Edmonton Journal

Ironworker­s unfazed by sky-high constructi­on

Online photos capture pulse-pounding examples of ‘specialize­d type of work’

- GORDON KENT gkent@postmedia.com twitter.com/ GKentYEG

Working on a steel girder more than 50 storeys over Edmonton would unnerve most people, but for ironworker­s building one of Canada’s tallest towers it’s another cool day on the job.

“It takes a little nerve, but you kind of tune out the height after you have been doing it for a while,” said Keith Stevenson, business manager for Ironworker­s local 720 on Thursday.

About a dozen of the local’s 2,200 members are installing trusses and putting in bolts at the top of Edmonton’s 66-storey Stantec Tower, which will be Canada’s highest office building west of Toronto when it’s completed by the end of the year.

The skilled tradespeop­le are captured in a series of heart-stopping

It takes a little nerve, but you kind of tune out the height after you have been doing it for a while.

photos posted on Facebook by the Building Trades of Alberta, doing what Stevenson admits is “a fairly specialize­d type of work.”

“You have to really like the heights. You don’t always get to work at heights like that … You also have to be able to climb up without assistance.”

All their work is done with harnesses and other safety equipment.

While ironworker­s don’t have many chances at such projects because towers are often built with concrete rather than steel, some members enjoy working on those lofty perches, he said.

“I think the excitement of it (is the appeal). It gives you a bit of a rush. And the knowledge you’re doing something other people can’t do. A lot of these guys are thrill-seekers in their off-hours.”

 ??  ?? Members of Ironworker­s local 720 work on Edmonton’s Stantec Tower, Canada’s tallest office building outside Toronto, on Thursday. “You have to really like the heights,” says Keith Stevenson, business manager for the union.
Members of Ironworker­s local 720 work on Edmonton’s Stantec Tower, Canada’s tallest office building outside Toronto, on Thursday. “You have to really like the heights,” says Keith Stevenson, business manager for the union.

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