Skip to main content

Collaborative approach is delivering the Queensferry Crossing

The Queensferry Crossing forms the centrepiece of a major upgrade to the cross-Forth transport corridor in the east of Scotland. It will be the longest three-tower, cable-stayed bridge in the world and represents a Scottish Government capital investment of more than €1.5 billion. The 2.7km Queensferry Crossing is alongside the Forth Road Bridge and will carry the M90 motorway across the Firth of Forth between Lothian, at South Queensferry, and Fife, at North Queensferry. Each of the three towers are 207m
March 28, 2017 Read time: 4 mins
Queensferry Crossing takes shape
The Queensferry Crossing forms the centrepiece of a major upgrade to the cross-Forth transport corridor in the east of Scotland. It will be the longest three-tower, cable-stayed bridge in the world and represents a Scottish Government capital investment of more than €1.5 billion.

The 2.7km Queensferry Crossing is alongside the Forth Road Bridge and will carry the M90 motorway across the Firth of Forth between Lothian, at South Queensferry, and Fife, at North Queensferry. Each of the three towers are 207m high.

Scotland’s weather can often be extreme and has played its part during construction. The bridge was due to be completed by last December. But completion was put back to May this year due to weather delays. Media reports showed that 25 days were lost due to high winds during April and May last year. Any products or processes that can keep the project on schedule is vitally important.

The bridge will need around 4km of new connecting roads. But it is more than just a bridge. It also will carry an array of utilities and communications equipment, making Queensferry Crossing one of the UK’s most utility-complex bridges. This presented a supply chain challenge to the partnership between cable management specialist voestalpine Metsec, mechanical and electrical fixings supplier MEF and contractor SES Engineering Services (SES).

The 250tonne steel bridge sections arrive in Rosyth docks from China, where they are then prefabricated to incorporate all of the services and road surfaces. Specialist cold roll-forming company voestalpine Metsec - part of the voestalpine engineering group based in Linz, Austria – is supplying the cable management systems. These are prefabricated into 424 modules by SES and then installed into each of the 110 finished 750tonne road section decks. They are then taken out by barge onto the River Forth for lifting by crane to connect to the span between the bridge towers.

All of the cable management products used had to be pre-approved by the construction contractors, the Forth Crossing Bridge Constructors Consortium (FCBC): 981 HOCHTIEF Solutions, 1021 American Bridge International, 4761 Dragados and 8288 Morrison Construction. Extreme temperatures meant it was essential that thermal extension couplers for cable management were designed into the project with the support of the Metsec team.
“MEF is part of the SES-approved supply chain because the company can supply cable management systems we needed in bespoke sizes, vitally important in terms of minimising waste and ensuring ease of fit,” says Gordon Cullen, contracts manager at SES. “MEF was willing to adapt the units to minimise the number of joints required.”

Metsec supplied hot-dip galvanised cable trays and cable ladders cut to special lengths, the trays to 3.5m and the ladders to 6.9m. The finished modules assembled by SES will hold a complex array of water management and cabling needs, from lighting and power, traffic management systems, security, fire alarms, radio communications, structural health monitoring and building monitoring, all designed to give optimal control over the management and performance of the bridge.

“It’s a highly complex installation that effectively acts as the ‘brains’ of the bridge,” says Cullen. “They control everything from the timing of the lights to maintenance planning with a focus on optimising efficiency and communications not just on the bridge but on how it communicates with the traffic management systems that feed into it.”

The bridge’s 55micron hot-dipped galvanised steel tray and ladder systems will need to endure exposure to the elements for up to two years before being completely sealed in under the bridge, explains Alistair Fairweather, sales manager at MEF. “The high quality of the product will contribute to keeping the whole life costs of the project down.”

“We knew we had the capability to reprogramme our mill to allow us to manufacture the specified lengths of ladder and tray in a way that would fit perfectly into the required modules,” says Jon Hillier, director at Metsec cable management division. “Working with MEF meant that we could offer just-in-time capabilities to support tight prefabrication scheduling for each bridge deck.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Quebec to build new Mercier Bridge for Montreal city
    May 12, 2017
    The Canadian province of Quebec plans to build a US$219 million bridge across the St Lawrence River alongside the existing Mercier Bridge in the city of Montreal. Provincial government cabinet ministers Pierre Moreau and Geoff Kelley confirmed that a new bridge is forthcoming, but gave schedule for procurement or construction start, according to local media. However, Moreau said the work will begin probably before the new Champlain Bridge is finished at the start of 2019. Construction of the new Champlain B
  • Cranes help construct major bridge project in CHina
    September 8, 2014
    A number of tower cranes have helped complete the Chishi Grand Bridge project in China Six Potain tower cranes were used to build two 280m tall bridge pylons, high in the clouds above the mountains of southern China. The cranes spent 30 months building the pylons at the Chishi Grand Bridge, which will span 1.47km and carry its road deck 180m above the ground. The bridge will open at the end of 2014.
  • New bridge is spanning China’s Yangtze River
    June 28, 2013
    There is massive development in design and construction of bridges in China and the Yingwuzhou Bridge over the Yangtze River is one key project – Mike Woof reports, with assistance from Route One’s Chinese publishing partner *CMTM Called the Mother River, the Yangtze is a focal point for China politically, economically and culturally. The river has been at the heart of China’s development for millennia, its history stretching back as far as the dawn of human civilisation. The name Yangtze, or Yangzi, is its
  • Major Europe-Asia bridge connection in Turkey
    July 1, 2014
    The 3rd Bosporus Bridge and the Northern Marmara Motorway will improve transport links between Europe and Asia and cut chronic congestion in Istanbul, Turkey’s largest city - Mike Woof reports Work is now well underway on the 3rd Bosporus Bridge and the Northern Marmara Motorway, providing a new link for Turkish city Istanbul and the region as a whole. This enormous bridge and highway project is breaking several records for Turkey in terms of scale, as well as setting a number of international records for e