Skip to main content

Crane versatility helps with bridge building

The versatility and mobility of a Terex crawler crane has helped enormously with the construction of a new road bridge in Luxemburg. The Terex Superlift 3800 lattice boom crawler crane owned by Trier-based Steil Kranarbeiten was used to build a bridge in Luxemburg only two days after the same machine was used on a job in the Hunsrück mountain range. The machine was needed to lift a 440m long bridge across a valley, connecting a new section of highway.
August 14, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Terex crawler crane carries out tricky bridge lift in Luxeumburg

The versatility and mobility of a Terex crawler crane has helped enormously with the construction of a new road bridge in Luxemburg.

The 1222 Terex Superlift 3800 lattice boom crawler crane owned by Trier-based Steil Kranarbeiten was used to build a bridge in Luxemburg only two days after the same machine was used on a job in the Hunsrück mountain range. The machine was needed to lift a 440m long bridge across a valley, connecting a new section of highway. To do this, the machine had to lift 14 steel girders and set them down on concrete piers. The components forming part of the bridge were substantial items measuring 96m long, 7m high and, together with the required load-securing devices, weighing in at 295tonnes each. To lift the 14 loads, Steil’s team erected the Superlift 3800 crawler crane with a 72m main boom, 250tonnes of counterweight on the superstructure, 50tonnes of central ballast, and 200tonnes of counterweight on the superlift tray. To provide stability when lifting a load of such dimensions, Steil’s rigging team configured the vario hookblock with dual hooks and a spreader.

The contractor used two hoisting wire ropes and 10-part reeving, which meant that, at 18tonnes/reeving, it needed a maximum lifting force of 360tonnes. To place the girders in their supporting pylons, the operator first lifted them to a height of 22m, swiveled them to the side, and then moved the crane forward about 50m in the direction of the bridge piers. To provide sufficient ground stability, the crawling path was rigged with steel plates.  Once the operator advanced the full 5m, the load was then swivelled back in and set it down on the corresponding bridge pier at a working radius of 23.5m.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Terex Superlift 3800 crane rises to the challenge in Alsace
    May 14, 2015
    Crane service provider Sarens has used a Terex Superlift 3800 lattice boom crawler crane to lift a pedestrian and bicycle steel bridge over the A4 Autoroute near Schiltigheim, in the Aisace region of France. The job was out of the ordinary, according to the Sarens Group, a transport and specialised rigging specialist based in Wolvertem, Belgium. “We didn’t have a special permit for a heavy-load transport with the required weight,” said Sarens project manager Joost Elsen.
  • Toggenburger takes two Terex cranes to tackle a Swiss tandem lift
    August 21, 2015
    Two of the largest cranes in Switzerland recently were called upon to lift an 884tonne, 162m-long connecting bridge between two buildings at the Coop distribution centre in Schafisheim. “The individual bridge components had enormous gross weights of up to 275tonnes and required us to use working radii of up to 29m,” said Andre Huber, project manager at Toggenburger, the company that took on the task. To get the job done, Toggenburger rolled out its biggest machinery which also happen to be the two lar
  • Working in tandem
    August 16, 2018
    A tandem crane lift has been carried out in Kuwait on a major project in using Demag machines from Terex. The two machines have been used on the Kuwaiti government's Sheikh Jaber Al Ahmad Al Sabah Causeway Project. This 36km-long road connection is among the world's largest infrastructure projects underway at present. The project includes a 27km-long bridge over Kuwait Bay. The Kuwaiti logistics service provider Integrated Logistics Company (ILC) is carrying out key sections of the project, moving pre-a
  • Terex cranes in a tight spot in Michigan
    February 6, 2017
    Terex cranes have been involved in a multiple bridge repair project in the US More than 96,000 vehicles per day travel a stretch of I-96, including its 52-year-old bridges. The Michigan Department of Transportation is in the midst of a two-year US$77 million project to repair bridges and relieve increasing congestion along Interstate 96 at the U.S. Highway 23 interchange in Livingston County. Toebe Construction along with joint venture partner Kamminga & Roodvoets are bringing in a lot of lifting powe