Heaviest load in Alberta highway history crawls through Edmonton area - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:13 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

Heaviest load in Alberta highway history crawls through Edmonton area

The Alberta government calls the 820-tonne, 96-metre-long piece of petrochemical development equipment the heaviest load ever to travel on Albertas highway network."

Equipment length of a football field being transported from south Edmonton to Fort Saskatchewan

The 800,000-kilogram splitter is being transported from an industrial yard in the city's south side, where it was built, to Inter Pipeline's Heartland Petrochemical Complex near Fort Saskatchewan. (Inter Pipeline)

A massive piece of equipment the size of aCFL football field and the heaviest ever to move on an Alberta highway isslowly creeping its way toward Fort Saskatchewan.

The hugepiece of equipment willcrawl throughthe capital region over the next four days,and its journey northis expected to cause headaches forcommuters on city streets and area highways.

The splitter isbeing transported from an industrial yard in the city's south side where it was built, toInter Pipeline's $3.5 billion petrochemical development project, the Heartland Petrochemical Complex near Fort Saskatchewan.

The rig beganits four-day crawlSunday night. Around 8 a.m. Monday, the rig was spotted on Highway 14 at a staging areaon the eastside of Highway 21.

Third from right, Transportation Minister Brian Mason stands between representatives from Dacro Industries and Inter Pipeline, a petroleum transportation company. (Government of Alberta)

The Alberta government calls the propylene-propane splitter, equipment for petrochemical industry, the"heaviest load ever to travel on Alberta's highway network."

The "historic super load" is six times as large as Caterpillar's largest mining truck used in the oilsands,the government said.

The 800,000-kilogrampiece of equipment is 96 metres long, Inter Pipeline said in a news release Sunday.

The splitterseparates propylene from propane, which is thenprocessed into arecyclable plastic known as polypropylene.

It will be moving slower than the speed limit and may be pulled over periodically, the government said.

The load will use the entire width of a two-lane highway, including the shoulder.

At its largest configuration, including all vehicles, the load is 179 metres long, 9.5 metres wide and 13 metres high.

The splitter will take the following route:

  • Exit Dacro Industries yard, west of 93th Street to 51st Avenue.
  • East on 51st Avenue to Roper Road, continuing east to 75th Street.
  • South on 75th Street to 51stAvenue.
  • East on 51st Avenue to 50th Street at Whitemud Drive, westbound off ramp.
  • Whitemud Drive east to Anthony Henday Drive southbound.
  • Southbound on Anthony Henday Drive to Highway 14.
  • East on Highway 14 to staging area on the eastside of Highway 21 and the south side of Highway 14.
  • East on Highway 14 to Range Road 190.
  • North on Range Road 190 to Township Road 510.
  • East on Township Road 510 to Highway 834.
  • North on Highway 834 to Highway 15.
  • West on Highway 15 to Lamont.
  • Continue west on Highway 15 to Range Road 220.
  • Head north on Range Road 220 to site, north of Fort Saskatchewan.

Once installed later this year, the tower willbe taller than the ski jump used at Canada Olympic Park in the 1988 Olympic Winter Games, Inter Pipeline said.

Once complete in late 2021, the Heartland Petrochemical Complex is scheduled to be Canada's first integrated propane dehydrogenation and polypropylene facility.