Skip to main content

Bridge deck launched for the New Wear Crossing, Sunderland (Video)

March 30, 2017

The 300m bridge deck of Sunderland’s New Wear Crossing has been successfully launched across the river.

The 4,750tonne concrete and steel deck was resting on the south side of the River Wear from where it was inched across to touch the north side in a 20-hour operation. It had to slide through the twin arched towers of the bridge’s double pylon on its way to its final position to connect the city regions of Pallion to the south and Castletown to the north.

The temporary blue steel nose will soon be removed and the remaining 40m section of deck will be built in-situ on the north side this summer.

The project to build the New Wear Crossing started in May 2015 and completion is expected in the spring of 2018. The bridge is phase two of the Sunderland Strategic Transport Corridor, which is a five-phase plan to improve links between the A19 and Sunderland City Centre and the Port of Sunderland.

Scaffolding attached to the top of the pylon will enable cable stays to be fitted, which will be attached to the deck and gradually stressed to take the weight of the bridge later this year. After that, the blue steel temporary towers supporting the deck will be removed and then lighting, road markings and safety features will be added.
Simon Fryer, a technical director of Buro Happold Engineering, who led the team that designed the bridge, said it’s been three years of hard but exciting work.

UK-based 1622 Farrans Construction and Belgian bridge specialist Victor Buck Steel Construction formed a partnership to create the FVB Joint Venture, main contractor for the bridge. FVB JV’s design team is led by Buro Happold Engineering and Roughan & O'Donovan, as well as independent checker 6801 Ramboll.

Victor Buyck Steel spent a year fabricating the pylon at its canal-side yard in Ghent. Because of its size, 8569 Sarens, a global heavy lifting and engineering transport specialist, was called in to gingerly shift the completed pylon onto two canal barges for transport along the canal to the sea port. Sarens transferred the pylon onto one, larger 100m-long seagoing barge.

When the pylon arrived about 1.5km off the coast at Sunderland, it was met by harbour tugs which brought it into port. On a specific high tide, it was carefully towed about 4.5km upriver to the site of the cofferdam between Pallion and Castletown.

The New Wear Crossing is the first bridge to be built over the River Wear in Sunderland for more than 40 years. World Highways recently featured the work as a <%$Linker:

2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 29953 0 oLinkExternal key project report Visit Key Project Report page false /categories/road-highway-structures/features/sunderlands-new-wear-crossing-takes-shape/ false false%> in the magazine and on the website.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Peri launched UP MDS Formwork at INTERMAT 2012
    February 3, 2012
    Peri is unveiling its new UP MDS shoring tower to all markets outside France at INTERMAT 2012. The shoring tower is equipped with working platforms hanging from the handrails, providing a high level of security during the erection and dismantling phases, and a significantly reduced exposure to musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs). The working platform sets an automatic working position 1m below the handrail and follows the top of the tower. The system improves productivity by optimising weight (total weight of
  • VIDEO: Broadway Bridge defies demolition experts, for a time
    October 12, 2016
    A 100-year old steel arch bridge in the United States stood firm for a time against the blasts laid down by demolition experts.

    The structure connected the cities of Little Rock and North Little Rock in the state of Arkansas. It carried U.S. Route 70 but was finally closed on 28 September.

    Although Broadway Bridge, spanning the Arkansas River, was built almost a century ago, the steel arches were added 60 years later as part of a strengthening project to the under-structure to widen the river navigation channel.
  • Bentley announces finalists for the 2017 Be Inspired Awards
    August 11, 2017
    AECOM, Arcadis-WSP/PB, CH2M-Fairhurst and Highways England are among the finalists for this year’s Bentley awards for outstanding use of BIM – building information modelling. Bentley Systems, a provider of infrastructure software solutions, said that the winners will be announced at The Year in Infrastructure 2017 Conference to be held in Singapore this year, October 10-12. “The annual awards honour the extraordinary work of Bentley users advancing infrastructure design, construction, and operations through
  • Seoul, city of contemplation and the 25th World Road Congress
    March 18, 2015
    It’s been a decade since South Korea’s capital city Seoul took the bold step of replacing a major urban throughway with a park, complete with a river, to create the Cheonggyecheon Walkway. Now, Seoul is getting ready to host the 25th World Road Congress from November 2-5. The event is being produced in cooperation with the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport of the Republic of Korea, the Korea Expressway Corporation, the Korea Road & Transportation Association and the PIARC Korean National Commit