Mammoet turned SPMTs into giant forklifts for successful marshaling project

Published: Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Utrecht, Netherlands: Mammoet, the Dutch company specializing in engineered heavy lifting and transporting large objects, has once again proven its expertise by successfully turning Self-Propelled Modular Transporters (SPMTs) into giant forklifts for marshaling in connection with a wind turbine project in France.

Situated 12km from the island of Yeu, and 16km from the island of Noirmoutier, the Îles d’Yeu, the project marks the fifth offshore wind farm to be commissioned in France.

It will be home to 61 offshore wind turbines, with an individual capacity of 8MW. With an estimated annual production capacity of 1,900GWh, it will generate enough electricity for approximately 800,000 people per year.

A client of Mammoet for many years, BOW Terminal approached its engineers to assist with the marshaling, movement and temporary storage of the offshore wind turbines’ transition pieces (TPs), which were being fabricated in Belgium.

TPs are traditionally moved using crawler cranes, or with Self-Propelled Modular Transporters (SPMTs) fitted with a gantry system that requires assembly, and rigging to be connected at a height over 20m.

This project marked the first opportunity for Mammoet to showcase an innovation that makes TP handling safer and more efficient for the offshore wind energy sector.

It transforms SPMT trailers into giant forklifts – resulting in an offshore wind marshaling solution that is faster and more secure.

All 61 transition pieces were being shipped from Antwerp to BOW Terminal Vlissingen, the Netherlands. Each TP weighs 400 tons and measures 30 meters in height and 6 meters in diameter.

Arriving by barge in fours, the TPs were lifted onto the quayside by a 1,200t crawler crane and placed onto temporary concrete supports.

Each TP was then collected on a 2 x 14 axle line configuration of SPMT and moved to a temporary laydown area. There, they were placed on supports waiting to be called off, after which they were simply lifted and driven back from the storage area to a setup location on the quayside.

In the past, the SPMT trailers would be fitted with a gantry system that is constructed and parked over the top of the transition piece so it could be lifted from above.

In this instance, Mammoet utilized a new attachment for the SPMT that essentially turned it into a giant forklift, allowing the units to be picked up more quickly and easily from underneath.

Lars de Haas, Project Manager at Mammoet, explains: “BOW Terminal came to us and asked if we had a system like this available. We explained that there was already a concept in progress, and we just had to develop it. This took around four months, including all fabrication and testing – which was carried out at BOW Terminal.”

The TPH800, as it’s known, has a heavy lift capacity of 800 tons. It has two main cross beams that sit on top of two lines of SPMTs. From the cross beams hang two lower beams, which act like forklift forks.

As the SPMTs approach the TP, the front cross beam lifts like a parking barrier to allow the lower beams to be slotted underneath the transition piece. Once these are in position, the front beam lowers and the TP is firmly locked into place by pinning both cross beams to both lower beams.