Crane positioning: street/neighbour/railway mast

  • Erstellt am 2016-02-18 13:43:47

Sebastian79

2016-02-19 10:23:48
  • #1
So, as you wrote it, apparently not... although one can argue about what is lowercase and uppercase.

Our shell construction company had a nice, old Liebherr crane and I have to say that this simplified many things. We didn't have much space to store, so things had to be reshuffled repeatedly.

I think you can't generalize whether you need one or not - and certainly not dictate to the contractor what they should use.
 

Bauexperte

2016-02-19 10:43:36
  • #2
Heaven Sebastian .... For the intricate ceilings, something like what can be seen in the attachment is sufficient; so manageable in terms of space requirement => small. A good solution for difficult access possibilities. It can be even more compact; unfortunately I don’t have a picture of that, as it is quite rare. We are mostly talking here about single-family houses and their requirements; so it is self-explanatory that I hardly could have meant cranes which are used in multi-story residential construction and are visible to everyone far and wide. The contractor – especially long-established ones – will always decide according to their respective preferences. In this respect, it is not surprising that your statement from post #16 is just as accurate as m_l_r_s explanation from post #17. This ultimately also means that the _permanent_ ordering of a crane is not necessary; which brings us back to the original topic. Rhineland greetings
 

sirhc

2016-02-19 11:16:42
  • #3
So, it will not be a filigree ceiling, but shuttered and cast. We will speak with the regulatory office and the owner next week, on whose help we depend. Either that will lead to something, or we will solve it differently. Ladder rights probably would not apply anyway, as I have since found out, so a mobile crane will have to be used. Thank you very much for your help.
 

Doc.Schnaggls

2016-02-19 11:54:05
  • #4
Hello,

if it really should become a truck crane, you must also remember to apply for a corresponding road (section) closure in good time at your responsible office for public chaos (sorry - I actually meant "order" ).

It doesn't cost the world (for us it was EUR 40.00 per closure each time) and the necessary signs can often even be borrowed for free from the city.

Regards,

Dirk
 

sirhc

2016-02-19 11:57:57
  • #5
Thank you for the tip. Basically, the GC takes care of everything that has to do with the "city" and concerns his work, but with the truck crane, that might not be the case because he usually works differently.
 

Musketier

2016-02-19 14:00:39
  • #6
I think you are the last property on a dead-end street. Does anyone even have to drive through there?
 
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