The new 800 tonne crawler crane hoisted a new pedestrian and cycle bridge over the Berlin-Spandau Ship Canal to connect the previously divided neighbourhoods of Moabit and Mitte. The Golda-Meir-Steg, as the 78 metre bridge is called, was named after the former Israeli Prime Minister.
The steel bridge was built in Deggendorf and had to be transported 1600 km by barge using inland waterways to get it from Bavaria to Berlin. The enormous LR 1800-1.0 crawler crane hoisted the new bridge off the barge right on schedule on 22 October. It was then turned into position using rope and man power before being lowered carefully by the crane.
The challenge for the MaxiKraft team was that there was very little space for the crane and its equipment at the site. That meant that the various components had to be delivered in precisely the correct order that they were required to set up the crane.
Another difficulty was the fact that the crawler crane had to be moved ten metres back from the originally planned site so as not to damage or displace the pile foundations used to secure the bank of the canal and to build the abutment for the bridge. That meant it had to operate with an additional ten metre radius to install the 195 tonne bridge – 48 metres rather than the 38 metres, which had been calculated originally. Equipped with a 66 metre main boom, derrick system and suspended ballast with the V-frame, 70 tonnes of central ballast, 170 tonnes of slewing platform ballast and 380 tonnes of derrick ballast, the LR 1800-1.0 overcame this challenge with flying colours.
The V frame, a hydraulically adjustable ballast system which enables enormous adjustment distances with a ballast radius of between 14 and 23 metres, was once again worth its weight in gold for this job. It delivers maximum flexibility compared to the standard rigid system for large ballast radii. The derrick ballast had to be extended to the maximum radius of 23 metres to install the bridge.