Home > Uncategorized > An engineer without a site… for now.

An engineer without a site… for now.

21 Moorfields will be a 17-storey office and commercial building, ear marked to become the London HQ of Deutsche Bank, in the heart of the City of London. It is a fascinating project that pushes the boundaries of light-weight steel structural design and threads the needle, in some cases quite literally, through the maze of site constraints. The project is estimated to cost upwards of £350M and is scheduled for practical completion in 2022.

WEA-0002

The East Face above the Crossrail station entrance

The development spans over the 6 live London Underground (LU) lines running into Moorgate Station and is immediately above the western ticket hall and access shaft for the London Liverpool Street Crossrail (CRL) station. The ‘ground floor’ of the site is also the roof of Moorgate Station and is a composite steel beam and RC slab deck supported on a series of piled columns known as the retained deck (RD).

WEA-0001

Architects impression showing the two LU lines and the Crossrail running tunnels – piling through this lot was literally threading the needle. 

The steel superstructure spans 55m across the retained deck between two parallel rows of giant piles (the largest of which is 2.5m diameter and 57m long). Each pair of piles supports a 10-storey arch and truss to span the gap with a number of temporary works stages to ensure stability of the structure through to completion.

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Truss and arch system with cantilevered East Face Truss

I have been assigned to manage the superstructure concrete package, starting with the pile heads, steel base plates and mezzanine deck, moving onto deck and beam work at every level.

All very good but there is one small problem… we aren’t allowed on site.

The early works contractor (Mace), failed to secure the second-stage (i.e. superstructure) contract and so are vacating the site – slowly. Until they do so (the end of this week) we are sitting in an office down the road with only the high camera for site updates. To complicate this, the D&B contract between McAlpine’s (my lot) and the client (Land Securities) has yet to be signed so when works do start on Monday no one will be under contract to anyone else.

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The closest any one can get to site until Monday

This enforced exile has given me ample opportunity to read into my works package and spend time with the QS team to fully understand their processes. I have also already experienced almost every type of contractual arrangement I can recall from PPO and PCM – we have PCSA, Letters of Intent, Contract Administrators Instructions, Frameworks and, hopefully soon, a JCT D&B contract.

Come Monday I can sharpen my stadia rod and don my finest hi-vis vest for a bit of Engineers in the Wild excitement on site. Until then I’m back to my bills and quotes, spreadsheets and delivery notes.

 

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  1. gtqs's avatar
    gtqs
    28/03/2019 at 7:53 am

    Morning Tom, thanks for the hat tip for the PPO & PCM modules. Letters of Intent already? Oh dear! It sounds like your QS team will be your new best friends when the contract interpretation discussions start. if you need a second opinion on anything commercial and or contractual send me an E Mail. Regards, Greg Tripp

    • 02/04/2019 at 3:14 pm

      Thanks Greg. More info on the contracts in my AER but everyone seems quite calm about the LoIs. We are under instruction as an extension of our PCSA but there is no PCSA for most of the subbies. We’re told this is only for a month’s work but we shall see.

  2. Richard Farmer's avatar
    Richard Farmer
    01/04/2019 at 12:19 pm

    Is the site image looking West? I’m trying to work out where the pile caps are being formed. Is it somewhere below the RD with columns then coming up through to some sort of cross head on which the trusses sit or are the piles heavily reinforced and continuous up through the cross rail and tube lines, ticket hall and all, to the RD level? What sort of size are the pile heads and how are the works packaged up?

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