How are they going to get that crane down, anyway? - Action News
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Nova Scotia

How are they going to get that crane down, anyway?

A Dalhousie University structural engineer says the crane that fell last weekend as Hurricane Dorian pushed toward Nova Scotia will likely need to be carefully cut into pieces to remove it safely.

Work to remove crane will begin Saturday

The crane toppled as Hurricane Dorian hit Halifax on Sept. 7. (Steve Lawrence/CBC)

Nearly a week after Hurricane Dorian hit the region, a crane remains draped over a building under construction in downtown Halifax.

The province says work to remove the crane will begin Saturday, but as people stroll by the siteon South Park Street near Spring Garden Road, one of the questions they're asking is, "How are they going to get that thing down?"

The twisted hunk of yellow metal is being held in place by gravity. But even now, long after Dorian's 155-kilometre-per-hourwinds have dissipated, some pieces can be seenswaying slightly in the breeze.

Parts of the crane, including this piece, could be seen swaying in the wind on Wednesday afternoon. (Craig Paisley/CBC)

It's a developer's nightmare.

For a structural engineer, it's no dream either.But figuring out how to take the crane down is definitely an intriguing puzzle to solve.

Fadi Oudah,an assistant professor of engineering at Dalhousie University who specializes in assessing and remediating structures, said he was shocked by the scene when he saw it in person.

"Probably my first reaction was, 'That's areally tough job from a structural engineering perspective and both from [a] contractor and engineering perspective, obviously. And how are you going toremove such a thing?'"

Fadi Oudah is an assistant professor in the department of civil and resource engineering at Dalhousie University. (Craig Paisley/CBC)

Oudah hasn't done a comprehensive analysis of the site and isn't involved in the removal.But as an observer with a relevant academic background, he's gotideas about how it can be done.

First of all, he says, it's unlikely crews will be able to pick the crane up and remove it in one piece.

That's because the connecting pieces, like between the tower and the jib, or the jib and the counterjib, have likely been damaged. If the whole crane ispickedup, parts could go crashing to the ground.

Therefore, crews willneed to cut up the crane.But that, too, could pose a hazard to itsdelicate balancing act.

"If you are to cut it, you are going to disturb this equilibrium," said Oudah."And withdoing so, some parts of the crane may move. And this may cause some other parts falling down in the streets onthe public."

In order to cut pieces off, crews will need to securethem, either with boom cranes or by bracing them to the structure itself, Oudah said.

Oudah said it may be useful to re-examine the safety codes and standards for crane design to consider the possibility of very high winds.

No word on fines for operator

Labour Minister Labi KousoulissaidThursday it's too early to say whether the operatorcould face fines.

He said all cranes must be independently approvedby an engineer andadhere to safety regulations before they are put into use.

Labour Department staff met with crane operators before the storm to recommend procedures that should be followed during the hurricane, Kousoulis said, and all recommendations were followed at the site of the crane collapse.

The crane's jib, the piece that runs parallel to the ground, came crashing down onto South Park Street. (Craig Paisley/CBC)

"From what I understand, the arm should be swinging freely in the windso that depending on how the wind changes it's not putting stress on the structure," Kousoulis told reporters Thursday.

"The engineers will determine what brought the cranedown and whether there was a brakeon or whether that was a factor in it.I'm not an expert on it."

The department is now trying to determine whether post-storm inspections should be done on other cranes to look for signs of damage.

Kousoulis said dismantling a regular, intact crane takes about two weeks, but he's not sure how long it could take to remove this one.

No one from WM Fares Group, the developer responsible for the crane, responded to an interview request from CBC News.

With files from Jean Laroche