Skip to main content

Bridge lift in Orlando for interstate rebuild

Measuring 33.8km long and costing US$2.3 billion, Orlando’s massive I-4 Ultimate is the largest infrastructure project in the Florida Department of Transportation’s history. Divided into four phases, the project requires major bridge work to improve traffic flow through Central Florida. In all, 13 existing structures are being widened, 53 new bridges added and 74 bridges replaced. Area 2, currently under construction, runs through Orlando from Highway 50 at the northern edge to the Highway 423/I-4 interc
July 4, 2019 Read time: 2 mins
V&M has about another two years of work on Area 2 of the I-4 Ultimate project in Florida and will keep using Terex HC Series cranes
Measuring 33.8km long and costing US$2.3 billion, Orlando’s massive I-4 Ultimate is the largest infrastructure project in the 2697 Florida Department of Transportation’s history.


Divided into four phases, the project requires major bridge work to improve traffic flow through Central Florida. In all, 13 existing structures are being widened, 53 new bridges added and 74 bridges replaced. Area 2, currently under construction, runs through Orlando from Highway 50 at the northern edge to the Highway 423/I-4 interchange at its southernmost part.

The engineering team is adding or reconstructing 40 structures in this area and needs to place 22,680tonnes of steel for this phase.

V&M is the key structural steel contractor for the bridge work and now has three 1222 Terex crawler cranes in its fleet: a 208tonne HC 230; a 250tonne HC 275 crane; an HC 285 offering a 258tonne capacity.

Area 2 comprises of multiple high-level flyover ramps, which makes accessing the site challenging. Rather than working at night to place girders, V&M and the Florida DOT are using 40- to 56-hour road closure times to improve construction efficiency and limit impact on traffic.

The work schedule requires V&M to move from bridge to bridge, and each bridge consists of one to five units. Within each bridge unit, workers must move the cranes three to four times. Once on site, the Terex HC series cranes’ hydraulic counterweight removal system simplifies and reduces plate installation and removal time.

Throughout Area 2, V&M will equip its three HC cranes with boom configurations ranging from 42.7-61m and work at radii where the lift chart offers capacities from 68-90.7tonnes.

For maximum capacity, the cranes are rigged in their full counterweight configurations. Additionally, a luffing jib is kept on site to assist lifting the preassembled girders over structures.

On the complex bridge number 225, V&M paired the smaller HC 230 and 275 cranes in tandem lifts, while its larger HC 285 crawler and an AC 700 all-terrain crane from Hunter Merchant were reserved to support the heavier girder spans. This gave crew members the capacity required to connect the flyover spans between piers while supported at elevation.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Liebherr’s LTM 1300-6.2 all-terrain crane exhibited at Conexpo 2014
    January 6, 2017
    The LTM 1300-6.2 all-terrain crane with single-engine drive is the successor to the proven LTM 1250-6.1. Its telescopic boom has been extended by six metres to 78m, and the model’s load capacity has also been increased. Liebherr claims its LTM 1300-6.2 crane is the most powerful mobile crane in the 300tonne class available on the market. While the LTM 1300-6.2 is designed as a simple folding jib crane, it is also said by the German firm to be the smallest luffing jib crane on the market. This provides cran
  • Liebherr’s LTM 1300-6.2 all-terrain crane exhibited at Conexpo 2014
    January 17, 2014
    The LTM 1300-6.2 all-terrain crane with single-engine drive is the successor to the proven LTM 1250-6.1. Its telescopic boom has been extended by six metres to 78m, and the model’s load capacity has also been increased. Liebherr claims its LTM 1300-6.2 crane is the most powerful mobile crane in the 300tonne class available on the market. While the LTM 1300-6.2 is designed as a simple folding jib crane, it is also said by the German firm to be the smallest luffing jib crane on the market. This provides cran
  • Doka rises to the challenge on Turkey’s Eyiste Viaduct
    June 4, 2019
    Formwork specialist Doka recently rose to the challenge on Turkey’s Eyiste Viadust, the country’s highest bridge with piers up to 155m tall. The Eyiste Viaduct will be part of a route between Central Anatolia and Turkey’s Mediterranean region, shortening travel time between the cities of Konya and Alanya. Cantilever forming travellers and Doka’s automatic climbing formwork Xclimb 60 were part of the construction solution. The viaduct is nearly 1.4km long and carried by two abutments and eight piers, stret
  • Tackling Florida highway congestion
    October 4, 2016
    Congestion is a major problem in certain areas of US state Florida. Large number of commuters and tourists means that central Florida’s Interstate 4 (I-4) highway suffers particularly from congestion. Its proximity to Disneyland means that the traffic often comes to a complete standstill.