Skip to main content

Giatec promises Smart Concrete

Giatec’s Smart Concrete concept allows ready mix concrete suppliers to offer optimised mixes to their customers – and to charge more for them. Giatec, which makes concrete sensors and associated software and apps, works with the concrete producers to calibrate their mixes. The concrete company then supplies Giatec’s maturity monitoring sensors as part of the concrete package. “The ready mix suppliers get information straight away so that they can adjust their mixes if necessary,” says Giatec business
April 27, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
8775 Giatec’s Smart Concrete concept allows ready mix concrete suppliers to offer optimised mixes to their customers – and to charge more for them.

Giatec, which makes concrete sensors and associated software and apps, works with the concrete producers to calibrate their mixes. The concrete company then supplies Giatec’s maturity monitoring sensors as part of the concrete package.

“The ready mix suppliers get information straight away so that they can adjust their mixes if necessary,” says Giatec business development director Vic Perry. “It also means they can improve the efficiency of their products going forward.” So, for example, if a high early strength mix is gaining too much strength, too quickly, the producer could make adjustments and save some money.

The contractors can use data from the monitors to help inform decisions on site, such as when to strike shutters, which can lead to time and cost savings - as well as improved safety and quality. Giatec also sells its sensors and accompanying apps, known as SmartRock2, directly to contractors.

Data from the sensors can be collected via Bluetooth by holding a smartphone or tablet close to the area where the sensor’s small, square power and memory pack is located, a maximum of 5cm below the concrete surface. The system takes a temperature measurement – which can then be translated into strength – every 30 minutes and then stores it.

To date, Giatec has only rolled Smart Concrete out in North America, where it currently supplies it to 12 ready mix forms. In the future, it plans to offer the solution outside its home market too, says Perry.

Giatec reckons that there will be around 2,000 of its sensors operating around the world at any time. In the future, it hopes to use the huge amounts of data these generate. “We want to build algorithms from the data,” says Perry. “Although it’s early days. We have a lot of data, but not as much as we would like to have yet.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Concrete paving developments boosting performance
    April 12, 2018
    Change is afoot at Miller Formless following its change of ownership, with investment in research and design a priority – Mike Woof writes Miller Formless is undergoing a process of change under its new ownership, with investment in the factory as well as in the product range. The recent tie-up between Guntert & Zimmerman and Miller Formless has brought additional global manufacturing capacity. Guntert & Zimmerman had established a manufacturing presence in India through an agreement with a local firm, a
  • Breaking with Indeco hammers
    April 16, 2018
    Contractor New Hampshire Rock Reduction is using hydraulic hammers from Indeco for rock breaking and excavation duties. The firm says that it selected these units so as to optimise productivity and has used the breakers in quarrying as well as site development applications. Located in the northeast corner of the US, New Hampshire is one of the country’s smallest states. Noted for a rocky terrain, New Hampshire’s geology includes a heavy presence of metamorphic, especially igneous, rock formations, which yi
  • Efficient concrete testing technology available
    February 8, 2021
    Giatec is now offering the improved SmartRock mobile application with key upgrades.
  • CECE 2018 conference Rome: the sector powers up for digitisation
    March 20, 2019
    Getting the human-machine interface for equipment automation right is a lot trickier than expected. David Arminas reports from the CECE conference in Rome For many contractors, digitisation is key for improving on-site operational efficiency. But it may be time to take stock of progress and examine what does and doesn’t work. That is not to say that the anchors should be thrown out to halt development. Far from it. In the past eight months, the CECE - Committee for European Construction Equipment – led