Skip to main content

New Wear Crossing cables fully installed and tensioned to 50%

Structural engineering company VSL International has installed all 28 cable stays of England’s New Wear Crossing and stressed them to 50% of their design load. The next stage of stressing the cables will happen next month and be to 100% of design load. This will allow the construction team to adjust and tension them just enough to lift the bridge deck off the blue steel temporary supports that were constructed in the river to take the weight of the structure.
September 21, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
Looking good: The 28 cable stays are fully installed on the New Wear Crossing and tensioned to 50 percent.

Structural engineering company 1569 VSL International has installed all 28 cable stays of England’s New Wear Crossing and stressed them to 50% of their design load.

The next stage of stressing the cables will happen next month and be to 100% of design load. This will allow the construction team to adjust and tension them just enough to lift the bridge deck off the blue steel temporary supports that were constructed in the river to take the weight of the structure.
 
In the coming months, the temporary supports will be removed, leaving only the single central arched pylon and the bridge deck on display in the river.

Opening of the bridge is expected by spring of next year.

Finishing works, such as road surfacing, paving, lighting, the installation of railings and carrying out road markings, must all be complete before the cable stays can be finely adjusted and locked off at the end of construction.

 The 28 cable stays are installed in pairs north and south of the central pylon. Each cable stay is contained inside a white protective, plastic sheath. Inside each sheath, or tube, are between 44-77 strands, depending on a cable’s intended position on the deck, that form a single cable. They vary in length from 52-165m.

The longer the cable, the more strands there are. Each strand is the diameter of a small coin and will be tensioned to lift seven tonnes.

“People could be forgiven for thinking the bridge is very close to opening as the structure looks complete from a distance,” explained Stephen McCaffrey, project director for 1622 Farrans Construction and Victor Buyck Steel Construction, a joint venture to deliver the project on behalf of Sunderland City Council.

“We still have quite a lot to do, such as completing the road works on both sides of the river, getting the surface of the bridge deck finished and all of those additional works and safety features complete.”
 
Work began on the New Wear Crossing – Sunderland’s first bridge across the River Wear in more than 40 years – in May 2015.

The bridge become more recognisable with the 105m pylon being erected in February, the bridge deck launched across the river in spring and the installation of the cable stays during the summer.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Pre-stressed bridge decks use modular formwork system
    July 9, 2012
    Imaginative formwork, often using modular components, is helping to shape some challenging bridges worldwide. Patrick Smith reports Traffic volumes in and around Prague have swollen massively in recent years, pushing the existing road network to the limits of its capacity. To permanently ease congestion in the Czech capital's centre, a multi-lane orbital motorway is under construction as a high capacity bypass for central Prague and to link up all the motorways and other major highways radiating from the ci
  • Bridge formwork solutions complete big bridge picture
    July 2, 2014
    Advanced bridge formwork solutions are allowing contractors to complete vital major highway infrastructure projects covering Norway, Sweden, Estonia and Poland. Guy Woodford reports Building the Labbdalen bridges in Norway is a key feature of the E6 highway improvement programme. Main project contractor HÆHRE tasked RMD Kwikform and Teknikk with supplying a complete formwork and shoring solution that could tackle the challenging Norwegian terrain, whilst preserving the environment. Situated two hours
  • Rapid replacement of multiple bridges – the plan
    December 14, 2017
    The US State of Pennsylvania is saving itself $220 million over 10 years on a programme to replace 558 bridges with an unusual public private partnership approach - Kristina Smith writes It is called the Rapid Bridge Replacement Programme with good reason. Pennsylvania’s Department of Transport, PennDOT, wants to see no less than 558 structurally deficient bridges replaced with newly designed and constructed ones, all within four years. Using traditional forms of procurement this programme would be like
  • Work on St Petersburg bridge project
    June 20, 2016
    Contractor ICA Construction used two Aquajet robotic hydrodemolition machines at the top of a 120m-high bridge pylon located in the city of St Petersburg. The two Aquajet robotic water cutters were used to remove surplus concrete from around the inner steel structure of the bridge pylon. This link spans the River Neva and forms part of the Western High-Speed Diameter (WHSD) route in St Petersburg. The WHSD is a highly important route for the region and will provide a key connection between the Scandinavi