Skip to main content

Mersey Gateway Project reaches half-way point across the Mersey

The Mersey Gateway project in England has passed a significant milestone, with over half of the main bridge deck stretching across the River Mersey. Work to install stay cables on the main bridge also passed a key point, with installation of the 31st 150m long cable – the halfway point for stay cable installations on the pylon. When complete, 146 stay cables will support the 1km-long reinforced concrete bridge, with a combined load-bearing weight of more than 53,000tonnes. “We’re now more than 50
March 10, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
The 6126 Mersey Gateway project in England has passed a significant milestone, with over half of the main bridge deck stretching across the River Mersey.

Work to install stay cables on the main bridge also passed a key point, with installation of the 31st 150m long cable – the halfway point for stay cable installations on the pylon.
 
When complete, 146 stay cables will support the 1km-long reinforced concrete bridge, with a combined load-bearing weight of more than 53,000tonnes.
 
“We’re now more than 50% through this highly visual phase of the Mersey Gateway construction,” said Gareth Stuart, project director of the Merseylink construction joint venture. “People will be able to see the stay cables connected to the bridge deck as it emerges across the river week by week.”
 
Each stay cable consists of up to 91 steel strands that sit inside a stay pipe – the outer casing that provides protection from weathering. More than 1,300km of the strands will be used on the project.

Every single strand needs to be installed individually, explained Merseylink’s design manager, George Moir. “It’s gone well so far, and we’re installing around six stays per week from the three pylons. The first two strands are threaded through the stay pipe then the tower crane lifts the pipe up to the anchor point in the upper pylon where the top ends of the strands are fixed into place.
 
“The bottom ends of the strands are then attached to the anchor point in the bridge deck and stressed using a hydraulic system. This enables us to get the correct level of tension needed to support that segment of bridge deck,” said Moir. “We then use a winch system through the stay pipe to winch the remaining strands up one by one. Once all of the strands have been installed they sit in parallel inside the stay pipe to form the stay cable.”
 
The stay cables vary in length; with the shortest measuring approximately 41m and the longest measuring 226m.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Crushing and screening innovation for quarries
    November 5, 2012
    Novel crushing and screening developments are coming to market - Mike Woof reports A wide array of innovations and market developments are occurring in the sector for quarrying machinery. New technologies are being introduced while business developments are also changing the face of this market segment. There is strong interest in new technology from industry too and this was well highlighted by data from the organisers of the Hillhead quarry show in the UK. The organisers revealed that there was a jump of
  • Russia's key highway development project
    February 8, 2012
    One of the largest construction programmes in Europe is being carried out to get a Russian resort ready for the Winter Olympics. Patrick Smith reports
  • Russia's key highway development project
    May 28, 2012
    One of the largest construction programmes in Europe is being carried out to get a Russian resort ready for the Winter Olympics. Patrick Smith reports. Daytime temperatures top 30°C in September, and with hundreds of shops and hotels, it is not difficult to see why Sochi has become Russia's premier holiday playground. The city, on the east coast of the Black Sea, near the border with Georgia, bustles with tourists, and this is boosted with delegates at the 9th International Investment Forum Sochi 2010.
  • Peerless performance for Aggregate Industries on Nene Bridge job
    June 4, 2019
    Aggregate Industries is supplying its Lytacrete secondary aggregate solution for the US$6.5 million Nene Bridge structural refurbishment project near Peterborough, England.