Skip to main content

St Helena receiving airport upgrade

Two Liebherr machines, one LR 1200 crawler crane and one HS 895 HD duty cycle crawler crane, are currently employed in the construction of an international airport on Saint Helena. The island’s seclusion poses a particular challenge for this project Saint Helena, known as Napoleon’s last exile, is one of the oldest British colonies and is definitely one of the most remote places on earth. Located more than 2,000km from the African mainland in the South Atlantic Ocean, the British Overseas Territory Saint H
June 30, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
New crane is helping with airport construction project
Two Liebherr machines, one LR 1200 crawler crane and one HS 895 HD duty cycle crawler crane, are currently employed in the construction of an international airport on Saint Helena. The island’s seclusion poses a particular challenge for this project

Saint Helena, known as Napoleon’s last exile, is one of the oldest British colonies and is definitely one of the most remote places on earth. Located more than 2,000km from the African mainland in the South Atlantic Ocean, the British Overseas Territory Saint Helena has only been accessible by ship to date.
Starting from Cape Town, South Africa, for instance, the journey currently takes about five days. In order to improve the transport infrastructure to and from the island an international airport has been under construction since early 2012.

For this project two Liebherr cranes, belonging to the South African construction group Basil Read, were delivered to Saint Helena. The powerful LR 1200 crawler crane with a lifting capacity of 200tonnes was shipped in 33 separate sections from the port of Walvis Bay, Namibia, to Saint Helena at the beginning of 2014. Only a few weeks later an HS 895 HD duty cycle crawler crane arrived on the island.

Not only was the distance challenging, but also the permissible transport weight proved to be an aggravating factor. The HS 895 HD had to be disassembled into single parts, each weighing less than 40tonnes, in order to be loaded onto the ship. The winch, the A-frame, the rear counterweight cylinder as well as the boom back stops had to be removed from the crane. The airport is being built on Prosperous Bay Plain in the east of the island at an estimated cost of some €270 million.

This is one of the largest areas of relatively level ground on the mountainous island. After the scheduled completion of the airport in 2016 it will be sufficient for the landing of most short and medium range aircraft. This will not only boost the touristic ambitions and the economic development of the island but will also be of strategic importance for international air traffic as a stopover for airlines operating Cross-Atlantic flight routes.

Related Content

  • Faroes: NCC careful of Sandoy Tunnel work around St Magnus Cathedral
    March 17, 2020
    NCC is careful to not disturb the 800-year old St Magnus Cathedral on Sandoy Island.
  • Liebherr R 980 SME crawler excavator for quarry
    January 12, 2017
    The German family-run company Pongratz Schotterwerk, in Ensdorf-Wolfsbach/Bavaria, has been using a Liebherr R 980 SME crawler excavator in a limestone quarry since May. The 100tonne excavator - which replaces an R 954 S-HD - is working at the quarry face loading dumper trucks. Developed and manufactured in Colmar, eastern France, the Liebherr crawler excavator has an operating weight of around 100tonnes. The 420kW diesel engine complies with the exhaust emissions standards of Stage IIIB/tier 4i. After b
  • Russian firm uses crane to help bridge building
    May 5, 2015
    Russian construction company BaltMostStroy has been using a Sennebogen 7700 crawler crane to build bridges along a new freeway route The 300tonne capacity crawler crane has been used to lift prefabricated parts weighing as much as 100tonnes onto the concrete foundations. LLC Lonmadi in St Petersburg is Sennebogen’s Russian sales and service partner and supplied the contractor with the 7700 crawler crane. This versatile crawler crane is being used on demanding infrastructure construction work in Russia. A
  • Kuwait’s key causeway contract under construction
    July 4, 2016
    A new causeway, crossing the Bay of Kuwait, is under construction and providing a major engineering challenge - Mike Woof reports. The new Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah Causeway Project being built across the Bay of Kuwait is a massive engineering project that is costing around US$3 billion in all. This highly complex project involves the design, build, completion and maintenance of the causeway, which spans Kuwait Bay between Kuwait City and the Subiyah area. The 36km Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah Cau