Ad
Tuesday, August 19, 2025
16.1 C
London

The Voice of Scaffolding Since 2008  |  U.K. Edition

Harsco completes one of Europe’s largest scaffolding projects

- Advertisement -

Harsco Infrastructure has announced the successful completion of what was, at the time it began, one of the largest scaffolding projects of its type in Europe.

The 3-year, £35M project has enabled a major programme of cleaning and refurbishment work to be completed on the roof at London’s Victoria Station, while allowing the station to retain its normal schedule of operations.

As a Grade Two listed building. the roof itself is widely recognised as an engineering masterpiece which dates back to 1865 and had undergone a series of ad-hoc repair works over the years. Along with the fact that the project was far more complex than originally envisaged, this presented Harsco with a series of unique challenges.

“The listed nature of the building and the fact that the station had to remain operational meant that we had to work in very close collaboration with both May Gurney, who were the main contractor, and also with Network Rail,” comments Harsco’s Project Engineering Manager, Brendan Fox.

“We erected three temporary roof structures, one in each roof barrel and concourse. These were multi-functional and provided a weatherproof, dustproof, acoustic structure which also gave support for the access scaffold above, so that blasting, painting and glazing works could be carried out during normal working hours. In the Eastern barrel a 31.4m mansard roof structure spanning four platforms was built during the day, above a construction gantry. At night this was then pushed out over the platforms in 24-metre sections. These ran on steel tracks which were supported on steel grillages and towers over the platforms.

In the Western barrel a part-mobile and part-static mono-pitch temporary roof structure was built. The static section was supported at one end on specially designed gallows brackets bolted to the West wall and this allowed the shops, bars and restaurants below to carry on business as usual. The spans were maximised wherever appropriate so that as much platform space as possible was retained for the full operational use of the station. This helped Harsco meet the challenge of maximising pedestrian footfall and passenger access to maintain the rain service.

“There were many challenges that arose from working in a live environment, “ adds Brendan Fox. “These included having very limited storage facilities and only being able to complete certain works at night. However with careful and detailed planning, plus the use of innovative solutions to the various challenges that arose, we succeeded in completing the project to everyone’s satisfaction and with no impact on train services.”

- Advertisement -

Popular Categories

Most Read >

Scaffolders Could Down Tools in Heatwave Under New HSE Proposals

Scaffolders could be given the right to stop work...

Bristol Scaffolders Raise £20k with Mountain-top Tower Tribute

A group of scaffolders have carried and erected an...

ITP invests in R&D hub to advance scaffolding protection products

A Yorkshire-based manufacturer of construction textiles is creating a...

NASC and SAIA Join Forces to Elevate Global Scaffold Standards

The National Access & Scaffolding Confederation (NASC) and the...

Pilosio Partners with Sky Climber to Bring FlyDeck System to North America

Italian scaffolding manufacturer Pilosio has entered the North American...
- Advertisements -

Related Articles >

Scaffolding Collapses Onto Van in North London

A large section of scaffolding collapsed onto a van on Stoke Newington Church Street in north London on Wednesday morning, trapping a driver underneath. The incident happened at around 07:30 am on April 16...

Latest Topics

SAIA announces 2025 award winners in Fort Worth

The Scaffold & Access Industry Association (SAIA) has announced...

SARNZ chief executive to step down after four years

The head of Scaffolding, Access & Rigging NZ Inc...

ITP invests in R&D hub to advance scaffolding protection products

A Yorkshire-based manufacturer of construction textiles is creating a...

Scaffolders Could Down Tools in Heatwave Under New HSE Proposals

Scaffolders could be given the right to stop work...
- Advertisement -