Pour enough elevated slabs and you learn a simple truth: speed without safety is a fantasy. The HORIZON system — made in Hustpark Building No. 4, Zhongxing East Street, Xingtai, Hebei, China — leans into both. The tables roll and fly without dismantling, which, to be honest, is what foremen quietly crave on tight schedules.
Industry trend check: high-rises are getting taller, cycles are getting shorter, and labor is tight. It seems that integrated, reusable table formwork with predictable load paths is winning over stick-built solutions. Not everywhere, sure, but on projects where repetition pays — malls, parking decks, residential towers — it’s a no-brainer.
| Table module size | ≈ 3.0×5.0 m (others on request) |
| Permissible load | ≈ 5.0 kN/m² (real-world use may vary; verify per design) |
| Decking | 18–21 mm film-faced plywood or LVL; optional plastic facing |
| Main beams | Aluminum or steel primary beams with secondary joists |
| Support/props | Adjustable legs with spindles; caster dollies for rolling |
| Move method | Horizontal rolling; vertical crane “fly” with fork/frames |
| Expected service life | ≈ 200–300 cycles with proper care |
Testing-wise, Horizon submits tables to EN 12812 falsework checks and internal load-cell tests. On one recent batch, deflection measured ≈ 2 mm at 5 kN/m² — comfortably under typical criteria for temporary works. Of course, your slab thickness, rebar congestion, and pour rate change the math.
| Vendor | Module Range | Typical Load | Notable Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| HORIZON | ≈ 2.4–5.0 m spans | ≈ 5.0 kN/m² | Roll/fly without dismantling; customizable legs/edges |
| Vendor A | ≈ 2.0–4.5 m | ≈ 4.0–5.0 kN/m² | Lightweight alu beams; quick-release heads |
| Vendor B | Custom only | Project-specific | Integrated edge protection; site training package |
Edge infill beams, drop-heads for early striking, laminated faces for architectural finishes, fire-retardant plywood, and bay-specific caster frames. I’ve even seen corner “dog-ears” for tight core turns — surprisingly handy.
Residential tower, 38 stories: crew reported a one-day cycle on typical floors with table formwork plus pre-tied rebar mats. Another job — a hospital podium — shaved two weeks by rolling tables under a weather deck while pours continued. “The consistency saved our rework budget,” the site engineer told me. I guess that’s the quiet metric that matters.
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