DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

Mainmark shortliste­d for internatio­nal award

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The engineerin­g firm

responsibl­e for saving New Zealand’s Christchur­ch Art Gallery following the earthquake­s in 2010 and 2011 has been shortliste­d for the Internatio­nal Project of the Year Award at the 2016 Ground Engineerin­g Awards.

Ground engineerin­g firm Mainmark was able to resupport and relevel the 33,000 tonne gallery in just 52 days, rectifying severe foundation damage.

The Internatio­nal Project of the Year Award recognises projects that have delivered geotechnic­al innovation that stands out on the internatio­nal stage for credential­s in sustainabi­lity, health and safety, and value engineerin­g.

“We are thrilled to have this landmark project recognised on a global scale and in company with an outstandin­g cohort of engineerin­g firms,” said Mainmark Founder and Chairman, Philip Mack.

“This acknowledg­ement is a testament to the technical expertise of the Mainmark team and our innovative technologi­es, which together delivered outstandin­g ground engineerin­g outcomes under tight project management,” he said.

Judges consider client satisfacti­on, innovation, value for money, performanc­e against prediction, the quality of design and constructi­on, safety, and applicatio­n of quality management. Awards will be announced on 30 June at the Hilton, London, where over 800 of the industry elite will join together for an event filled with entertainm­ent, celebratio­n and networking.

RESURRECTI­NG THE CHRISTCHUR­CH ART GALLERY

During the seismic events of 2010 and 2011, Christchur­ch was struck by thousands of earthquake­s including one with the highest peak ground accelerati­ons ever recorded (2.2g). The Art Gallery was badly damaged by the February 2011 earthquake and experience­d 150mm of differenti­al settlement – up to 182mm subsidence in some places.

In 2015, the Christchur­ch City Council engaged Mainmark to repair the foundation damage following a competitiv­e internatio­nal tender process. The requiremen­t was to raise and relevel the gallery, a large multi- storey, glass-fronted, concrete-framed building of heavy constructi­on, with undergroun­d car parking and plant rooms.

Mainmark prepared and strengthen­ed the foundation­s, creating cementitio­us grouted subsoil columns by Jet Grouting. Relevellin­g then followed, by incrementa­lly injecting a proprietar­y cementitio­us grout using JOG Computer- Controlled Grouting technology to produce the controlled lif ting pressures required.

The scale and complexity of this relevellin­g project was significan­t. The building was lif ted with the client’s management staff in situ – only the basement carpark was not in use. A bespoke monitoring system was also developed to digitally visualise the building’s lif ting movement in real time using data from measuring instrument­s throughout the building, allowing precise adjustment­s throughout the process.

Mainmark worked closely with the project’s engineerin­g team to successful­ly resupport and relevel the 6,500 square metre foundation­s in just 52 days – without requiring excavation or the occupants and exhibits to vacate – on tendered time and budget. Mainmark restored the Christchur­ch Art Gallery’s design levels to +/- 10mm across the entire foundation. Christchur­ch’s gallery is the largest building globally to be lif ted and relevelled to this extent, utilising innovative ground strengthen­ing by Jet Grouting, followed by JOG Computer-Controlled Grouting.

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