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Test your basic knowledge |
Building Construction Management Vocab
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Study First
Subjects
:
industries
,
construction
,
business-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Friction Pile: Bears the load by using friction between it and the ground around it by having a tapered form. End-Bearing Piles: Most of the load is transferred to the bottom of the pile.
Friction vs. End-bearing Pile
PSL
Bentonite Slurry Wall
Contiguous Bored Concrete Piles and Secant Piles
2. A document that describes regulations for the use of land in a particular jurisdiction.
Dimensional Lumber - and nominal vs actual dimensions
Column Footing
Zoning Ordinance
Re-Shoring
3. Design Development
DD
Performance vs. Prescriptive Code Provisions
Fire Resistance Rating
Dewatering
4. Used commonly for load-bearing wood - masonry - or concrete walls.
Joist
Type I-V Concrete - and the Roles for Each
Truss - Bottom Chord and Top Chord
Strip Footing
5. Used where columns are lightly loaded or bear on soils with a high bearing capacity.
Annealed glass
low-e coating
Column Footing
Slump Test
6. Pile: Driven or drilled long - slender foundation element. Pile: a piece of machinery used to drive piles into the ground.
Zoning Ordinance
Mat Foundation
Flat-Sawn vs. Quarter-Sawn Lumber
Pile and Pile Driver
7. Chemical compounds that are used in concrete mixes to increase the workability of the mix without reducing the slump.
DBB
Tinted glass
Plasticizers
Friction vs. End-bearing Pile
8. Control Joint: A sawed or tooled joint on the top surface of a concrete slab-on-ground; a continuous vertical joint in a concrete masonry wall. Cold Joint: A nonmovement joint resulting when fresh concrete is placed against previously placed concrete
Advantages and Disadvantages of High Strength Concrete
Spandrel beam
Sump and Well Point Dewatering
Concrete Control Joints and Cold Joints
9. Using concrete slab blankets or putting hot water in the concrete mix.
Cold Weather Concrete Construction Protection Measures
Tendons
Wrought iron v. mild steel
Laydown Yard/Staging Area
10. A large-diameter - deep reinforced-concrete foundation element made by drilling a hole into the ground and filling it with concrete; an enclosure that permits excavation work to be carried out under water.
Caisson
AISC standard structural shapes
Plasticizers
Laminated glass
11. Lengths of dimension lumber - glued and laminated together to create a structural member of a large cross section.
Cold Weather Concrete Construction Protection Measures
Glue-Laminated Lumber
DB
CM
12. Control Joint: A sawed or tooled joint on the top surface of a concrete slab-on-ground; a continuous vertical joint in a concrete masonry wall. Cold Joint: A nonmovement joint resulting when fresh concrete is placed against previously placed concrete
AISC standard structural shapes
Insulated metal panels
Concrete Control Joints and Cold Joints
PSL
13. A ceiling hung from the overlying floor or roof structure.
reflective glass
Mat Foundation
Backup wall
Suspended ceiling
14. Advantages: High early strength Disadvantages: Very expensive
Truss - Bottom Chord and Top Chord
Advantages and Disadvantages of High Strength Concrete
Stone cladding
curtain walls
15. Friction Pile: Bears the load by using friction between it and the ground around it by having a tapered form. End-Bearing Piles: Most of the load is transferred to the bottom of the pile.
One-Way vs. Two-Way Slabs
Mat Foundation
Friction vs. End-bearing Pile
Flat-Sawn vs. Quarter-Sawn Lumber
16. Cee Channel: Studs and joists - symbolized by S - Runner Channel: bridging channels - symbolized by you - Tracks: you shaped - symbolized by T
Building Code
Cee Channel - Runner Channel - Tracks
Prefabricated brick panel curtainwall
Permanent Concrete Freeze-Thaw Protection
17. Exterior wall cladding system suspended from or supported by the structural frame of the building.
Stucco - its components and layers
curtain walls
Cold Weather Concrete Construction Protection Measures
Pile and Pile Driver
18. Two pieces of glass laminated under heat and pressure to a plastic interlayer to form a fused unit.
Sheet Piles and Shoring
Stone cladding
Laminated glass
SD
19. Soldier Piles are placed into pre-drilled holes that are filled with concrete after the piles are set. Excavation begins - and as the pit is dug deeper - lagging is bolted to the soldier piles to support them.
Annealed glass
Joist
Soldier Piles and Lagging
Precasting vs Site-Casting: Methods & Pros and Cons
20. A document that describes regulations for the use of land in a particular jurisdiction.
Zoning Ordinance
Prefabricated v. site-built masonry cladding
Shallow vs. Deep Foundations
The role of lime in mortar and mortar types
21. Shallow Foundation: Used for all types of buildings and bear directly on the upper soil levels. Deep Foundation: Used where soil on the surface does not have adequate strength or is unstable. Consists of piles or piers.
Column Footing
Shallow vs. Deep Foundations
Insulated metal panels
Floating and Troweling
22. Place where materials are stored on or near the project site.
Sump and Well Point Dewatering
Laydown Yard/Staging Area
Plasticizers
Tie Backs
23. Contiguous Bored Concrete Piles: Closely spaced - reinforced concrete piles. Often has shock-crete sprayed on the front to make a wall. Secant Piles: Two sets of interlocking contiguous piles.
Concrete Control Joints and Cold Joints
Contiguous Bored Concrete Piles and Secant Piles
Stone cladding
GFRC
24. A legal document that regulates the design and construction of buildings to ensure that the buildings meet minimum standards of health - safety - and welfare.
Building Code
Engineered Lumber
Tie Backs
Soldier Piles and Lagging
25. A surface coating that reflects most of the long-wave radiation.
Dimensional Lumber - and nominal vs actual dimensions
low-e coating
Caisson
DB
26. Sheet steel that is hot-dip galvanized.
Cold-Formed Light Gauge Steel Members
Slump Test
Truss - Bottom Chord and Top Chord
Steps in Forming a Reinforced Concrete Wall
27. An L-shaped steel pin that connects to the GFRC skin with a bonding pad and is welded to the supporting light-gauge steel frame.
Veneer
Flex anchors
curtain walls
CD
28. A thin layer of material over a back-up component.
DD
Shallow vs. Deep Foundations
Veneer
Light-Gauge Steel Framing
29. Wood into which preservatives have been pressure injected to retard termite infestation and fungal decay. Using a different preservative - the pressure treatment can also be used for increasing the fire resistance of wood.
Pressure Treated Lumber
Veneer
Spandrel beam
Type I-V Concrete - and the Roles for Each
30. Two pieces of glass laminated under heat and pressure to a plastic interlayer to form a fused unit.
OSB
Laminated glass
LVL
Rebar and Welded Wire Fabric (WWF)
31. A fastener that connects an exterior cladding to the supporting frame to resist lateral loads
Rafter
The Three Parts of Construction Management
Tie Backs
Engineered Lumber
32. Parallel-Strand Lumber: Manufactured wood product composed of narrow strands of veneered lumber glued together - all oriented in the same direction to form a member of large cross section.
Fire Safety Exiting Requirements
PSL
The role of lime in mortar and mortar types
Fire Safety Exiting Requirements
33. Shoring placed under concrete to support it while it cures.
LVL
Re-Shoring
Performance vs. Prescriptive Code Provisions
OSB
34. Material added to concrete mix to influence its performance.
The Three Phases of Construction Management
Stone cladding
reflective glass
Admixture
35. Construction Management
CM
Shallow vs. Deep Foundations
CD
Stone cladding
36. A glass that reflects incoming visible radiation due to a very thin metal oxide coating on one side.
reflective glass
Friction vs. End-bearing Pile
Fire Safety Exiting Requirements
Advantages and Disadvantages of High Strength Concrete
37. Stone panels attached to a backup wall or curtain wall frame.
tempered glass
Flex anchors
Stone cladding
PSL
38. A framing system that mimics wood light frame construction - but the elements are made of cold-formed - galvanized sheet steel.
Light-Gauge Steel Framing
Concrete Control Joints and Cold Joints
Zoning Ordinance
OSB
39. Used where columns are lightly loaded or bear on soils with a high bearing capacity.
low-e coating
Column Footing
The Three Phases of Construction Management
Laydown Yard/Staging Area
40. They review the plan sets to make sure they meet code requirements - then they will issue building permits if all codes and regulations are met. During the construction process - an inspector will be called to review the construction of specific part
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41. The combination of high-strength steel strands - sleeves - and end anchorages used for post-tensioning concrete.
heat-soaked tempered glass
Cee Channel - Runner Channel - Tracks
Tendons
reflective glass
42. Prescriptive codes give a clear - defined method for meeting a requirement. Performance codes allow the designer to decide how to meet the end requirement that must be met.
Performance vs. Prescriptive Code Provisions
Pile and Pile Driver
Prefabricated v. site-built masonry cladding
Tendons
43. Design Development
Building Inspector's Process
CM
Sheathing
DD
44. Hollow Core Slabs: Precast - prestressed concrete slabs that contain voids in their central region that reduce dead loads by 40-50%. - Planks: Precast concrete slabs that are solid.
Building Code
OSB
Re-Shoring
Hollow Core Slabs and Planks
45. A large-diameter - deep reinforced-concrete foundation element made by drilling a hole into the ground and filling it with concrete; an enclosure that permits excavation work to be carried out under water.
Light-Gauge Steel Framing
Flat-Sawn vs. Quarter-Sawn Lumber
Prefabricated v. site-built masonry cladding
Caisson
46. Oriented Strandboard: A wood-based panel made by gluing several layers of wood strands under heat and pressure so that the adjacent layers are oriented in opposite directions.
Zoning Ordinance
Slump Test
OSB
Mat Foundation
47. Lengths of dimension lumber - glued and laminated together to create a structural member of a large cross section.
Insulated metal panels
Caisson
Glue-Laminated Lumber
Stone cladding
48. Post-tentioning: Subjecting a concrete or masonry member to compressive stresses by tensioning high-strength steel strands (wires) after the concrete has developed sufficient strength.
tempered glass
Mat Foundation
Pre-tentioning and Post-tentioning
Engineered Lumber
49. Wrought iron is corrosive resistant - time consuming to make - and contains about .02% carbon. VS. Mild Steel contains .1-2.5% carbon and is much stronger and easier to make.
Glue-Laminated Lumber
DB
Cee Channel - Runner Channel - Tracks
Wrought iron v. mild steel
50. Include the width and height of the exit enclosures - fire resistance of materials used therein - and illumination levels in the exit enclosures.
Fire Safety Exiting Requirements
Backup wall
Prefabricated v. site-built masonry cladding
EIFS