Perceptible Investigation of Established Building to Endorse Repair Approaches
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47392/IRJAEM.2026.0097Keywords:
Assessment, Corrosion, Deterioration, Rehabilitation, RepairAbstract
A perceptible investigation of established educational institution buildings—specifically those aged 18 years and above—serves as a critical process for identifying necessary repair approaches and endorsing appropriate rehabilitation strategies. Over nearly two decades of continuous use, institutional structures often encounter material degradation, environmental wear, compliance gaps with updated safety codes, and evolving functional requirements. Perceptible investigation involves a combination of visual assessments, non-destructive testing (NDT), damage diagnostics, and structural health monitoring to evaluate the current condition of key building components, including concrete, steel reinforcements, partitions, and service infrastructures. Findings from these methods pinpoint both immediate hazards and latent deficiencies, such as cracks, spalling, moisture ingress, reinforcement corrosion, and compromised joints. Based on these investigations, targeted repair approaches are recommended—such as crack sealing, cathodic protection, fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) strengthening, and surface repair. The integration of self-healing concrete, cathodic protection systems, and advanced crack injection techniques further enhances long-term serviceability and resilience of institutional buildings. Effective endorsement of repair methodologies is underpinned by a meticulous understanding of the extent of deterioration and tailored interventions that ensure structural integrity, safety, and operational continuity. Emphasis is placed on proactive maintenance and sustainable rehabilitation, securing the building's role as a safe and functional educational facility. These abstract highlights the necessity for systematic and perceptible investigation as a foundation for implementing innovative and durable repair techniques in aging educational institution buildings.
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