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

  • Solving congestion in Brisbane
    August 2, 2012
    Rapid growth in a major Australian city in recent years has created new problems for the infrastructure and especially transport Expansion in the city of Brisbane, the Queensland state capital and the third largest city in the country, is set to continue and some 1,500 people arrive/week from within Australia and from other parts of the world. At this rate by 2026 the city's population should increase by 1.4 million: at present it is 1.8 million. To cope, the Queensland government and city council have ini
  • Aggregate machinery makers raise the efficiency bar
    May 22, 2018
    Manufacturers of crushers and screens are making their equipment more efficient as well as quieter. Among new entrants into the jaw crusher market is the MC 120 Pro, from Writgen company Kleemann. It was launched last September at the industry trade fair in Homberg/Nieder-Ofleiden, Germany. Both the diesel-electric jaw crusher – operating as part of an interlinked machine combination additionally comprising the MCO 11 PRO cone crusher and MS 953 EVO screening plant – and the MBRG 2000 granulator showed off
  • Toggenburger takes two Terex cranes to tackle a Swiss tandem lift
    August 21, 2015
    Two of the largest cranes in Switzerland recently were called upon to lift an 884tonne, 162m-long connecting bridge between two buildings at the Coop distribution centre in Schafisheim. “The individual bridge components had enormous gross weights of up to 275tonnes and required us to use working radii of up to 29m,” said Andre Huber, project manager at Toggenburger, the company that took on the task. To get the job done, Toggenburger rolled out its biggest machinery which also happen to be the two lar
  • Meva’s Mammut 350 formwork makes the difference for Neckar viaduct
    April 19, 2018
    Formwork specialist Meva is helping replace the longest motorway bridge, the Neckar River viaduct in Germany’s south-west state Baden-Wuerttemberg Work on the 1.3km Neckar viaduct, part of the A6 motorway at Heilbronn, should be finished by 2022. It is part of the A6 expansion project between the Weinberger junction and Wiesloch/Rauenberg. The project is officially the new Neckar viaduct BAB 6 at Heilbronn. Federal Motorway 6, the A6, is also known as the BAB 6. The 477km motorway starts at the French b