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Certifications: EN 10204 3.1 / 3.2 material test certificates, ICC-ES AC compliance documentation where applicable, and complete export documentation packages.
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Application & Material Selection Reference

Construction

A world-class technical reference for structural engineers, general contractors, building product manufacturers, procurement heads, and code officials specifying anchors, fasteners, and structural components for commercial, industrial, and residential building construction — covering post-installed concrete anchor technology and ICC-ES certification, fire-rated structural connection considerations, LEED and green building material documentation, and the QC and documentation discipline required for critical building construction supply.

Post-Installed Concrete Anchors ICC-ES AC Certification (AC193 / AC308) Fire-Rated Structural Connections LEED / Green Building Documentation IBC Building Code Framework EN 10204 3.1/3.2 · ISO 9001:2015
Part 01 / Post-Installed Concrete Anchors — Mechanical vs. Adhesive
Post-Installed Anchor Technology
& ICC-ES Certification —
A Distinct Product Category

Post-installed concrete anchors — drilled and installed into existing hardened concrete, as distinct from cast-in-place anchor bolts and rod discussed throughout RR Hydraulic’s other references — are a genuinely distinct product category with their own certification framework specific to building construction.

Construction Post-Installed Anchors — RR Hydraulic Engineering Reference

1.1 — Mechanical Expansion Anchors

Mechanical expansion anchors develop holding capacity through physical expansion against the drilled hole wall as the anchor is torqued or set — wedge anchors, sleeve anchors, and drop-in anchors are common configurations, providing immediate load capacity upon installation without a cure time, and generally offering straightforward, visually verifiable installation (correct embedment and torque can be confirmed directly at time of installation). Mechanical anchors are widely used for general building construction anchoring — equipment mounting, handrail posts, and general structural attachment to existing concrete — where their straightforward installation and immediate load capacity are advantageous.

1.2 — Adhesive (Chemical) Anchors

Adhesive anchors bond a threaded rod or rebar into a drilled hole using a two-component epoxy, vinylester, or polyester resin adhesive, developing holding capacity through the adhesive bond strength between the anchor, adhesive, and surrounding concrete rather than mechanical expansion. Adhesive anchors generally offer higher capacity in a given hole size, better performance in cracked concrete (a specific design consideration in seismic regions, tying to the seismic design philosophy discussed in RR Hydraulic’s Infrastructure Projects reference), and reduced installation-induced stress on the surrounding concrete compared to mechanical expansion — but require correct adhesive cure time before loading and more careful installation practice (hole cleaning, adhesive mixing and injection, and correct working/cure time observance) to achieve their certified capacity.

1.3 — ICC-ES AC Certification: The Governing Framework

Critical, distinct certification framework for this product category: Post-installed anchors used in structural applications under US building codes require ICC-ES (International Code Council Evaluation Service) certification under the applicable Acceptance Criteria — commonly AC193 for mechanical anchors in concrete, and AC308 for adhesive anchors in concrete — evaluating the specific anchor product’s tested performance in both cracked and uncracked concrete, and establishing the design values building code officials and structural engineers rely on for anchor design. This is a specific, product-level certification distinct from the general material certification (EN 10204 3.1/3.2) discussed throughout RR Hydraulic’s other references — an anchor’s base material may be entirely correct while the specific anchor product/configuration lacks the required ICC-ES evaluation report for the intended structural application. Always confirm the specific ICC-ES evaluation report applicable to the exact anchor product, diameter, and embedment depth being specified, rather than assuming general anchor category compliance.
Part 02 / Fire-Rated Structural Connections & Building Code Framework
Fire-Rated Structural
Connections, Fireproofing
Compatibility & IBC Framework

Building construction imposes fire-resistance requirements on structural connections that do not apply to the industrial process piping and equipment discussed throughout most of RR Hydraulic’s other references — a distinct life-safety consideration specific to occupied buildings.

Fire-Rated Structural Connections and IBC Framework — RR Hydraulic

2.1 — Fire Rating Requirements for Structural Steel Connections

Building codes require structural steel framing in most commercial and multi-story buildings to maintain a minimum fire resistance rating — typically achieved through applied fireproofing (spray-applied fire-resistive material, intumescent coatings, or enclosure in fire-rated construction) protecting the steel framing from rapid temperature rise and associated strength loss during a fire event. Structural bolted connections (per the general structural bolting practice discussed in RR Hydraulic’s dedicated Structural Bolts, A325, and A490 references) must be protected to the same fire-resistance rating as the connected structural members — connection geometry, particularly at complex multi-member connections, can create specific challenges achieving uniform fireproofing coverage that structural and fire protection engineers should coordinate during design.

2.2 — Intumescent Coating Compatibility

Coating System Interaction

Where structural steel receives both a corrosion protection coating (per RR Hydraulic’s Hot-Dip Galvanized and Zinc Plated references) and a subsequent intumescent fireproofing coating, compatibility between the two coating systems must be verified — some intumescent products require specific primer/substrate compatibility, and galvanized steel in particular sometimes requires a specific compatible primer system before intumescent coating application to ensure proper adhesion and fire-rated performance.

Connection Accessibility for Coating Application

Bolted connection geometry should allow adequate access for uniform fireproofing coating application and inspection — an important coordination point between structural connection design and the fire protection contractor’s application requirements, ideally addressed during design rather than discovered as a field coordination problem during construction.

2.3 — IBC and Building Code Framework

The International Building Code (IBC) and its regional adoptions provide the primary building code framework governing structural, fire, and life-safety requirements for building construction — a distinct code framework from the industrial process piping codes (ASME B31.3, discussed throughout RR Hydraulic’s process industry references) and power/nuclear codes (ASME Section I/III, discussed in RR Hydraulic’s Power Plant Hardware reference) governing the industrial applications elsewhere in our reference library. IBC incorporates referenced structural design standards (AISC 360 for steel, ACI 318 for concrete, including the post-installed anchor design provisions referencing the ICC-ES certification discussed in Part 1) by reference, forming the complete regulatory basis for building structural and life-safety design.

Part 03 / LEED and Green Building Material Documentation
LEED Certification
& Sustainable Material
Documentation

Green building certification programs — most notably LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) — introduce specific material sourcing and documentation requirements distinct from the technical material specifications discussed throughout RR Hydraulic’s other references.

LEED Green Building Material Documentation — RR Hydraulic

3.1 — LEED Material Credits Relevant to Structural and Fastener Supply

Recycled Content Documentation

LEED material and resource credits can reward documented recycled steel content in structural and fastener materials — steel production (particularly electric arc furnace production, common for the structural bolting and general steel discussed throughout our references) frequently incorporates substantial recycled content, and manufacturers can provide recycled content documentation supporting a project’s LEED material credit calculation where requested.

Regional Sourcing Documentation

Some LEED credit categories reward materials sourced within a defined regional radius of the project site, reducing transportation-related environmental impact — project teams pursuing this credit category should confirm the specific sourcing location and distance documentation required from their material suppliers.

Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs)

Environmental Product Declarations — standardised, third-party-verified documentation of a product’s life-cycle environmental impact — are increasingly requested for LEED and other green building certification documentation, providing quantified environmental impact data beyond simple recycled content percentage.

3.2 — Confirming Project-Specific Documentation Requirements Early

Green building certification requirements and the specific documentation format required vary by certification program (LEED, BREEAM, and other regional green building standards) and specific project certification target level — confirming the exact documentation your project’s certification consultant requires early in the procurement process, rather than after material has already been ordered or installed, ensures the necessary documentation can be captured and provided without requiring after-the-fact reconstruction of sourcing or content data that may be difficult or impossible to obtain retroactively.

Part 04 / QC, Applications & Export
Inspection Protocol,
Industry Applications
& Documentation

RR Hydraulic maintains full traceability across the construction materials range, with ICC-ES anchor certification and LEED/ green building documentation coordinated where required.

Construction Inspection and QC — RR Hydraulic

4.1 — Inspection & QC Protocol

CHEM
Chemical Composition
Verification against the applicable material specification (per the specific alloy’s dedicated RR Hydraulic reference) for the selected construction application.
MECH
Mechanical Testing
Tensile, yield, and elongation testing per the applicable standard, confirming minimum mechanical property requirements are met.
ICC-ES
ICC-ES Certification Verification
Confirms the specific post-installed anchor product holds the applicable ICC-ES evaluation report (AC193/AC308) for the intended structural application, per Section 1.3.
COAT
Coating Compatibility Verification
Confirms corrosion protection coating and any subsequent fireproofing coating are compatible per the applicable system’s requirements, per Section 2.2.
DIM
Dimensional Inspection
Full dimensional verification against the applicable governing product standard on sampled or 100% of production lots.
FAI
First Article Inspection
Complete chemical, mechanical, and dimensional verification on the first production run of each unique configuration per project order, released before batch production.

4.2 — EN 10204 / Documentation Requirements

Table 4.A — Material Certification for Construction Component Supply
CertificateContentEPC RequirementWhen Mandatory
2.1 / 2.2Declaration / non-specificAcceptable for non-critical general applicationsLow-consequence general fastening (per project QA/QC procedure)
3.1 (EN 10204)Heat-traceable chemical + mechanical test reportMandatory — all EPC supplyStructural connections and general project procurement
ICC-ES evaluation reportAC193/AC308 tested performance and design valuesMandatory — structural post-installed anchorsAll structural post-installed concrete anchor supply
LEED/green building documentationRecycled content, regional sourcing, or EPD documentationConditional — LEED-target projectsWhere the project’s certification target requires material documentation

4.3 — Applications by Building Category

Commercial Office Buildings Residential and Multi-Family Construction Industrial and Warehouse Facilities Retail and Mixed-Use Development Healthcare and Institutional Facilities Educational Facilities High-Rise and Tower Construction Parking Structures Curtain Wall and Facade Systems Renovation and Retrofit Construction Green Building / LEED-Certified Projects General Concrete Anchoring Applications

Post-Installed Anchoring Applications

Mechanical and adhesive anchors for equipment mounting, handrail and guardrail posts, curtain wall attachment, and general structural attachment to existing concrete, with ICC-ES certification confirmed for the specific product and application per Part 1.

Structural Steel Framing and Connections

Structural bolting (A325/A490, per RR Hydraulic’s dedicated references) for building structural steel connections, coordinated with fire protection requirements per Part 2 for occupied commercial and residential construction.

Green Building and Certified Projects

General construction fasteners and structural components supplied with the recycled content, regional sourcing, or EPD documentation discussed in Part 3 for LEED and other green-building-certification-targeted projects.

4.4 — Export Packaging Specification

  • Post-installed anchors packed with clear product designation and ICC-ES evaluation report reference to support field installation compliance verification
  • Structural bolt assemblies packed as complete matched sets per the practice discussed throughout RR Hydraulic’s Structural Bolts, A325, and A490 references
  • Heat/lot number marked or tagged on each item, cross-referenced to the accompanying material test certificate and, where applicable, LEED documentation
  • Documentation in a waterproof pocket: EN 10204 3.1/3.2 (or 2.1/2.2 where acceptable) MTC, ICC-ES evaluation report (post-installed anchors), chemical composition report, mechanical properties report, LEED/green building documentation (where applicable), and packing list with application/material/size breakdown per item
  • ISPM-15 timber or export cartons for international shipment, with country of origin and HS tariff code documentation matched to the specific component category

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