indexSeparator = ' / ';
// Add one line per photo, using
//         addPhoto ('filename', 'caption', 'index text');
// The third parameter is optional and will default to the number
// of the photo if not provided.

addPhoto('photos_drury/drury1.JPG','<b>Drury Inn, Columbus, Ohio</b><br>First day on the job... We were contracted to remediate and problem solve this commercial project in progress. We were referred to this job to train an existing post tension concrete crew who were busy stacking and pouring with neither carpentry nor ICF experience.  The interior EPS wall will die into the 24 inch square first floor columns continuously around the building on the 14 foot pour. This, of course, resulted in one sided forms outside each column withholding three to four inches of concrete. On the second through seventh floors, a four inch concrete core was utilized and, with twenty inch columns above, the ICF wall planed past each column - when the columns were true.', '1');

addPhoto('photos_drury/drury13.JPG','', '2');

addPhoto('photos_drury/drury5.JPG','Each pour terminated about 4 inches above the floor above. A laser was used to shoot elevations for windows curb height, window bucks were installed and the next floor would be stacked. The builder had a custom extruded vinyl window buck system made specifically for their commercial applications. We rabbetted the ICF blocks around openings to allow installation in the first floor which had a six inch concrete core. The bucks were actually designed for a four inch core and were pre-designed to allow a window above and HVAC unit underneath. They were precut and drilled for all windows second through seventh floor.', '3'); 
addPhoto('photos_drury/Drury10.JPG','It is a long day pouring 650 feet of walls at your toes... We had to reset the pump six times to get around corners, cranes, etc... The "decision makers" on site elected not to use a line pump, which would have been safer, cheaper, faster and easier to pour. The pump kept getting caught in post tension cables hanging from the overhead deck. The cables could not yet be cut due to some testing/approval issues.', '4');

