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When it finally wraps
up in 2004, Boston's $14-billion Central Artery/Tunnel project
will feature almost four miles of state-of-the-art tunnels.
Helping with the lion's share of tunnel finish work is Arva
Industries Inc., St Thomas, Ontario, Canada, which teamed
with a local joint venture to custom design and build two
new self-propelled work platforms that are now seeing heavy-duty
action on a $170-million job.
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| LIFT-0FF
Ceiling erector(above) and "giraffe" platform
boost productivity. (Photo by Bigdig.com) |
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| (Photo by ARVA
Industries Inc.) |
"We had an aggressive schedule
to finish over three miles of Interstate tunnel and we needed
the ability to build the ceiling modules in the tunnel, then
self-load, haul and erect in place," says Paul E. Buco,
project manager for McCourt Obayashi JV, Boston. "There
was nothing in the market to meet our needs but within two
weeks of talking to Arva officials we had a functional design
and a finished product in nine months."
Arva was formed in 1980 to design
and manufacture specialized equipment and lifting devices.
To meet the project's needs, Arva developed a huge ceiling
module erector and support system costing $500,000. Using
the erector, McCourt Obayashi workers typically can mount
eight to 10 modules in a standard shift. Each 12x40-ft module
weighs 30,000 lb and is comprised of five precast concrete
panels joined by structural steel supports. The modules serve
as the tunnel ceiling finish and the air exhaust plenum. "This
[machine] was our brainchild and we worked with Arva to develop
it," says Buco.
"Alternatives, such as a low-bed
trailer with hydraulic jacks, yielded production rates of
three modules per shift."
To maintain aggressive production,
Arva also designed six dolly carts on which to build the modules.
"We almost have a nonstop factory set up in the tunnel,"
says Buco. "Trailers supply materials to construct two
complete modules per cart. The dolly loads on the erector
like a dumpster [and the erector] then travels to the work
site and lifts it to the ceiling where the modules are fastened
to hangers." Precise movement is needed to place suspension
pins, so workers on another platform use joystick-equipped
radio controls. "It provides complete freedom of movement
for workers in the air without dragging around a communications
cable," says Arva President Fred Smith. "But it
also has hydraulic and electric backups to keep it fully operational."
Before the panels can be placed,
workers must complete other ceiling work using two "giraffes."
The $220,000 Arva work platforms can lift 20,000 LB up to
23 ft on a four-section telescopic column. Each giraffe replaces
four conventional scissor and boom lifts on the Interstate
93 tunnel.
Because the giraffes are only
10 ft wide in transport mode and up to 17 ft wide when operational,
they can rotate 360¡ at the top in the tunnel to accommodate
a transverse placement from their 40-ft-long platform and
allow traffic to flow underneath. Up to 10 workers using electric
and hydraulic tools set hatches and cellular decking in the
tunnel ceiling. After the ceiling work is in place, a joint
venture subcontractor, Adams Management Group Inc., Worcester,
Mass., uses another giraffe to apply fireproofing.
"The big advantage [of the
machine] is the fact that the materials to support the work
are on the platform, whereas in a conventional lift, you have
to repeatedly come down and restock," says Buco. "It
saves time and having a larger platform provides a safer environment."
Each giraffe has a hydraulically
controlled trap door and telescoping stairs that allow workers
to move around easily. "We don't need to lower it or
bring in another machine to off-load workers," says Buco.
"That's important because it doesn't tie up another lift."
"We do a lot of special design
work but we've never built a self-propelled work platform
before. So the big challenge was to meet all codes and operating
conditions in a short period of time," says Smith. "The
staircase design was particularly challenging because it required
telescopic sections that had to be operated anywhere from
10 ft to 23 ft and cannot be lowered while the platform is
turning. Another challenge was being able to rotate the deck
from the top."
Joint venture officials are pleased
with the equipment. "The most complicated part of the
job, ceiling installation, now has become routine," says
Buco. "And the equipment has worked so well there isn't
one thing we would change today."
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