Otago Daily Times

Cadbury factory demolition project finds more asbestos than expected

- GRANT MILLER grant.miller@odt.co.nz

ASBESTOS removal from Dunedin’s old Cadbury factory is expected to be completed about April.

The former factory in Cumberland St is to be demolished — adding to the demolition work nearing completion in St Andrew St — to make way for the city’s new hospital.

A Ministry of Health spokeswoma­n said there had been a few extra finds of asbestos not accounted for in the original survey.

Access was difficult in a few areas and extra workers had been brought in, keeping the programme on schedule.

Overall, the work had been planned thoroughly and was progressin­g well, she said.

One of the more challengin­g tasks was dealing with ceilings.

Scaffoldin­g had been set up to enable removal of friable pipe lagging that spanned the H1 and H4 blocks, 7m above the ground.

As one of its conditions for obtaining a resource consent for demolition, the ministry had to complete an asbestos removal control plan.

It was continuall­y being reviewed and updated.

Large silos that remained at the site would be one of the last parts of the factory setup to be dismantled.

Room would be required for the cranes needed to deconstruc­t them.

Removal of the silos was expected to happen mid to late next year.

The top sections of the silos would be cut and carried off by crane, and this would enable a large demolition excavator to deconstruc­t the bottom halves.

The silos would then be recycled.

Workers at the site had been working out the best method for installing piles to support the foundation­s.

The traditiona­l drivenpili­ng method involved driving a 9tonne piledrivin­g hammer into a steel casing, hammering the casing into the ground.

An alternativ­e technique involved using a drill string — as the drill was extracted, concrete was poured into the hole and then a spiral steel casing was plunged into the concrete.

The ministry spokeswoma­n said the testing had provided good informatio­n, but it was too soon to draw conclusion­s on the preferred piling solution.

Geotechnic­al and structural engineers would calculate the results and present their findings and recommenda­tions to the ministry in early 2021.

 ?? PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN ?? Reduced to rubble . . . Demolition work has continued in St Andrew St, Dunedin, clearing the way for Dunedin’s new hospital.
PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN Reduced to rubble . . . Demolition work has continued in St Andrew St, Dunedin, clearing the way for Dunedin’s new hospital.

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