|
Cianbro
module loaded onto barge
1st of 4 units set for voyage to Texas
**
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Loading the 200-ton refinery module onto an empty barge
docked at Cianbro's Eastern Manufacturing Facility bulkhead required an
“engineered ballast plan,” but went better than planned, Bob Germack,
project manager for Hake Rigging Co., said Wednesday after the module
was settled on the seagoing vessel.
The loading went “better than we could even have hoped,” he said. “It
took about nine minutes to fully get on the barge. We pre-ballasted, but
we didn’t have to ballast while loading.”
Crews for Hake, which is a division of Barnhart Crane & Rigging,
thought they were going to have to pump water into hatches in the barge
to counterbalance the load, but it was not needed.
The first module is the smallest of four that will be loaded on the
barge, which will set off later this month for the 15- to 20-day trip to
Port Arthur, Texas, where they will become part of an expansion at the
Motiva Port Arthur Refinery.
Cianbro will send a total of 53 modules from Maine to Texas for the
expansion, which is the largest capital project ever undertaken in
Texas. Two of the larger modules in the first load have been broken into
two parts for the trip, Germack said.
“We’re looking at getting under the next piece right now,” he said at
4:30 p.m. Wednesday. “We won’t move it until tomorrow. We're moving one
every day.
A copyright story and picture from
the Bangor Daily News, Thursday, March 19, 2009. Story by Nok-Noi Ricker
of the BDN; the picture by Kevin Bennett.
**BANGOR
DAILY NEWS PHOTO BY KEVIN BENNETT -
The first of the
refinery modules manufactured at Cianbro's Eastern Manufacturing
Facility in Brewer creeps its way onto a barge in the Penobscot River on
Wednesday as the Coast Guard's ice breaker Tackle stands by. Workers, at
left, are dwarfed by the structures which are headed to a refiners on
the gulf coast in Texas.
|