As winter approaches, Canada's roads, bridges, sidewalks and buildings are facing a familiar problem: cracks caused by large ...
New research suggests the Romans used a method known as "hot mixing" to produce self-healing concrete, which allowed them to ...
Due to environmental conditions in Canada, freeze-thaw cycles, road salt and moisture are serving to accelerate cracking and ...
Local officials here called on the Department of Public Works and Highways to immediately repair the damaged portion of Arnedo Dike at barangay Cupang here. The damage to the dike may result in the ...
ARAYAT Municipal Mayor Jeffrey Luriz and Pampanga 3rd District Rep. Mica Gonzales appealed to Public Works Secretary Vince ...
Strong-Bond features innovative Color Cure technology, which dispenses blue then changes to gray when cured for efficient, guesswork-free installation.
Your roof would leak like a sieve if you installed the shingles backward. Imagine if the top edge of a lower shingle sat ...
Lime granules trapped in ancient walls show Romans relied on a reactive hot-mix method to making concrete that could now ...
They're actually pretty adorable, and they eat mice. But you may unwittingly be inviting them to hang out in, and tear up, ...
Ancient Romans built arched bridges, waterproof port infrastructure and aqueducts that enabled the rise of their empire and that are still standing—and often still used. In his first-century B.C.E.
But could a 2,000‑year‑old construction site hold the key to building longer‑lasting, greener infrastructure today?