North Stand Construction Discussion

Just had a little stroll around the stadium, took a few snaps the scale of this build is enormous.
 

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Took a photo of the Manchester skyline whilst out cycling last night. If you look careful you can see the two cranes and the Etihad on the far right of the photo View attachment 121429

That skyline!
There's a painting that's always fascinated me. It's called View of Manchester, painted by Willian Wyld in 1851. Wonder if anyone knows it? Beautiful countryside immediately outside Manchester to the east — as it is to this day — but at that period you looked down from a bucolic landscape into a vast bowl of smokestacks — the biggest no doubt in the world at the time. There's a lover and his lass sitting on the grass doing exactly that.
How things have changed.

Edit: it's not actually called what I thought it was called (that's the name given on the back of my copy of Gaskell's Mary Barton, which uses the painting on the front cover). It's called Manchester from Kersal Moor. I don't think I've ever been on walks on Kersal Moor.
 
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That skyline!
There's a painting that's always fascinated me. It's called View of Manchester, painted by Willian Wyld in 1851. Wonder if anyone knows it? Beautiful countryside immediately outside Manchester to the east — as it is to this day — but at that period you looked down from a bucolic landscape into a vast bowl of smokestacks — the biggest no doubt in the world at the time. There's a lover and his lass sitting on the grass doing exactly that.
How things have changed.

Edit: it's not actually called what I thought it was called (that's the name given on the back of my copy of Gaskell's Mary Barton, which uses the painting on the front cover). It's called Manchester from Kersal Moor. I don't think I've ever been on walks on Kersal Moor.
Here it is.
That skyline!
There's a painting that's always fascinated me. It's called View of Manchester, painted by Willian Wyld in 1851. Wonder if anyone knows it? Beautiful countryside immediately outside Manchester to the east — as it is to this day — but at that period you looked down from a bucolic landscape into a vast bowl of smokestacks — the biggest no doubt in the world at the time. There's a lover and his lass sitting on the grass doing exactly that.
How things have changed.

Edit: it's not actually called what I thought it was called (that's the name given on the back of my copy of Gaskell's Mary Barton, which uses the painting on the front cover). It's called Manchester from Kersal Moor. I don't think I've ever been on walks on Kersal Moor.
here we go
IMG_9204.jpeg
 
Tell you what, I'm no engineer, but I bet those transfer cables and then the definitive cables are taking some phenomenal tension.

Fuck yeah. It is an exciting thing to follow, but also somewhat scary, and I'm really glad there are a few here that seem to appreciate how delicate all this is.

They will have microsensors on the anchor to monitor any movement as they do it, but it is still a hell of a thing to manage.

Because it is ultimately all linked. The angled pier that will eventually be removed, is helped in tension in both directions. So if you transfer the roof cables to the new structure, fair enough you have held the roof up, but that balance of forces on the pier itself is now removed. And if you remove the back cables too, something needs to prop it, at that angle. That's before they can even attempt to actually manoeuvre it out.

And the 14 cables they transfer aren't holding just the north stand roof up, they tighten the east and west sides too, and that tension needs maintained at the junctions.

The ultimately eventually discarded propping and temporary works alone in this, are probably the equivalent of a small stand structure its own right, imo.
 
How will they actually move the cables across to the new support do you think? The tension on them must be incredible. Also, is the roof section unsupported as the cable end is moved from the mast to the tower?
 
How will they actually move the cables across to the new support do you think? The tension on them must be incredible. Also, is the roof section unsupported as the cable end is moved from the mast to the tower?
My guess would be they would attach new cables to take on the load then remove the old ones. But that's just a guess
 
My guess would be they would attach new cables to take on the load then remove the old ones. But that's just a guess
Don't think so, not as I understand it.

They will effectively build a caged clamp around the whole front lot. And new steel to the back node. And then tighten it, while loosening the existing back cables, incramentally, till all the tension is transferred onto the new cage.

Annoyingly, that one particular image is blurry that the notes on it are impossible to read. Let me see if I can highlight what I assume is happening though.
 
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