Skip to main content

Pressure is on Superslim formwork

Temporary works specialist Altrad RMD Kwikform - Altrad RMDK - is helping realign the A452 road over a new rail line for England’s future high-speed trains.
By David Arminas February 4, 2025 Read time: 3 mins
Superslim Soldiers are designed to handle high loads, which for the A452 realignment project, ensured that the formwork would remain stable under the pressure of the concrete (image courtesy Altrad RMD Kwikform)

 

Altrad RMDK is working with HS2’s construction partner for the Midlands region, Balfour Beatty VINCI (BBV), and civil engineering and groundworks contractor Galldris. The A452 Kenilworth Road Overbridge is a fully integral box structure with in-situ concrete base, abutments and wingwalls, spanning more than 76m. The project is part of the vast HS2 landscape realignment of the trunk A452 road over the new high speed rail line.

The structure was one of the highest concrete pours undertaken by Altrad RMDK in Europe to date with a pouring height of 13.5m to one of the main wingwalls. The project’s success was critical in maintaining the momentum of the HS2 timeline, highlighting the collaborative efforts of all involved.

The project presented a multitude of challenges due to the complex shape and weight of the bridge. One of the main challenges was overcoming the complex geometric patterns used for the wingwalls. These wingwalls tapered in height along their length and also along their width across the base. Not only this, but the external shutters lean into the internal face to taper in width across the height.

Where the wingwalls met the abutment walls, there was a complex movement joint that was required to allow for the expansion of the respective elements while still retaining the backfill that would eventually encapsulate the structure. The project demanded meticulous planning, coordination, and execution, with the additional pressure of adhering to a tight schedule.

Altrad RMDK and Galldris worked in partnership, bringing together expertise and resources from both organisations, which proved instrumental in overcoming the complex challenges posed by the project’s scope.

The contractor needed a solution that could be configured into various shapes and sizes. The solution was a custom specification to be engineered using Superslim Soldiers and Alform Aluminium Beams to meet the complex requirements.

Superslim Soldiers are designed to handle high loads, making them an ideal solution for a pour of this stature; they ensured that the formwork would remain stable under the pressure of the concrete. The beams helped maintain the structure’s shape and integrity during the entire pouring process, which was crucial in order to prevent deformities and ensure the accurate formation.

The Alform Beams provided a quick, durable and lightweight solution, allowing for simple installation, which was particularly advantageous on this high pour as moving and positioning formwork can be time and labour intensive.

Despite being lightweight, Alform Beams withstood the substantial pressure from the concrete. They worked alongside Superslim Soliders to ensure that formwork remained intact and stable throughout the pour. This was important as it was essential that the solutions maintained the tapering shapes and dimensions of the wingwalls throughout the pouring process.

“The A452 Kenilworth Overbridge project highlights Altrad RMD Kwikform’s engineering capabilities and innovative solutions,” said Stuart Grant, senior sales representative at Altrad RMD Kwikform. “Through partnerships, careful planning and the use of advanced equipment, the project demonstrated the effective collaboration needed for this infrastructure development.”

Altrad RMD Kwikform provides of formwork, falsework/shoring, heavy-duty support, ground shoring and safety and access systems, specialising in temporary structure needed to deliver major infrastructure and building projects. The company designs, hires and sells formwork, falsework/shoring, heavy-duty support, ground shoring as well as safety and access systems.

Key sectors include civil engineering and infrastructure, ground works, energy and industrial, commercial and multi-storey residential buildings. The company works in 3D designs and BIM (building information modelling)-compliant models through its visualisation software LocusEye.

 

Related Content

  • ACO’s Qmax Neo drainage for Costa Rica
    June 16, 2021
    Stormwater drainage by ACO is keeping dry some access roads for National Route 1, the Carretera Interamericana Norte (North Interamerican Road).
  • Bridge surface repair improves safety
    July 9, 2012
    Modern products are making life easier for those who have to look after bridges in need of repair Aproject to repair a bridge in the American state of Tennessee has brought safety benefits and improved the ride quality for drivers using the crossing. The Chickasaw Bridge spans the Ellington Parkway and it has benefited from a rehabilitation job by contractor Jamieson Construction. The roadway on the bridge was in a poor state and required frequent patching, and to tackle the problem, the Tennessee DOT consi
  • Balfour Beatty still bullish about 2021 results
    May 14, 2021
    However, the group’s most impacted business in Q1 remained UK construction where strong public sector infrastructure projects continue to be offset by the private sector market.
  • Zero emissions cement
    May 10, 2023
    An innovative zero emissions cement trial is starting in the UK, with the aim of developing net zero cement for the global construction industry