Specialized Crane Equipment Helps Strategically Demolish Minnesota's Old Highway 24 Bridge

Company needed a compact mobile crane with high capacity and long boom to help with center span lifts during deck girder removal

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The Minnesota Highway 24 Bridge crossing the Mississippi River at Clearwater may not seem special at the surface. It serves a mere average daily vehicle count of just over 16,000 and dissects two towns that barely share a population of more than 2,000 people.

On the weekends, however, the 1,235-foot-long structure sees significantly higher traffic. It is a vital conduit between U.S. Highway 10 and Interstate 94, which parallel opposite sides of the Mississippi River and connect St. Cloud to Minneapolis. Unfortunately, this 1950s-era, 30-foot-wide bridge, like so many of that time, was functionally obsolete and had a restricted maximum load of 80,000 pounds.

The price tag to demolish and replace the outdated Highway 24 Bridge came in at $17.4 million. From August 2015 to August 2017, two Terex lattice boom crawler cranes the 165-U.S.-ton class HC 165 and 110-U.S.-ton class HC 110 were tasked with completing the lion’s share of the heavy lifting to construct the new, modern two-lane highway with wide shoulders and a multipurpose trail.

Misc 038Upon finishing the new structure, the general contractor focused efforts on the final contract phase, demolition and removal of the 60-year-old bridge structure. The delicate task had to be completed without damaging the new bridge or contaminating the river, and work had to be completed within approximately 10 months.

For deck girder removal from the center and east bridge spans, a specialized piece of crane equipment not in the contractor’s fleet was required. With the east causeway being short and narrow, the company needed a compact mobile crane with high capacity and long boom to help with center span lifts and one that could navigate the road embankment access the causeway. St. Cloud, Minn.-based Landwehr Construction, Inc. was called in for consultation.

Flexible AC 350/6 crane

The distance from road level to river was about only 55 feet, but “we only had about 50 feet of room to make a 90-degree corner to position the crane on the causeway,” recalls Pat Herron, crane division manager for Landwehr. This east causeway measured only 70-feet-wide by approximately 40-feet-long. He continues, “The west causeway, where the HC 165 worked from, was approximately 450-feet wide,” which left about 145 feet of space in between for the river to flow.

The bridge’s four center I-beam girders were cut to a 98-foot length and weighed 42,900 pounds each. The plan called for a tandem lift between the HC 165 crawler crane and Landwehr’s crane, which required working at a 120-foot radius. In addition to assisting with center span removal, Landwehr was contracted to remove four east-span girders, each 137-feet long and weighing 67,000 pounds.

Herron knew it was going to be difficult, but there was one crane in Landwehr’s fleet that offered the combination of capacity, boom length and compact design to maneuver into position and complete the lifts. “This was a job for our 400-U.S.-ton capacity class AC 350/6 all terrain crane,” says Herron, as this type of challenging project was a primary reason for Landwehr adding the AC 350/6 to its fleet.

There was one catch. Girder weights and boom working radius required the AC 350/6 to be equipped with its superlift structure to meet capacity. However, causeway size didn’t allow enough room for the superlift to be installed at river level. “Due to overhead obstructions and tight conditions, the crane’s superlift structure had to be installed at road level with the assistance of the HC 110,” explains Herron.

Fortunately, the AC 350/6 crane’s flexible design allowed for the superlift structure to be installed prior moving into position. “We realize that often our customers must navigate into tight spots to complete a lift, and that’s why we designed the AC 350/6 to be the most compact model in the 400-U.S.-ton market,” mentions Bryce Meier, regional business manager for Terex Cranes. “Plus, it offers a telescopic boom length of up to 210 feet, and it out-performs cranes in the 440-U.S.-ton capacity class in certain situations, which is advantageous on projects like the Highway 24 Bridge demolition job.”

Landwehr mobilized the crane plus six truckloads of counterweight, superlift structure and miscellaneous lifting materials for the short 13-mile trip to the jobsite. Once at the staging area, the HC 110 crane helped to install the superlift structure. Crane operator, Owen Schluender, carefully navigated the AC 350/6 down the embankment into operating position. “Axles 1-3 and 5-6 are steerable and the fourth axle raises to reduce turn radius, helping the crane navigate the 90-degree turn,” explains Meier.  

Dscf1489Once in operating position with its front axle close to the edge of the causeway, trucks carrying the counterweight stacks were sent to river level to be installed. “The AC 350/6 self-rigs the counterweight, and we had just enough clearance for installation,” comments Herron. “The crane actually navigated the access road easier than the trucks.”

After installing 257,300 pounds of counterweight, the final superlift connections were made within a matter of minutes to complete rigging. Landwehr’s experienced crew was able to complete crane set-up and positioning within 5 hours.

Hoist ready

For center girder removal, the AC 350/6 crane’s boom was telescoped to 177.8 feet. Working at the 120-foot radius offered a crane capacity of 39,900 pounds, more than enough to remove the center girders in the tandem lift with the Terex HC 165 crawler crane.

The girders were hoisted onto trucks staged on the new bridge, secured and transported the short distance to a processing area, where the HC 110 crane removed the beams. Within a day, the center girders were completely removed and positioned in the processing area.

The following day, Landwehr’s crew was back at the jobsite to remove the four east steel girder spans. Working with a 163.1-foot boom length and a 76-foot radius, the AC 350/6 hoisted the final 137-foot-long girders weighing 67,000 pounds each in less than eight hours.

“The crane performed well and exactly as we expected. Without the flexibility to drive down the embankment with the superlift installed, we wouldn’t have been able to do the job,” says Herron. “The only other way would have been to expand causeway size. Since the river was 20-feet deep at this location, it would have been very time consuming and costly to expand the size.”

In less than three days, Landwehr mobilized and rigged the Terex AC 350/6 all terrain crane, completed eight girder lifts, and moved onto the next job. “The AC 350/6 has become a staple in our crane fleet,” says Herron. “In an industry where downtime is not acceptable, it has time and time again been the go-to crane to get the job done and give the customer the top-of-the-line quality and service on which we pride ourselves.”

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