Skip to main content

Northern Spire wins award from UK’s Association for Project Management

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.
November 30, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
The Northern Spire in Sunderland, UK: rising above the River Wear as well as many other infrastructure projects
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.

Construction was awarded in 2015 to FVB JV, a joint venture between 1622 Farrans Construction and Victor Buyck Steel Construction set up specifically for the project.

Other awards picked up by the Northern Spire this year include the Robert Stephenson Special Project Award from the UK’s Institute of Civil Engineering and also Project of the Year from the Chartered Institute of Highways and Transport in England’s North East region.

World Highways followed %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external the bridge&#8217;s progress false http://www.worldhighways.com/categories/road-highway-structures/features/sunderlands-new-wear-crossing-takes-shape/ false false%>, including the barging of the 1,550tonne main spire across the often treacherous North Sea from Belgium to northern England in early 2017.

Farrans Construction is a building and civil engineering contractor operating across the UK and Ireland while Victor Buyck, in Belgium, specialises in steel bridges. FVB JV was supported by their design team, led by Buro Happold Engineering and Roughan & O'Donovan, as well as independent checker 6801 Ramboll.

Stephen McCaffrey, project director for the Farrans Victor Buyck joint venture, which delivered the project on behalf of Sunderland City Council, said it was the methodologies adopted to build the bridge that made Northern Spire so different.

“We chose to build Northern Spire in quite an innovative way, from constructing the bridge deck on the south side of the river and launching it out in two sections across the river, to fabricating the 105m central pylon in Belgium, before sailing it to Sunderland in one piece.
 
“It would have been possible to build Northern Spire in a more conventional way,” said McCaffrey. “But we chose different methods because we felt it was more efficient and resulted in a better finish, and we had the luxury of space in which to do it. I think it’s a project that we will all remember for the rest of our careers.”

The bridge is Phase 2 of Sunderland City Council’s Strategic Transport Corridor, which is a five-phase plan to improve the road network between the A19, the city centre and port.

The next phase of the works to improve the road network is a dual carriageway that will pick up where Northern Spire ends on the south side of the river, linking the new bridge to St Mary’s Boulevard, going under Queen Alexandra bridge. It is expected to get underway next year and is likely to be complete in 2021.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Paul Verrico of Eversheds will be headline speaker at ERIC 2016
    August 9, 2016
    Despite Europe being a global leader in road safety, around 25,000 road users (working, walking, driving or riding a bicycle) did not make it home in 2015 and more than 200,000 others sustained life-changing or serious injuries. Leading Safety Lawyer Paul Verrico, a Partner of European law firm Eversheds will present the ERICLeeds16 ROAD SAFETY DEBATE. He will argue that organisations in the UK face ever increasing sanctions through new sentencing guidelines for health and safety and corporate manslaugh
  • Bridge building in miniature by Cimolai
    January 6, 2017
    Bespoke equipment supplier Cimolai Technology is exhibiting a model of the equipment it supplied for a Bulgarian bridge project. Construction of the bridge entailed lifting and positioning pre-cast sections weighing up to 260tonnes. Cimolai designed, built and supplied a bespoke cantilever lifting system to sit atop the centre pillar and simultaneously hoist the blocks from barges 42m below on the river Danube. The company said its European contracting customers are increasingly winning orders further afiel
  • Bridge building in miniature by Cimolai
    April 19, 2013
    Bespoke equipment supplier Cimolai Technology is exhibiting a model of the equipment it supplied for a Bulgarian bridge project. Construction of the bridge entailed lifting and positioning pre-cast sections weighing up to 260tonnes. Cimolai designed, built and supplied a bespoke cantilever lifting system to sit atop the centre pillar and simultaneously hoist the blocks from barges 42m below on the river Danube. The company said its European contracting customers are increasingly winning orders further afiel
  • Ethiopian Roads Authority (ERA) picks Spanish, Chinese contactors
    October 22, 2014
    The Ethiopian Roads Authority (ERA) has contracted out two major road projects to Spanish and Chinese companies. China Hunan Hunda Road & Bridge Construction will build the 111.3km Merkote-Delbo junction-Alaba-Sodo road under a contract worth around US$50 million (€39.12 million). Completion is within two and a half years. Spanish joint venture UTE Elsameks Eco Asphalt Ethiopia 35 will handle the 63km Ambo-Welliso project. Completion is due in three years, with funding of around $59 million from the W