With fabricated steel props and trusses, Northallerton based structural fabrication specialists Allerton Steel appointed Collett to undertake the intricate delivery of thirteen cargoes destined for the Leicester Square Hotel construction site in the heart of the capital.
The seven 11 Tonne steel props measuring 19m (L) x 0.5m (W) x 0.5m (H), and the six 63 Tonne trusses measuring 20.5m (L) x 0.5m (W) x 3m (H) would initially travel to Middlesbrough, a route we’re well versed in, before their final journey to London. It’s not the easiest of tasks delivering 20m long, 63 Tonne cargoes directly in to the nation’s capital and as a result, extensive planning, liaising and negotiating was required to facilitate the project.
The initial delivery schedule for the props to London was to be over a specific time scale at night, a week or two prior to the delivery of the trusses. For the trusses themselves, the initial schedule would be one load per evening over a one week period. This was eventually altered to two loads per evening over a three day period to suit site delivery requirements.
Initial route studies and swept path analysis reports were undertaken by our Consulting Team analysing several routes within the M25 London area to identify the most suitable path for the loaded vehicles to take. With the delivery site in the heart of Leicester Square we were faced with an extremely narrow access via Orange Street off Haymarket. As a result, we carried out detailed negotiations with the Metropolitan Police, Transport for London, London Boroughs, London Underground, Network Rail and Canal & River Trust on our proposed routing within the London area so as to avoid any specific weight limits and restrictions for long vehicles.
From our route studies and consultations, it was proposed that one particularly intricate area to navigate would be that in the vicinity of Victoria Station and Parliament Square, as a result we put forth the idea of using The Mall as an alternative. This required us to approach The Royal Parks to apply for access to utilise The Mall through St James’s Park. This would see each of the six truss movements approaching from Buckingham Gate, along The Mall before travelling through Admiralty Arch, allowing us access to Trafalgar Square and onwards to final destination.
The Royal Parks approved our request to utilise The Mall for this project, under the proviso that each vehicle did not exceed 10mph whilst on this section of the route. With this final routing approval in place we now had our permitted route through the capital, approaching London from the West, avoiding weight restrictions on parts of the A40 and A4, then via Shepherds Bush, Marble Arch, Hyde Park Corner, The Mall, Trafalgar Square, Regent Street, Jermyn Street (to avoid Piccadilly Circus) and Haymarket to the Orange Street destination in Leicester Square.
In order for the vehicles to negotiate the final section of the route from The Mall through Admiralty Arch and onwards to Leicester Square, parking bay suspensions were implemented in Waterloo Place and Haymarket. The Transport for London Santander cycle hire docking station on approach to the development site in Panton Street was suspended, along with the temporary removal of the cycles and one docking station end post. Taxi rank suspensions were also required in Regent Street along with street furniture removals at the junctions of Jermyn Street and Haymarket, Haymarket and Orange Street.
The deliveries of the props from Middlesbrough to London took place over four consecutive days in January 2018 with the trusses following shortly after in mid February over three consecutive days.
To comply with strict site operating time limits and curfews on the site in Leicester Square, the final delivery programme for the trusses required two loads over three consecutive evenings. The first delivery arrived at 21:00 hours with the second following two hours later at 23:00. In order to achieve these timings, a dedicated parking location for the loaded vehicles was agreed in Colnbrook, just outside the Metropolitan Police area and 20 miles from the delivery site. This would allow for the vehicles to arrive the day prior to the agreed delivery slot, on the day of delivery each vehicle would leave the parking location at 18:30 and 21:00 respectively to arrive on site to the agreed timescales.
Deliveries of the trusses from Colnbrook into London commenced on a Wednesday evening. On each occasion the 21:00 hours delivery was unloaded on arrival with the empty vehicle departing site before 23:00 hours. The 23:00 hours delivery would then arrive and wait on a closed off section of Orange Street until 18:00 hours the following evening when unloading would take place. The empty vehicle would then leave the construction site after 19:00 hours so as to comply with Metropolitan Police restrictions within Central London.
This process continued for three consecutive nights, with the loads on the Friday being delivered and unloaded on the same night to avoid any Saturday unloading and conflict with the upcoming Chinese New Year Celebrations. All empty vehicles had to be routed, notified and escorted out of the capital, utilising the pre-arrange use of the dedicated Transport for London Bus Lane to gain access from the bottom of Haymarket to Trafalgar Square before continuing via Whitehall, Parliament Square, Victoria, Hyde Park Corner and the A4 Westbound out of London.
After the months of planning and liaising with all other invested parties, our Team delivered all thirteen of the cargoes directly to the construction site over a period of seven days. Certainly a challenge given the rapidly changeable climate of Central London, our Teams continued with professionalism carrying out the project to the highest standards whilst dealing with the volumes of West End London traffic in an incredibly busy location.
More about Collett & Sons Ltd:
Experts in Motion since 1928 we have a wealth of experience transporting difficult and abnormal loads throughout the UK, Europe and worldwide. Our haulage fleet of over 65 trucks, 120 specialist trailers and Self Propelled Modular Transporters (SPMTs) operate across our strategically placed depots in Halifax, at the Port of Goole, the Port of Grangemouth, and most recently with the introduction of Collett (Ireland) Ltd in Dublin, we are ideally positioned to provide the solution for your project’s requirements.
With specialist teams dedicated to Heavy Transport, Heavy Lift, Marine & Transport Consulting, Collett & Sons has evolved to reflect the diverse nature of the transport business and the clients it serves.
Source: Collett