e-mosty June 2018 American Bridges American Bridges | Page 12

Figure 16: Steel girders Figure 17: The project´s first steel girder assembly is slowly lowered to its final location atop a pair of concrete piers More than 100,000 tons of steel girders went into the project. With the distance between pier caps extending as far as 400 feet, individual girders were assembled into groups (typically of three) on land, floated down river via barge and lifted into place. Atop the girders deck panels were installed. They form a base for the driving surface. Figure 18: The I Lift NY super crane places the new bridge´s first pier cap with exact precision The girder assemblies include infrastructure to carry communications, electrical power, water and compressed air to support bridge operations. Larger girders and deck segments are lifted with the I Lift NY which is a floating crane with lifting capacity of up to 1,900 tons (the largest girder weighs 1,100 tons, largest approach pile cap 600 tons) and with 328-foot lift arm. Figure 20: Installation of concrete road deck panels Building the bridge requires more than 300,000 cubic yards of concrete. TZC decided – in order to avoid using local roads – to utilize three floating concrete batch plants on the Hudson River, Figures 21 and 22. Each floating batch plant is about 60 feet wide and 200 feet long and produces an average of 125 cubic yards of concrete per hour. Crushed stone from a nearby quarry is delivered by barge. The materials are mixed in precise proportions by an on-board operator. The final concrete mixture is then pumped with a specialized hose to the various sections of the bridge. ← Figure 19: The I Lift NY super crane - moments before raising a pair of precast pile caps, each weighing 550 tons 2/2018