--- slug: reversible-mechanical-connection type: pattern summary: "Designing a joint so a full assembly and disassembly cycle leaves both components fit for inspection, repair, or reuse." created: 2026-05-06 updated: 2026-05-13 related: nine-r-framework: relation: depends-on note: "The R-strategies hierarchy explains why an intact component normally preserves more value than recovered material." buildings-material-banks: relation: supports note: "A material bank depends on components that can leave the building without losing identity, geometry, or useful condition." bolt-dont-weld: relation: specialized-by note: "Bolt Don't Weld is one common structural expression of the broader reversible-connection pattern." layered-construction-sequencing: relation: complements note: "A reversible joint works only when the construction sequence leaves the release path reachable." connection-hierarchy-mapping: relation: used-by note: "Connection hierarchy mapping decides which joints deserve full reversibility, one-time release, or ordinary permanence." disassembly-documentation-set: relation: supported-by note: "The documentation set preserves the release sequence, tools, inspections, and performance duties attached to each joint." reused-structural-steel: relation: enables note: "Reusable steel members often depend on bolted or otherwise removable connections that preserve member geometry." clt-mass-timber: relation: related note: "Mass-timber reuse depends on connection systems that limit damage to panels, beams, and columns during release." disassembly-theory: relation: prevents note: "A connection that cannot be released without damage turns many disassembly claims into intention rather than recoverability." iso-20887: relation: informed-by note: "ISO 20887 frames reversibility, accessibility, simplicity, independence, and recoverability as design considerations." --- # Reversible Mechanical Connection > **Pattern** > > A named solution to a recurring problem. *Design the joint so at least one full assembly and disassembly cycle leaves both joined components fit for inspection, repair, or reuse.* *Also known as: Demountable Connection; Dry Connection; Releasable Joint; Decomposable Connection* A reversible mechanical connection lets parts work now and come apart later. Don't ask whether the detail looks removable. Ask whether crews can find it, unload it, release it with tools, and inspect components without making scrap. ## Understand This First - [R-Strategies (R0–R9 / 9R Framework)](nine-r-framework.md) — the value hierarchy. - [Buildings as Material Banks (BAMB)](buildings-material-banks.md) — the asset logic. - [Bolt Don't Weld](bolt-dont-weld.md) — the familiar structural version. - [Layered Construction Sequencing](layered-construction-sequencing.md) — release-path sequencing. > **📝 Scope** > > This entry describes a design pattern, not engineering, code-compliance, fire-safety, seismic, warranty, product-certification, or contract advice. A qualified professional decides project suitability. ## Context Circular buildings contain reusable candidates: beams, façade cassettes, ceiling rafts, timber panels, demountable partitions, raised-floor tiles, and service modules. They become reusable when their joints release cleanly. A reversible mechanical connection transfers load, restraint, alignment, seal, or fixing duty without making destruction the release method. Bolts, screws, pins, clamps, clips, wedges, dry bearings, gaskets, brackets, splines, keyed plates, snap-fit systems, and mortarless interlocks can qualify, but the same bolt fails if buried behind fire protection, corroded into place, undocumented, or tied to a duty future crews can't verify. ## Problem Wet trades, adhesives, welded joints, grouted sleeves, hidden screws, site-applied sealants, and composite assemblies may meet the first brief, then turn removal into cutting, grinding, breaking, scraping, or guessing. Damage reduces value. A bent bracket, torn vapour layer, crushed timber embedment zone, scarred steel section, or delaminated panel may fail inspection. If the future owner can't tell how the joint worked, whether it was overloaded, which tool releases it, or what damage is acceptable, the component falls toward recycling or disposal. ## Forces - **First-build speed.** Permanent joints can be cheap, familiar, strong, and quick to inspect. - **Second-use evidence.** Reuse needs intact geometry, identity, known history, and non-destructive release. - **Repeatability varies.** Removal can cost stiffness, tolerance, thread quality, gasket compression, coating protection, or fire-rating evidence. - **Access is part of the joint.** A fastener hidden behind bonded finishes or inaccessible services is not practically removable. - **Performance duties remain.** Fire, structure, moisture, acoustic, blast, security, corrosion, and seismic requirements can make reversibility inappropriate. ## Solution Design the connection around release. A future crew must find the joint, understand its duty, unload it, release it with documented tools, support the component, inspect both sides, and then reinstall, repair, certify, or route it onward. Classify the release cycle before selecting hardware: never, once at end of first use, several times across a façade, fit-out, or service life, or often for maintenance. Repeat-use joints need predictable wear, parts, and inspection criteria. Select the least destructive joint that satisfies the duty. In steel, that often means bolted plates, splice details, standardized member lengths, and corrosion protection. In timber, it may mean bolted steel plates, removable screws, accessible concealed connectors, or hybrid systems that protect the reusable member. In façades and interiors, it may mean cassette brackets, clips, dry gaskets, screwed tracks, replaceable seals, and modular service interfaces. Leave evidence. Drawings identify the joint, not merely a fastener symbol. Specifications state torque, access, tool, sequence, coating, replacement part, inspection, and exceptions. BIM objects and material passports carry the same release logic. > **⚠️ Warning** > > Don't call a joint reversible because it has a bolt. If the bolt is hidden, seized, undocumented, over-painted, structurally ambiguous, or impossible to unload, removal may still be destructive. ## How It Plays Out - In a steel-framed extension, welded shop assemblies may remain while member-to-member site connections become accessible bolted joints. Drawings reserve tool space, fire protection leaves release points reachable, and handover records member grade, connection type, bolt specification, coating, inspection record, and safe unloading order. - In mass timber, a screwed plate may look removable while repeated release damages fibres, enlarges holes, reduces stiffness, or compromises performance. The team either preserves the panel and connector through one expected release or provides sacrificial zones for future fasteners. - In a façade cassette, the panel is clipped and bracketed, not bonded into a one-piece wall. Gaskets are replaceable, drainage parts separate, the bracket line remains accessible, and the sequence names trim pieces, lifting points, and seals to replace before reinstallation. - In interior fit-out, demountable partitions, raised floors, service rafts, ceiling grids, and loose-laid or mechanically fixed finishes can leave without turning the floorplate into mixed waste. Storage, cleaning, repair, and restocking still matter; the joints keep the option alive. ## Consequences **Benefits** - Preserves condition, geometry, identity, and inspection evidence for R3 reuse, R4 repair, and R5 refurbishment. - Makes material passports credible because the recorded component has a route out. - Reduces damage during maintenance, tenant churn, façade renewal, service replacement, and deconstruction. - Separates high-value recoverable joints from ordinary permanent joints through connection hierarchy mapping. - Gives future contractors a testable release method, not a vague disassembly-design claim. **Liabilities** - Adds design time, coordination, product selection, tolerance management, inspection effort, and first cost. - May require visible fixings, access panels, cover plates, service clearances, replaceable gaskets, or sacrificial parts. - Shifts risk forward if removable hardware lacks load paths, fire duties, corrosion exposure, or release sequence. - Doesn't guarantee reuse; the component still needs testing, certification, market demand, storage, insurance acceptance, and a lawful route into the next project. - Can be wrong where permanence gives safer performance, lower whole-life carbon, better durability, or lower maintenance risk. ## Sources - ISO's [ISO 20887:2020 standard page](https://www.iso.org/standard/69370.html) covers disassembly and adaptability for buildings, civil engineering works, constituent parts, owners, designers, constructors, deconstructors, regulators, and financiers. - BAMB's [Reversible Building Design topic page](https://www.bamb2020.eu/topics/reversible-building-design/) and [Reversible Building Design guidelines and protocol](https://www.bamb2020.eu/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Reversible-Building-Design-guidelines-and-protocol.pdf) cover transformation capacity, reuse potential, disassembly planning, and connection design. - Elma Durmisevic's [*Transformable Building Structures: Design for Disassembly as a Way to Introduce Sustainable Engineering to Building Design and Construction*](https://research.utwente.nl/en/publications/transformable-building-structures-design-for-disassembly-as-a-way-) supplies BAMB's decomposable-connection lineage. - Lisa-Mareike Ottenhaus and colleagues' [review of reversible timber connection systems](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2023.132823) covers timber adaptability, disassembly, reuse, and fastener-family limits. - The U.S. EPA's [best practices for reducing, reusing, and recycling construction and demolition materials](https://www.epa.gov/smm/best-practices-reducing-reusing-and-recycling-construction-and-demolition-materials) lists visible, accessible connections and bolts and screws. - The Steel Construction Institute's [*Protocol for Reusing Structural Steel*](https://www.steel-sci.com/assets/downloads/steel-reuse-protocol-v06.pdf) gives inspection, testing, grouping, declaration, and EN 1090 routes for reclaimed structural steel. --- - [Next: Layered Construction Sequencing](layered-construction-sequencing.md) - [Previous: Bolt Don't Weld](bolt-dont-weld.md)