Skip to main content

VIDEO: Sarens raises the pylon for New Wear Crossing in Sunderland

February 13, 2017
It was as weekend working in Sunderland city, northeast England, for global lifting specialist 8569 Sarens.

Over the two days, the Belgian company gently raised a 1,550tonne steel pylon that will form the backbone of the New Wear Crossing – no official name yet – across the River Wear.

General work on the two-span cable-stay bridge started on the bridge in May 2015. The structure will be supported by the single double pylon and will have four vehicle lanes, as well as dedicated cycle and pedestrian routes.

The New Wear Crossing is part of a strategic transport plan to link the Port of Sunderland and Sunderland city centre with the A19 main road. The bridge project is the key project report in the upcoming January/February issue of World Highways, available later this month.

The 336m steel and concrete bridge will be part of 2.8km of new road layout. Width of the bridge will be 25m and the longest span 240m.Completion is set for the spring 2018.

Victor Buyck Steel Construction, working with 1622 Farrans Construction, spent a year fabricating the pylon at its canal-side yard in Ghent, Belgium. Apart from the 1,550tonnes tonnes of steel, around 550tonnes of concrete went into making the pylon that, because of its size, had to be constructed in the open air.

Also because of its size, Sarens was called in to gingerly shift the completed pylon onto two canal barges for transport to the sea port. “The sheer size and weight of the pylon meant that it was never going to be an easy task,” said Jim Kilcar, bridge supervisor for contractor 3005 Atkins, which is overseeing the New Wear Crossing project for Sunderland City Council.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Sunderland’s Northern Spire bridge opens
    August 28, 2018
    Sunderland’s Northern Spire bridge with its 105m-high central A-frame pylon opens to traffic today after a four-month delay because of poor weather. The bridge opened for pedestrians and cyclists yesterday after three Sunderland-built Nissan vehicles first crossed the bridge during a ceremony to mark completion of the project. Work began in May 2015 and the bridge has been built within its allocated €129 million budget. However, poor weather conditions pushed back the opening of the bridge from this past
  • 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.

  • Cofferdams completed for Sunderland city’s New Wear River Crossing
    May 25, 2016
    In the UK, foundation work for Sunderland city’s new bridge is about to start as the huge cofferdam in the middle of the River Wear nears completion. Water has been drained out of the cofferdam, a large steel watertight structure within the river, to allow the building of pylons for the bridge deck. It is the first bridge to be built over the Wear in Sunderland for more than 40 years and is part of the wider strategic transport plan to link the Port of Sunderland and city centre with the A19 road.
  • Northern Spire wins award from UK’s Association for Project Management
    November 30, 2018
    The Northern Spire bridge in Sunderland, northern England, has beaten off stiff competition to win another national construction and engineering award. The Spire, which opened in August this year at a cost of €132 million, was named Project of the Year: Engineering, Construction and Infrastructure 2018 by the UK’s Association for Project Management. The award is the latest honour for Sunderland’s 105m-tall cable-stayed bridge which links Castletown on the north side of the River Wear with Pallion.