Georgia
8960 Highway 5 Building A
Douglasville, GA 30134
Phone: (770) 439-8336
Hours: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM EST
8960 Highway 5 Building A
Douglasville, GA 30134
Phone: (770) 439-8336
Hours: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM EST
As Georgia’s application experts, we specialize in innovative flooring solutions that include elevated concrete, cellular concrete, underlayment, insulation, and sound mat installation. Streamline your building project by entrusting your flooring and insulation needs to the professionals at Structis.
Scope:
Prepped seams with PW sealant
Installed Liquid Applied LM85
Added a 60-millimeter layer of Polyguard 650 membrane over the LM85
Topped it off with a drain mat and 2″ average 3000 PSI exterior pump mix, and sloped to drains with a broom finish
Contractor: Shell Mcelroy
Architect: Cooper Carey
Scope: We offered a perfect solution to a problem of a 9th floor area that was 2 1/4″ out of level on approximately 4000 s/f. The Contractor needed the floor to be leveled but the structural engineer had a weight tolerance of 12# per s/f. We were able to offer a solution by using Maxxon® Low Density Fill for all the deep fill areas and then topped and leveled the floor with Maxxon® Level-Crete.
Contractor: Summit Contracting
Scope: 300 Unit apartment complex – R-19 fiberglass batting in the walls – R-19 fiberglass batting in the floors for sound attenuation
Scope: Maxxon® Acousti-Mat® 3/4 Premium
Contractor: Fortune Johnson
Scope: 1” Maxxon® Gyp-Crete® 2000 Multifamily over Acousti-Mat® 3/8 Premium
Contractor: Fortune Johnson
Scope: Waterproofed balconies: installed T-bar flashing and poured exterior mix concrete.
Scope: 159,700 sq. ft. Maxxon® Acousti-Mat® 3/4 Premium Installed Throughout Floors 3-7 and Penthouse Level
Scope: 6,353 total square feet Aquafin® Vaportight Coat® SG3 capped with 1″ average Maxxon® Gyp-Crete® High Performance
Scope: 27,000 sq. ft. of Commercial Topping poured at an average depth of 1-1/4″
Contractor: Character Build
Scope: 21,330 sq. ft. 2” Maxxon® Gyp-Crete® High Performance over dual sound mat system of Maxxon® Acousti-Mat 3/4, Maxxon® SBR, and Maxxon® Reinforcement Renovation of old building to a new hotel
Contractor: CBG Builders
Scope: Pouring 1” Maxxon® Gyp-Crete® 2000 Multifamily over Maxxon® 1/4” Acousti-Mat® over prescient metal decking on 14 story high rise apartment building
Contractor: Whaley Construction
Scope: 95,000 sq. ft. 11/2” Maxxon® Gyp-Crete® 2000 Multifamily over Maxxon® Acousti-Mat® 3/4 with Maxxon® Reinforcement
Contractor: Brassfield Gorrie
Scope: 7,700 s/f Maxxon® Level-Crete poured at 5/8”-1 1/2” over concrete slab at 4000 psi
Cellular concrete is a type of concrete that is made using Portland Cement, water, and a preformed foam. The foam is combined with the cement slurry using a static mixer. The resulting concrete is lightweight, very flowable, and stable with virtually no bleed water.
Elevated concrete is a 3,000 psi pump mix weighing 140 PCF that is poured by our Structis team using utilizing a hydraulic concrete pump and a 2” line hose.
Spray foam, fiberglass, and cellulose are all great options for insulating a house or commercial building. But it’s important to know the differences between each type of insulation and, figure out what your structure needs before you request services from Structis:
IIC and FIIC are measures of how soundproof a material is, but there’s a slight difference between the two terms. Impact Insulation Class (IIC) is the lab rating of a material’s sound resistance. Field Impact Insulation Class (FIIC) is a more accurate on-site test that takes the combined soundproofing materials into account. These measures are both based on how well the chosen material reduces impact noises like footfall, scraping, jumping, etc. With a higher IIC or FIIC (multifamily buildings want to be around 55 FIIC), there’s a higher level of acoustic insulation in a material, which means that sounds are significantly reduced.
IIC and FIIC are measures of how soundproof a material is, but there’s a slight difference between the two terms. Impact Insulation Class (IIC) is the lab rating of a material’s sound resistance. Field Impact Insulation Class (FIIC) is a more accurate on-site test that takes the combined soundproofing materials into account. These measures are both based on how well the chosen material reduces impact noises like footfall, scraping, jumping, etc. With a higher IIC or FIIC (multifamily buildings want to be around 55 FIIC), there’s a higher level of acoustic insulation in a material, which means that sounds are significantly reduced.
The first step to exceptional services is getting in touch.