Skip to main content

The bridge to reduced traffic

In Zaporozhye, the industrial metropolis in Ukraine's south-east, a multi-lane cable stayed bridge is being built alongside an older viaduct. On completion, this large-scale infrastructure project will massively reduce the traffic burden on the existing bridge and significantly improve the daily traffic situation at this major river crossing.
February 28, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The 150m suspension towers are built using Doka's versatile SKE 50 automatic climbers and Doka Top 50 large-area formwork
In Zaporozhye, the industrial metropolis in Ukraine's south-east, a multi-lane cable stayed bridge is being built alongside an older viaduct.

On completion, this large-scale infrastructure project will massively reduce the traffic burden on the existing bridge and significantly improve the daily traffic situation at this major river crossing.

The two separate roadway slabs are cable stayed off twin H-shaped suspension towers, each 150m high. The project management team of lead contractor VTA Mostobud opted for an automatic climbing formwork solution from 203 Doka for the two suspension towers.

In terms of formwork adaptability the demands were tremendous, because the inclination of the tower legs changes over their height and the structures taper upward, but Doka's SKE 50 automatic climbers worked to the project owner's complete satisfaction and without time-consuming adaptations as the build progressed. For strength, the two towers are of solid cross-section to the full height of the first two concreting sections: the section is hollow from the 11m level up, and per tower leg there are eight SKE 50 automatic climbers carrying 100m² of Doka Top 50 beam formwork, plus a set of Doka shaft formwork.

"The formwork units [Doka SKE 50] are climbed very rapidly using hydraulic cylinders and the forming up and stripping out routines are straightforward, two factors that contribute enormously to speedy progress on this build," says project manager Klymenko Volodymyr.

A safety net safeguards all four platform levels to complete the comprehensive safety concept. Up to where the cross beam ties in at the sixth concreting section, the legs of the towers are inclined at an angle of 5.3° off the vertical, and above that beam level, the tower legs are climbed at an angle of 5.6°. The polygonal cross section tapers 5cm per concreting section. Aggregated over the total of 40 concreting sections, that equates to a difference of 2m between the first and last sections in the towers' tapering cross section.

The hollow section cross beam is 6m high and 20m long to carry the roadway slab and is formed with Doka Top 50 large-area formwork, supported at a height of some 25m by Staxo 100 load-bearing towers.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Challenging viaduct construction
    March 2, 2012
    TRAFFIC VOLUMES on Gran Canaria, the third largest of the Canary Islands, have been swelling rapidly in recent years, not least because of the boom in tourism. Among the routes most affected is the 32km long northern motorway GC-2 between Las Palmas and Agaëte, which has reached the limits of its capacity.
  • PERI fills gap in Greek market
    February 19, 2013
    A team of Greek and German PERI engineers have developed a comprehensive formwork and scaffolding solution for the T4 bridge on the A7 motorway in Greece. The 160km long A7 connects Kalamata in the south to Corinth in the northwest of the Peloponnese peninsula. On one stretch of the motorway a 390m long arched bridge – known as T4 – is being used to close the gap between Paradisia and Tsakona. Set for completion in early 2014, two-thirds of the 22m wide bridge superstructure will be suspended on a steel arc
  • Major bridge construction on Denmark's road project
    April 20, 2012
    Doka is playing a leading role in Denmark’s first ever public private partnership roadbuilding project. The 26km long, four-lane M51, 15km from the German border, will link Kliplev and Sønderborg in southern Jutland. And Doka will be the sole provider offormwork for the concrete used in erecting the motorway’s 72 bridges and crossings. The M51 is using 9000m² of the extremely adaptable Large-area formwork Top 50, and more than 4,750 basic frames of the heavyduty Load-bearing tower Staxo 100 system.
  • Doka puts the ‘Y’ in Turkey
    July 8, 2020
    The 600m cable-stayed Kömürhan Bridge rises around 165m over eastern Turkey’s Karakaya Dam Lake and is part of the Malatya-Elazig State Highway. The bridge is the fourth single-pylon cable-stayed bridge in the world and is due to open in July.