1 / 38

Ring Wall Ventilation System

This document provides an overview of the status and milestones of the Ring Wall Ventilation System project, as well as the manpower strategy and unfinished business. It also includes the proposed installation sequence and strategies for learning early lessons and developing a safety plan.

Download Presentation

Ring Wall Ventilation System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ring Wall Ventilation System Readiness Review 11 December 2001 John Good Project Engineer

  2. Goal • Establish what needs to be done prior to the Holiday break to prepare us for 2 January 2002. • Address issues left hanging in the last Review.

  3. Milestones Since 6 November 2001 • Major Sub-Tasks Status • Dome Modifications – Complete • Louver Fabrication – Delivery at 46% by Tomorrow. • Flashings – In Fabrication, Delivery 4 Jan 2002. • Shutter Rail Hoist – 50% • Auxiliary Steel – Complete • Electrical & Controls – Design Complete, Materials on Order, Control Panel to be fabricated in Austin. • Weather Curtain – In Fabrication. • Tooling & Equipment – Pending. • Manpower – Re-defined. • Safety Plan – Draft Completed. • Installation Procedure – Draft Completed.

  4. Project Schedule All major deliveries to McDonald are “Blacked-Out” between 22 December & 1 January

  5. Manpower Synopsis • Core Crew – 5 men • 2 skilled in sheet metal/steel work. • 2 helpers. • 1 laborer. • On Demand – 1 to 8 more men • 1 dome operator. • 1 hoist operator. • 1 fork truck operator. • 3 to 5 rigging & load handling assistance.

  6. Manpower Strategy • Temporary Hires vs. In-House Crew • Temporary Crew • Temporary Hire – 5 man crew. • Wolfpack • Other non-local source TBD. • HET/McD PP support during lift only – 8 men. • In-House Crew • UT Austin • 2 men. • HET • 1 man. • McD PP • 1-2 men TBD • Local Temporary Hire • 1-2 men. • HET/McD PP support during lift only - 8 men.

  7. Manpower Strategy • Temporary Hire Pros & Cons

  8. Manpower Strategy • In-House Crew Pros & Cons

  9. Unfinished Business • Shutter Rail Hoist • Rigging and Steel Delivered. • Hoist Arrives just before Christmas Break. • Electrical hook-up to slip rings. • Some equipment may be need to be purchased for this. • Weather Curtain • Arrives by 17 December. • “Back Support” may be delayed until 2 January. • Equipment Rental • Man lifts • 80’ & 60’ • Welding Machine • Dumpster • Misc. Equipment and Supplies • To be purchased or ordered by next week.

  10. Shutter Rail Hoist • Rigging • Lift as high as possible (30 feet) with Skyjack • Lift remaining distance (about 11 feet) with Come-alongs operated from Man Lifts • If that won’t work we need to rent a larger Skyjack for short time.

  11. Shutter Rail Hoist Pass Flex-Conduit Through Dome Panel • Power Feed • 460V • 3 Phase • ~6 Amp • Slip Ring Capacity = 20A Ty-wrap to Cable Access by Man Lift

  12. Shutter Rail Hoist • Manhole in dome panel for access to rail struts. • Access via JLG basket. • Can tie-off to basket while attaching/removing rigging to struts. • Installs 12 December.

  13. Temporary Cover • Plywood & Frame Lumber Construction. • Lifted into position by hoist. • Drawn into the wall by nylon straps attached to the adjacent columns. • Tucks directly under bonnet at the top of the wall to repel rain fall. • Stows against basement wall in staging area.

  14. Weather Curtain • Design Issues • Easy to deploy in moderate to high winds. • Deployable by standard 4 man crew in short period of time. • Able to withstand maximum survival wind load (120 mph ~ 50 psf). • Prevent water/dust intrusion.

  15. Weather Curtain • Curtain works IFF: • It has good structural integrity. • It is not stretched tight. • Forces greatly magnified for small angles in the strain path. • A leverage problem. • Edge supports must have a lot of help. • Limited by holding power of a screw in 22 gauge sheet metal. • Back Support is necessary in wind speeds > ~35 mph.

  16. Cargo Net

  17. Weather Curtain

  18. Weather Curtain • Rail & Trolley System

  19. Back Support Concept – Aluminum Truss 2” x 2” x 1/8” Typical Total Weight ~ 60 lbs.

  20. Aluminum Truss Ty-wraps to cargo net For stability. • Works OK … • Interference problems with X-bracing. • Prevents optimum location, but still OK. • Clamps to columns. • Wind buffeting likely a problem.

  21. Back Support Concept • Air Bag • Normally pressurized with fans. • Can be made air-tight. • High Resistance to Puncture. • Will withstand pressures from highest wind loads (50 psf). • Cost comparable to truss system.

  22. Air Bag 4-5 Nylon Strap Type Come-alongs Between Columns For Support • Excellent distribution of wind load. • Very low perimeter forces. • Works well with or without X-bracing. Bag is Hung in Place Then Inflated

  23. Installation Procedure • Draft procedure available for review and comment.

  24. 13 12 14 11 15 10 16 SECTION 1 9 2 8 3 7 6 4 5 Proposed Installation Sequence: 13, 12, 11, 10, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 2, 14, 15 Strategy: Learn early lessons in most isolated/least visible areas. Increased time to develop safety plan for Visitors.

  25. Installation Procedure

  26. Installation Procedure • Basement Road Staging Area

  27. Installation Procedure • Opening Dimensions.

  28. Use “Come-Alongs” on the 4 corners of the load to Draw the louvers into the Opening. Bent plates used to weld Louver to column.

  29. Basic Tools

  30. Electrical & Controls • Control Box • UT Austin (Mitch & Harvey) • Materials on order. • Assembled in Austin. • J-Boxes, Conduit, Wire, Hook-up Hardware • Materials ordered/installed by?

  31. Electrical & Controls

  32. Electrical & Controls

  33. Electrical & Controls

  34. Other Items • Scissor Lift appears to be history. • Rolling scaffold sufficient for installation. • On-going access??? • Project Office/Tool/Material Storage Area • Gang Box for tools may be sufficient. • Man Lift training. • Still needed???

  35. Critical Risks • Weather • Schedule • Greatly mitigated by adoption of installation task by in-house crew. • Telescope Exposure • Mitigated by robust, quickly deployable weather curtain. • Safety • Motivation for risk is greatly reduced by relaxation of schedule/reduction of installation cost. • Weather exposure is a key concern, even in workable weather. • Protective gear a priority. • Unforeseen Factors • Mitigated by more reasonable schedule/lowered budget burn rate. • Down-time cost to respond to the unexpected is substantially reduced.

  36. Action Items • In Preparation for 2 January 2002 • Order remaining hardware – UT Austin. • Order final component of Weather Curtain • The back-up support. • Order remaining Electrical/Controls hardware – HET? • Order hoist electrical hardware – HET? • Reserve/Set-up delivery of Man Lifts, Welder, Dumpster – McD PP? • Purchase necessary power tools – UT Austin?/McD PP?

More Related