Skip to main content

Breakers break up bridge in US state of Mississippi

January 19, 2015
A US contractor has carried out a successful demolition job on a bridge using excavators fitted with hydraulic breakers. The fleet of 178 Caterpillar excavators used for the work managed to break up the ageing structure in just 11 hours. The old Pigeon Roost road bridge will now be replaced with another, more modern structure better able to carry the necessary traffic load. The 1500 Mississippi Department of Transportation filmed the job using time lapse techniques to show the 11 hour job condensed into just 49 stunning seconds.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Versatility for demolition and recycling
    July 31, 2012
    A growing demand for equipment to be used in recycling applications is helping boost the market for demolition attachments Manufacturers have been keen to invest in technology, developing new models and with more innovations to come. There are several key players in the hydraulic breaker sector, with Atlas Copco and Sandvik dominating this market segment. However other breaker manufacturers are major players too, including Indeco, Furukawa and NPK, while there are also specialist attachment producers such a
  • VIDEO - Bridge demolition going wrong
    June 17, 2015
    A bridge demolition job went spectacularly wrong in Finland recently. Luckily for all concerned, there were no casualties, but it could have quite easily been a different story. A demolition contractor was using an excavator fitted with a hydraulic breaker to break up the structure, but the work was carrying on despite live traffic flowing on the road under the bridge.

    Note too the behaviour of drivers on the route after the initial collapse.

    This video came just as the European Demolition Association headed to Finland’s capital Helsinki to discuss best practice.
  • VIDEO: Saskatoon bridge demolition removes final span
    November 18, 2016
    The final section of a defunct bridge in Saskatoon has now been removed by demolition contractor Rakowski Cartage & Wrecking. Excavators fitted with hydraulic breakers were employed by the firm to break up the final span, which collapsed into the river as planned. Demolition work to remove the defunct structure commenced in 2012. Other sections of the bridge were removed using explosive demolition earlier this year.
  • Bridge demolition easier with modern machines
    February 23, 2012
    The speedy and safe removal of old or unwanted structures is made easier with modern, sophisticated equipment, Patrick Smith reports. The power and versatility of modern demolition tools and machines was demonstrated when a bridge was removed overnight as part of a motorway widening project.