At 2:13 AM in Waynesboro, Georgia, crews were already deep into a process they couldn’t stop.
For 41 continuous hours, concrete flowed into the basemat of Vogtle Unit 4, the foundation that would anchor one of the newest nuclear reactors in the United States.
This episode breaks down:
What a nuclear basemat actually is
Why concrete is part of the safety system
The physics of heat, cracking, and radiation shielding
The choreography required to keep a 41-hour pour alive
And why this moment marks the point where a power plant becomes real
Watch: Vogtle Unit 4 Basemat Pour (Timelapse)
If you only watch one thing, make it this. It’s the closest you’ll get to seeing thousands of people collectively refuse to mess up.
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