Skip to main content

Spencer Group cable access for Pattullo Bridge

Spencer is working on behalf of Fraser Crossing Constructors GP - a joint venture between Acciona and Aecon - on the suspension bridge near Vancouver, Canada.
By David Arminas July 3, 2023 Read time: 3 mins
The existing bridge will remain in use until the new bridge is open to traffic in 2024 but then will be removed (image courtesy Spencer Group)

UK bridge works specialist Spencer Group has been appointed to create an access system for inspecting stay cables on the new Pattullo Bridge in Canada.

The new bridge is a replacement bridge across the Fraser River near Vancouver, British Columbia connecting the municipalities of Surrey and New Westminster. The new Pattullo Bridge will take over from the existing bridge of the same name be used by drivers, cyclists and pedestrians when it opens in 2024. The existing bridge was opened in 1937 but now ceases to meet modern design standards.

Working on behalf of Fraser Crossing Constructors GP - a 50/50 joint venture between Acciona and Aecon - Spencer Group is designing, manufacturing, testing and commissioning a semi-permanent access system to enable maintenance engineers to inspect all elements of the bridge’s stay cables.

The cradle element, which transports personnel to the desired inspection location, operates similarly to a cable car, moving up and down a track rope on what will be a four lane, toll-free bridge. The cradle will be electrically hoisted up and down the main track rope. It will also vertically move up and down to enable personnel to inspect the stay cable wires throughout the lifespan of the bridge.

Gordon Neilson, principal engineer at Spencer Group and an expert in bridge gantry design, is behind the design for what is being called “The Pattullo Bridge cable fan access system”. Design work is set to be complete by the end of the summer. Manufacturing and testing will take place in the UK before the entire access system is then shipped to Canada for installation.

Fraser Crossing Constructors GP will be designing the bridge to interface with the stay cable access system, before it is tested and commissioned by Spencer Group.

The cradle will be electrically hoisted up and down the main track rope and it will also move up and down to enable personnel to inspect the stay cable wires (image courtesy Spencer Group)
The cradle will be electrically hoisted up and down the main track rope and it will also move up and down to enable personnel to inspect the stay cable wires (image courtesy Spencer Group)

Steven Bunting, project director at Spencer Group, is leading the project and coordinating the various stages of the design and build. “Our unique design on this project will be transferable to other cable stay bridges all over the world. It addresses challenges faced with the need to carry out tactile inspections of cables from a dedicated work platform, at difficult to reach locations at significant elevations,” said Bunting.

The new bridge will provide a safer crossing for bridge users with modern, wider lanes, separated by a centre barrier, dedicated walking and cycling lanes separated from traffic by a barrier on both sides of the bridge.

The bridge was originally to be opened in 2023, but the province decided to push back the opening to 2024 because of the Covid pandemic which disrupted supply lines and work schedules. The existing bridge will remain in use until the new bridge is open to traffic in 2024 but then will be removed.

Transportation Investment Corporation, a provincial Canadian Crown corporation, is delivering and overseeing this CAN$1.377 billion (US$1.05 billion) project. Fraser Crossing Partners is designing and building the new bridge. The province of British Columbia will own and maintain the new bridge when complete.

Spencer Group has carried out maintenance and repair work on some of the UK’s most iconic bridges. This includes major refurbishment on the Menai Suspension Bridge across the Menai Strait between the island of Anglesey and mainland north Wales - ahead of the structure’s 200th anniversary year in 2026.

Spencer Group’s specialist bridges team has global experience in high-level bridge works. It developed the Cable Crawler gantry system to enable vital dehumidification work to prevent corrosion of cables on the Severn, Forth Road and Humber suspension bridges in the UK, as well as the Alvsborg Bridge in Sweden. The company was founded by the now executive chairman Charlie Spencer in 1989 and is headquartered in Hull, northern England.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Innovative paving techniques being utilised
    February 15, 2021
    Innovative warm mix materials are now being offered by key contractors to deliver longer surface life combined with more sustainable operations
  • Cebu-Cordova Link Expressway opens
    April 28, 2022
    The 8.5km expressway, in which Cowi was owners engineer for the client Metro Pacific Tollways, incorporates the longest and tallest bridge in the Philippines.
  • The Mersey Gateway bridge project continues on schedule
    October 18, 2016
    Work continues on the 2.3km Mersey Gateway signature bridge project close to Liverpool in the UK. David Arminas reports on some of the construction highlights. Under construction is a cable-stayed structure with three towers that will span the Mersey River’s expansive mud flats between the towns of Runcorn and Widnes near Liverpool. Including the approach viaducts on each side, it will be 2.3km long with a river span of 1km. The main bridge deck will be reinforced concrete. The 80m-high central tower will b
  • THIS is a Paving Project– The I-15 CORE
    December 20, 2012
    Provo, Utah – The scope of the I-15 Corridor Expansion Project (I-15 CORE) in the state of Utah is nearly unprecedented because of the size of the project and the short completion deadline. Twenty-four miles (38.6 km) of removal and replacement of Interstate 15 between Lehi and Spanish Fork, widening the number of traveling lanes by two, for up to six lanes in each direction in 35 months. The new 364 lane miles (586 km) of concrete roadway will be slipformed 12 or 12.5 inches (305 or 318 mm) thick for a tot