Skip to main content

Piers completed for Morandi Bridge replacement project

The last of the 18 elliptical 40m-tall piers have been finished.
By David Arminas February 20, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
In total, 19 spans will eventually cradle a continuous steel deck (photo courtesy Salini Impregilo/PerGenova)

PerGenova, the joint-venture constructing the new Genoa Bridge, recently completed the last of the 18 elliptical piers – 40m-tall giants of reinforced concrete.

PerGenova – consisting of Salini Impregilo and Fincantieri – said that it reached the milestone in record time. At the moment, 10 of the 94m-long spans of the deck that will rest on the piers have been installed. In total, 19 spans will eventually cradle a continuous steel deck.

The spans needed to be raised more than 40m into the air and placed atop the piers. Also raised were 14 sidings that resemble wings along the side of the bridge, as well as fittings such as the sections that will facilitate the pouring of concrete. In light of the span’s weight, cranes were not used. Instead, strand jacks were brought it and used cables to hoist the span into place at a speed of 5m per hour.

The bridge replacement work follows the collapse of the old Morandi Bridge in 2018, causing fatalities. The new bridge also represents Progetto Italia, led by Salini Impregilo. The vision is for a new way of building complex infrastructure in Italy where private companies and public institutions come together to develop projects on time and to budget. The goal is to unblock stalled projects and to create innovative ways of working, according to Salini Impregilo.

“This [new bridge] is a unique project from a number of vantage points: there is the innovation and sustainability aspect, the speed at which the bridge is being built, the close public interest and the pressure that comes with it, the attention to quality and safety and, obviously, the very reason for the bridge to come into existence,” said Pietro Salini, chief executive of Salini Impregilo.

The project has up to 600 people working on site daily and more than 1,000 when including the supply chain. Progress can be followed in real time thanks to live streaming at the website www.pergenova.com which gets a round-the-clock feed from eight webcams.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Texas highway project tackles congestion
    February 20, 2012
    A new highway project in Texas will tackle peak congestion
  • 2015 IRF Global Road Achievement Awards Laureate
    September 15, 2015
    Commuter traffic in the Taipei Metropolitan Area is a major concern for the city’s town planners. In 2009, a decision was reached to widen National Freeway No. 1 between Wugu and Yangmei on a 42km section of freeway on the northern part of town. The lane-widening project saw the construction of two new viaducts built along each side of the freeway. From the onset, the project presented tremendous challenges owing to various factors, including limited space for construction; passing through a geologically
  • A history lesson in private public partnerships
    April 12, 2012
    Michel Démarre gives some historical insights into public-private partnerships conceived to implement urban infrastructure projects, a concept that surprisingly dates back to as early as the 13th century! All over the world today, the role of public authorities in the process of planning and, in most cases, designing, financing and procuring urban roads is paramount. Even for modifications to existing roads, decisions are made by these public authorities (usually after due consultation with the population)
  • 16th IRF World Meeting
    February 14, 2012
    International Road Community Rises to the Challenge of Safe, Smart and Sustainable Mobility. Songs are like roads - highways to the heart - opening new vistas, new challenges and new opportunities." Singer, Mafalda Arnault's words during a splendidly moving opening ceremony were an apt introduction to the spirit and achievements of what proved a highly successful 16th IRF World Meeting in Lisbon. A capacity audience clapping in unison to the soulful sounds of Fado was symbolic of an industry showing it can