A complete professional guide to inspection, defect identification, testing, and structural evaluation
Learn how to assess existing concrete structures using proven inspection methods, non-destructive and destructive testing techniques, defect classification, and evidence-based repair planning strategies for 2026.
A systematic approach to evaluating concrete condition, structural capacity, and service life for buildings, bridges, and infrastructure
Concrete structures deteriorate over time due to loading, environmental exposure, poor construction practices, and material degradation. A thorough structural assessment of existing concrete identifies defects early, quantifies remaining service life, informs repair decisions, and prevents costly catastrophic failures. In 2026, with ageing infrastructure worldwide, systematic concrete assessment has never been more critical.
Assessment of existing concrete structures is required when visible distress signs appear, when a change of use or loading is planned, after extreme events such as fire, flood, or impact, before purchase of a concrete building or structure, as part of routine maintenance programmes, or when planning structural strengthening or refurbishment works.
Structural assessments of existing concrete are typically carried out by chartered structural engineers, specialist inspection companies, and material scientists. The assessment process draws on visual inspection, non-destructive testing (NDT), material sampling, structural analysis, and professional engineering judgement to produce a condition report and recommended action plan.
A rigorous assessment of an existing concrete structure follows a logical, staged process. Skipping stages leads to missed defects, incorrect repair decisions, and wasted expenditure. The internationally recognised approach — consistent with standards such as BS EN 1504, ACI 364.1R, and AS 3600 — moves from desk study through to final reporting, as outlined below.
Before setting foot on site, a thorough desk study is essential for assessing existing concrete structures. This stage establishes the baseline: what was built, how it was designed, what materials were used, and what has happened to the structure since construction. Original drawings, structural calculations, specifications, construction photographs, and any previous inspection reports should all be reviewed.
Original structural drawings and reinforcement details, concrete mix design records, construction completion certificates, previous inspection and maintenance reports, any structural modification records, and planning or building consent documents. For older structures, historical maps and archive records may also be relevant.
The age of a concrete structure significantly influences the likely deterioration mechanisms. Pre-1970 structures may contain high-alumina cement (HAC) or no cover to reinforcement. Post-1970 structures are subject to specific national standards. Knowing the construction era guides the inspector toward the most likely defect types to look for on site.
The exposure environment — coastal, industrial, buried, or internal — determines the dominant deterioration mechanism. Pressure and environmental conditions drive chloride ingress in coastal zones, carbonation in urban atmospheres, and freeze-thaw damage in cold climates. This guides targeted testing in the detailed inspection stage.
Visual inspection is the most fundamental technique in assessing existing concrete structures. It costs least, reveals most, and should always precede any laboratory testing. A trained inspector can identify the nature, extent, and likely cause of distress from visual evidence alone. All defects should be recorded systematically using sketches, photographs, and condition mapping sheets.
Each defect type indicates a specific deterioration mechanism. Correct identification guides targeted testing and repair strategy selection.
Cracks are the most common defect found when assessing existing concrete structures. Not all cracks are structurally significant — the key is to classify each crack by width, pattern, orientation, activity (live vs dormant), and likely cause. The table below summarises the main crack types and their probable causes.
| Crack Type | Pattern / Appearance | Likely Cause | Structural Risk | Action Required |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flexural cracks | Vertical, tension face, regular spacing | Overloading or inadequate reinforcement | High | Structural analysis required |
| Shear cracks | Diagonal, near supports, 45° | Excess shear, inadequate links | Very High | Immediate assessment |
| Shrinkage cracks | Random, fine, surface crazing | Plastic or drying shrinkage | Low–Medium | Seal to prevent ingress |
| Settlement cracks | Diagonal, through thickness | Foundation movement | High | Monitor & geotechnical review |
| Corrosion cracks | Linear, above rebar, rust staining | Reinforcement corrosion expansion | High | Covermeter survey + repair |
| AAR/ASR cracks | Map/pattern cracking, gel exudate | Alkali–aggregate reaction | Medium–High | Petrographic analysis |
| Thermal cracks | Through-thickness, early age | Heat of hydration, temperature gradient | Medium | Monitor, seal if wide |
| Freeze-thaw cracks | Surface scaling, delamination | Cyclic freezing of pore water | Low–Medium | Surface repair and protection |
When assessing existing concrete structures, always determine whether cracks are active (live) or dormant (stable). Active cracks continue to widen and require investigation of the ongoing cause before repair. Dormant cracks have stopped moving and can often be sealed directly. Installing crack monitors (tell-tales) over a 4–8 week period is the most reliable way to determine crack activity before specifying repairs.
Non-destructive testing (NDT) allows engineers to assess the internal condition of existing concrete without removing material or compromising structural integrity. NDT is essential for quantifying defects identified visually, mapping reinforcement, measuring concrete cover, and determining carbonation or chloride front depths across a structure.
Measures the surface hardness of concrete as an indirect indicator of compressive strength. Quick and inexpensive, but affected by surface condition, moisture, and carbonation. Results should be calibrated against core-tested specimens. Useful for comparative mapping across large areas of an existing concrete structure — areas of low rebound indicate weaker concrete zones.
Uses electromagnetic induction to locate reinforcement bars and measure concrete cover depth. Essential for corrosion risk assessment — inadequate cover accelerates carbonation and chloride-induced corrosion. Results are mapped as cover histograms. Minimum acceptable cover per BS EN 1992 depends on exposure class; cover below 20 mm in exposed conditions is a high-risk finding.
Measures the electrochemical potential of embedded reinforcement through the concrete surface. Indicates the probability of active corrosion: potentials more negative than −350 mV (CSE) indicate greater than 90% probability of active corrosion. Used to map corrosion activity across slab or wall surfaces and prioritise repair areas.
Emits radar pulses and analyses reflections to detect voids, delamination, rebar position, post-tensioned tendons, and embedded services. Covers large areas quickly. Particularly valuable for bridge decks, tunnels, and parking structures where delamination may not yet be visible at the surface. GPR data requires specialist interpretation.
Measures the speed of ultrasonic pulses through concrete. Pulse velocity above 4,500 m/s indicates good quality concrete; below 3,000 m/s indicates poor quality or significant cracking. Used to detect voids, cracks, and zones of deterioration, and to estimate compressive strength when calibrated against core results.
Impact echo uses stress wave reflection to detect delamination and voids in concrete slabs and bridge decks. Infrared thermography identifies subsurface delamination through differential thermal emission — delaminated areas show higher surface temperatures. Both methods are effective for rapid screening of large concrete areas in existing structures.
Where NDT results are inconclusive or where the structural assessment requires confirmation of material properties, destructive material sampling is carried out. Core extraction, powder drilling, and carbonation testing provide direct evidence of concrete quality and deterioration mechanism. Laboratory results form the quantitative basis for structural calculations and repair specification.
Cylindrical cores (typically 100 mm diameter) are drilled from the existing structure and tested in compression. Core strengths are corrected for diameter-to-height ratio and core condition. A minimum of 3 cores per structural element is recommended. Results confirm whether the as-built concrete meets original design strength requirements.
Phenolphthalein indicator solution is sprayed onto a freshly broken concrete surface. The colourless (carbonated) zone indicates where concrete pH has dropped below 9, depassivating reinforcement. Carbonation depth is compared to cover depth — when carbonation reaches the rebar level, corrosion initiates. Results inform remaining service life calculations.
Concrete powder samples are taken at measured depths (e.g., 0–10 mm, 10–20 mm, 20–30 mm) and analysed for total or water-soluble chloride content. Chloride profiles are used to determine the diffusion coefficient and predict when the corrosion threshold (typically 0.4% by cement weight) will be reached at the rebar depth.
Sampling locations should be selected to represent both visually distressed areas and apparently sound areas — this contrast reveals how widespread the deterioration truly is. Avoid sampling near joints, edges, or areas of known repair. Always document the exact location of every core or powder sample on a dimensioned plan drawing for the condition report.
Understanding the root cause of deterioration is fundamental to assessing existing concrete structures correctly. Different mechanisms leave distinct signatures in the concrete, and selecting the wrong repair strategy for a given mechanism leads to premature repair failure. The six most common mechanisms are described below.
Atmospheric CO₂ reacts with calcium hydroxide in the cement paste, reducing the pH from ~13 to below 9 and depassivating the reinforcement. Once depassivated and in the presence of oxygen and moisture, the steel corrodes, expanding up to 6× its original volume and causing cracking and spalling. Most common in sheltered, damp-dry cycling environments.
Chloride ions from de-icing salts or marine spray penetrate the concrete and initiate localised (pitting) corrosion even in alkaline concrete. Chloride-induced corrosion is typically more aggressive than carbonation-induced corrosion and produces more rapid section loss. It is the primary deterioration mechanism in coastal structures, bridge decks, and car park slabs.
Alkali hydroxides in the cement paste react with certain reactive silica minerals in the aggregate, forming an expansive gel that absorbs water and causes internal cracking. The characteristic appearance is map (pattern) cracking, often with gel exudate visible at the surface. ASR assessment requires petrographic examination of cores by a specialist concrete petrographer.
External sulfates (from soil, groundwater, or industrial effluent) react with cement paste components to form expansive products — ettringite and gypsum — causing softening, cracking, and disintegration of concrete. Most common in foundations, buried slabs, and sewage infrastructure. Internal sulfate attack (DEF) can also occur in heat-cured concrete elements.
Water in concrete pores expands on freezing, generating internal tensile stresses. Repeated freeze-thaw cycles cause surface scaling, microcracking, and progressive loss of surface layer. Most damaging in saturated concrete without air entrainment. Common in road structures, retaining walls, and façades in cold climates. Assessed by visual survey and surface hardness testing.
Acidic solutions (pH below 6.5) dissolve calcium hydroxide from the cement paste, softening and disintegrating the concrete matrix. Common in industrial floors, sewage pipes, and agricultural structures. Leaching attack from soft water has a similar effect. Chemical attack is identified by softening of the surface, loss of aggregate, and reduction in covermeter readings.
Once the extent of deterioration has been established through inspection and testing, a structural capacity assessment quantifies whether the existing concrete structure can still safely carry its design loads. This requires calculating the reduced capacity of affected members — accounting for section loss, reduced reinforcement area due to corrosion, and any changes in load paths.
Where existing drawings are unavailable, reinforcement location and bar diameter are determined by covermeter survey supplemented by breakout at selected locations. The as-found structural model is compared against current loading requirements — if the structure was designed to an older code, it may still be adequate under modern loads provided deterioration has not significantly reduced capacity. Any structure with a load capacity ratio below 1.0 requires immediate intervention.
If any of the following are found during assessment of an existing concrete structure, immediate safety measures should be implemented before the full report is completed: active shear or flexural cracking in primary structural members, visible rebar with complete section loss, delaminated concrete overhead posing falling hazard, foundation settlement causing through-thickness cracking, or evidence of post-tensioning tendon failure. Prop, barrier, or close the structure as appropriate pending full assessment.
A standardised condition rating system communicates the severity of deterioration found during assessment of existing concrete structures. Rating systems vary between organisations and codes, but most use a numerical or colour-coded scale. The table below shows a widely used 5-level classification system aligned with industry practice.
| Condition Grade | Description | Typical Findings | Urgency | Recommended Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grade 1 — Good | No significant defects | Minor surface marks, no cracks | None | Routine maintenance only |
| Grade 2 — Fair | Minor defects present | Fine cracks, light staining, minor spalls | Low | Monitor, minor maintenance |
| Grade 3 — Poor | Moderate defects | Visible cracks, corrosion staining, delamination | Medium | Planned repair within 2 years |
| Grade 4 — Very Poor | Significant deterioration | Spalling, exposed rebar, wide cracks | High | Repair within 6–12 months |
| Grade 5 — Critical | Structural safety concern | Rebar section loss, active shear cracks | Immediate | Immediate safety measures + repair |
The final stage of assessing existing concrete structures is translating the condition findings into a costed, technically sound repair strategy. Repair work should address the cause of deterioration, not just the symptoms. Repair materials and methods should be specified in accordance with BS EN 1504 (European), ACI 546 (American), or the relevant national standard for the project location.
BS EN 1504 defines 11 principles of concrete protection and repair, from surface protection (Principle 1) through to increasing resistivity (Principle 8) and cathodic protection (Principle 10). Selecting the correct principle for each identified cause of deterioration is more important than selecting a specific repair product. Applying the wrong principle leads to rapid repair failure.
For structures with widespread chloride-induced corrosion, electrochemical methods offer whole-structure treatment: cathodic protection suppresses corrosion by supplying protective current; electrochemical chloride extraction (ECE) removes chlorides from the concrete; re-alkalisation restores pH in carbonated concrete. These are specified when patch repair alone would be uneconomic.
Assessment reports should compare repair options on a whole-life cost basis, not just initial cost. A surface seal applied to a structure with active corrosion will fail within 2–3 years. A correctly designed cathodic protection system may cost more initially but deliver 25+ years of service. Whole-life costing ensures the most economical long-term outcome from the assessment process.
Convert project durations and inspection intervals from days to weeks.
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⚡Convert energy units for thermal and fire engineering assessments.
The primary European standard for protection and repair of concrete structures. Parts 1–10 cover definitions, surface protection, structural and non-structural crack repair, concrete reinstatement, corrosion protection of reinforcement, and quality control of repair works.
NIST Reference →The American Concrete Institute guide to assessment of existing concrete structures, covering inspection procedures, material testing, structural evaluation, and the basis for repair or strengthening decisions in existing buildings and infrastructure.
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