Skip to main content

Norway’s Beitstad Bridge opens

Norway has officially opened the Beitstad Bridge over the Beitstad Sund, between the towns of Steinkjer and Verran in Nord-Trøndelag County.
June 22, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Sarens barged the bridge segments from Malm to the construction site (photo courtesy Sarens)

The 580m-long steel-concrete composite bridge, constructed by China’s Sichuan Road and Bridge Group (SRBG), is part of Norway’s County Roads 17 and 720. The company won the contract through an open tender and finished the project in 26 months.

Last September, heavy lifting specialist Sarens finished installing six pre-assembled bridge segments, varying between 40-150m long and up to 15m wide. The segments weighed between 130-780tonnes. Sarens barged the bridge segments from Malm to the construction site, a distance of about 5km. The crew also used a 24-axle SPMT (self-propelled modular transporter from Mammoet), a Kobelco hydraulic CKE-2500 crawler crane and a Terex-Demag CC8800-1 crawler crane. The CC8800-1 had a capacity of 1,600tonnes and was fitted onto the barge to perform all heavy lifts.

Sarens said that this was the first time a CC8800-1 crane had been used to install bridge elements from a Sarens barge. It was loaded onto a barge in Gent, Belgium, and towed to Malm in Norway by tugboat - an eight-day voyage. The crane was then configured in SSL MB 84m configuration for the first four lifts and the main boom was lengthened to 120m for the last two elements.

The crew lifted the first segment on day one and the sixth and final segment on day 14 – a two-week time frame set by the client, according to Joost Elsen, Sarens operations head who oversaw the work. “Challenges for the lifting were for once not the movement of the crane, but the exact positioning of the barge as we intended to minimise crane movements to only boom up and down to the installation radius.”

Main contractor SRBG says that its expertise lies in construction of deepwater long-span bridges, highway pavements and extra-long tunnels. Much of the company’s management team for the Beitstad Bridge came from the recently completed Halogaland Suspension Bridge, 200km north of the Arctic Circle. The Halogaland Bridge crosses the Rombaksfjorden in Narvik Municipality in Nordland County. Construction began in February 2013 and finished in December 2018 when it opened to traffic.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Poetry in motion
    August 9, 2018
    A heavy-lift operation by Roll-iT using Enerpac equipment delivered a bridge deck - with a poem engraved on the underside - to Antwerp’s old harbour Only when the deck of the new Londenbrug Bridge is raised do travellers see the poem by Antwerp poet Stijn Vranken. It is written large on the underside of the 300tonne prefabricated steel deck. People waiting for a ship to pass the raised bridge now contemplate the poem’s message about ships transporting goods and people to and from the four corners of the
  • Fehmarn Belt Tunnel opening set for mid-2029
    August 16, 2024
    Around 1,500 tonnes of reinforcement for casting the concrete tunnel elements are produced weekly for the 17.6km Fehmarn Belt Tunnel that will connect the Danish island of Lolland with the German island of Fehmarn.
  • VIDEO: Sarens raises the pylon for New Wear Crossing in Sunderland
    February 13, 2017
    It was as weekend working in Sunderland city, northeast England, for global lifting specialist 8569 Sarens.

    Over the two days, the Belgian company gently raised a 1,550tonne steel pylon that will form the backbone of the New Wear Crossing – no official name yet – across the River Wear.

    General work on the two-span cable-stay bridge started on the bridge in May 2015. The structure will be supported by the single double pylon and will have four vehicle lanes, as well as dedicated cycle and pedestrian routes.
  • Turkey’s important new tunnel will improve transport links
    May 18, 2016
    Major advances in tunnelling will allow cars to travel underneath the Bosphorus sea channel in Turkey's Istanbul next year when its third road link is opened, writes Adrian Greeman. The Bosphorus is redolent with history and strategic significance. As one of the world's most significant sea connections, linking the landlocked Black Sea to the Marmara Sea and the Mediterranean beyond, it has been vitally important for trade and crucial for military access. It is also one of the biggest obstacles for land tra