Renaissance GroupA Super Structures company
Lessons

Units & Conversions

Units & Conversions
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Units & Conversions

Welcome

Hello, and welcome. This is Super Structures General Contractors — a national general contractor headquartered in Powhatan, Virginia — here to help you and your clients build something that lasts. We're glad you're with us, and we look forward to connecting with you.

Here's one that matters more than its name lets on — Units & Conversions. Here's the big idea to walk away with: Convert inches to decimal feet (inches ÷ 12) for calculations — and know metric for international or metric specs. Nail it, and it pays you back on every job you ever run.

The trades use a mix of units — being fluent with them saves time and prevents mistakes.

Feet and inches

Converting

Going Deeper (Intermediate)

Construction constantly converts units: inches↔feet (×/÷12), sq ft↔sq yd (÷9), cu ft↔cu yd (÷27), decimal feet↔feet-inches, and imperial↔metric (25.4 mm = 1 in). Getting a conversion wrong throws off material orders by a lot.

Advanced / Pro-Level

The conversions pros do daily:

Practice Challenge

You pour a slab needing 270 cubic feet of concrete. How many cubic yards do you order, and why round up? (Answer: 270 ÷ 27 = 10 CY; you'd order ~11 CY — round up for waste, spillage, and uneven subgrade, because a short pour creates a cold joint and you can't easily add to a partial slab.)

In Practice

A plan dimension reads 8.5 feet. That's not 8 feet 5 inches — 0.5 ft × 12 = 6 inches, so it's 8'-6". Mixing up decimal feet and feet-and-inches is a classic, costly error.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Takeaway: Convert inches to decimal feet (inches ÷ 12) for calculations — and know metric for international or metric specs.

Educational overview — confirm structural and layout specifics with the project plans and engineer.

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