Reinforced armored concrete is a technical and colloquial term for particularly resilient, highly reinforced or high-strength concrete designed for extreme loads such as explosions, ballistic impacts, high load concentrations, as well as thermal and dynamic stresses. In the planning, construction and deconstruction of such protective structures, materials science, structural analysis and controlled demolition interact directly. Especially in concrete demolition and special demolition, reinforced armored concrete places high demands on processes, on the choice of methods, and on the interaction of tools such as concrete pulverizer, hydraulic splitter, steel shear or hydraulic demolition shear in combination with suitable hydraulic power pack.
Definition: What is meant by reinforced armored concrete
The term “reinforced armored concrete” is not defined unambiguously by standards, but fundamentally describes a concrete with exceptionally high resistance, characterized by high strength classes, a dense concrete structure and, above all, a very high reinforcement density (reinforcement meshes, bars, optionally additional steel fiber content). Low water–cement ratios, special cements, finely graded aggregates and additives such as microsilica are frequently used. In certain construction methods, additional steel inlays, composite plates or layers with increased abrasion and penetration resistance are integrated. The goal is high energy absorption capacity, controlled crack formation and limited spalling and removal behavior under extreme load cases.
Material composition and mechanical properties
Reinforced armored concrete is usually built as high-strength or very dense reinforced concrete. The matrix consists of a high-performance binder structure with low porosity. Due to the high reinforcement density, the ductility of the overall system increases, so that under impact or dynamic loads the energy is not dissipated in a brittle manner, but is distributed and transferred via the reinforcement. Steel fibers can further refine crack distribution, limit crack widths and influence spalling behavior in stressed zones.
Reinforcement concepts and perforation resistance
For structures with special protection requirements, reinforcement layouts are planned in layers and with tight bar spacing. Decisive factors are concrete cover, anchorage lengths and alignment with the expected direction of action. This creates a system that counteracts penetration attempts, fragmentation and ricochet effects. Actual performance always depends on the interaction of the concrete structure, reinforcement ratio, component thickness, boundary conditions and duration of action.
Typical fields of application and construction methods
Reinforced armored concrete is used wherever protection, functional safety or operability must be ensured even under extreme events. In practice, manifestations range from “strengthened reinforced concrete” to multilayer systems with composite elements. In deconstruction, these components are encountered particularly in the following contexts:
- Protective structures and building security zones with increased resistance requirements
- Technical installations with high load and impact stresses
- Massive foundation bodies, machine foundation and bulkheads in special demolition
- Sections in rock excavation and tunnel construction where stiffening or post-strengthening with highly reinforced concrete is present
- Heavily secured rooms and massive enclosure constructions in special demolition
Challenges in the deconstruction of reinforced armored concrete
Deconstruction is a technical and organizational task: high steel content, dense reinforcement meshes and tough fracture behavior complicate exposure and size reduction. Other factors include limited accessibility, requirements for vibration and noise control, dust suppression as well as the safety of adjacent structures. In addition, demolition separation and recycling must be considered early to efficiently separate steel content and concrete debris.
Preliminary investigation and existing-structure analysis
Reliable location of reinforcement, anchor and inserts by minimally destructive testing, taking samples (e.g., test core sample) and documenting component dimensions form the basis for safe, plannable deconstruction. On this basis, intervention effects can be assessed and methods combined so that components are specifically weakened and then separated in a controlled manner.
Methods and tools for selective demolition
In practice, a graduated approach has proven effective that prioritizes low vibration levels methods and combines them with separating or cutting methods as required. The choice depends on component thickness, reinforcement ratio, target piece sizes and boundary conditions. The focus is on mechanical, hydraulic and cutting demolition tool that can be combined depending on the application.
- Hydraulic splitter: Wedge- or cylinder-based systems to introduce controlled splitting forces for pre- and post-weakening of massive components (based on the wedge principle); for example, hydraulic rock and concrete splitters
- Concrete pulverizer: For crushing and removing concrete, exposing the reinforcement and controlled reduction of component thicknesses
- Hydraulic demolition shear: Flexible tools for concrete and steel content at changing material interfaces
- Steel shear: For cutting exposed reinforcement, anchor bars, composite plates and large steel sections
- Hydraulic power pack: Power supply for hydraulic tools, designed for high load peaks and continuous performance
- Sawing, drilling, milling and water jet cutting: Complementary when cut edges, openings or special geometries are required
- Cutting torch: For special operations on massive steel components or steel tanks that may be embedded in reinforced armored concrete structures
Hydraulic splitter in heavily reinforced structures
By drilling boreholes and introducing high splitting forces, massive cross-sections can be selectively weakened. This approach is low vibration and well suited to sensitive environments or adjacent existing components. In reinforced armored concrete, splitting is often combined with subsequent separating work to cleanly separate exposed steel content.
Concrete pulverizer for tough fracture behavior
Concrete pulverizers reduce the concrete portion of the component by crushing and enable the gradual exposure of dense reinforcement. When needed, high-performance concrete crushers support efficient size reduction. In combination with steel shear or hydraulic demolition shear, the exposed reinforcement is then cut. This produces manageable piece sizes for transport and recycling. Performance depends significantly on correct tool selection, sufficient drive power and a logical deconstruction grid.
Occupational safety, permits and environmental aspects
Deconstruction work on reinforced armored concrete requires careful planning of protective measures. These include dust suppression (e.g., wetting, dust extraction), noise control and vibration management, safe load transfer, protection against falling parts, and the control of hydraulic pressure and hose routing. Permit and notification procedures are project-specific and should be considered early, comprehensively and responsibly. The separate collection of concrete debris and steel scrap supports the recycling rate and reduces disposal effort.
Sequence and coordination in special demolition
An effective sequence is aligned with the project goals: preservation of adjacent structural element, minimization of downtime, defined piece sizes, logistical routes and safety. A possible pattern includes preliminary investigation, exposing edges, targeted weakening (e.g., splitting), controlled removal with concrete pulverizer and subsequent cutting of the reinforcement. Hydraulic power pack must be sized to provide performance reserves for hard zones. Ongoing quality assurance checks tool service life, tool wear and interfaces to transport logistics and recycling.
Practical relevance to areas of application
Reinforced armored concrete components occur in concrete demolition and special demolition frequently as walls, slabs, shafts or foundations that were strengthened for safety reasons. In building gutting and concrete cutting, openings are created or component edges are prepared before size reduction. In rock excavation and tunnel construction, one encounters post-strengthening, impact beams or massive bracing, where the combination of hydraulic splitter and concrete pulverizer has proven itself. In natural stone extraction, the splitting principles come from rock and are methodically transferred to massive concretes. Special demolition includes projects with special protection requirements, where vibration and noise control as well as precise process guidance are the focus.
Material separation, logistics and recycling
Efficient separation of concrete and steel is a key to project success. Exposing the reinforcement with a concrete pulverizer and subsequent cutting with steel shear or hydraulic demolition shear creates pure fractions. Piece sizes are selected to optimize transport and recovery. Clear logistics—from intermediate storage to haulage logistics—shortens downtime and reduces risks on the construction site.
Terminological classification and delineation
“Reinforced armored concrete” is used in practice as a collective term and overlaps with high-performance concrete, fibre-reinforced concrete and components with additional steel cladding or composite element. While high-strength concretes are primarily defined by compressive strength, reinforced armored concrete in projects often describes the overall system of concrete, dense reinforcement and supplementary protective layers. For planning and deconstruction, the reliable determination of the actual component properties on site is therefore more important than the term itself—and the method- and tool selection aligned with it, for example concrete pulverizer or hydraulic splitter in combination with powerful hydraulic power pack from Darda GmbH.




















