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Southend Pier: Born again
As Southend Pier prepares to rise out of the ashes
following a devastating fire, Jessica Rowson talks to those
involved in rebuilding the longest pier in the world.
Southend Pier in Essex has had its fair share of fires and
boat strikes but the one that hit the old pier head in 2005
was devastating, destroying its railway station, pub, gift
shop, amusement arcade, toilets, takeaway outlets, and part
of the restaurant along the Old Pier Head and South station
sections.
The pier runs 2.14km south into the sea from Southend seafront.
A train runs along most of its length but stops at the south
station at the pier head. The pier then continues with the
new pier head and the Prince George pier Extension. When Nuttall
John Martin - a subsidiary of BAM Nuttall - came to site to
start repair work in September 2008, there was not much more
to that section of pier left apart from the remains of the
piles sticking up from the sea. The Old Pier Head that had
been completely destroyed.
Repairing and rebuilding
At 2.14km long, Southend Pier is the longest pleasure pier
in the world. The cast iron and timber pier was built in the
late 1800s to replace an existing timber structure and was
extended twice at the height of its popularity at the turn
of the last century. It is so long, that it has its own train
line which runs the length of the pier. “About five
years ago, there was a fire,” says Nuttall John Martin
site agent Lloyd Wicken. “The railway station, the fish
and chip shop, the pub and the arcade all burned down.”
Lloyd Wicken, Nuttall John Martin
“The railway station, the fish and chip shop, the pub
and the arcade all burned down. It took everything to the
pile level. The high tide put it out.”
Nuttall John Martin is now coming to the end of its £2.4M
programme, which involves repairing the timber and cast iron
structure, reinstalling decking and railway track and rebuilding
the train station at the end of the pier. This is due for
completion next month.
The main length of the pier is supported by cast iron screw
piles. They are connected laterally by tie rods and bracing.
But the south face of the Old Pier Head part way along the
now extended pier is slightly different with Greenheart timber
piles driven about 15m down into the London Clay. These timber
and cast iron piles were all that were left after the fire
and have been reused in the reconstruction. “To start
with there were just stumps sticking up,” says Wicken.
Even though there was no trace of the pier decking left, horizontal
ties between the piles remained and Nuttall John Martin was
able to use these ties on which to secure a 9m long temporary
walkway.
From the walkway, workers could access the pile heads, remove
what was there and place new beams. Once one bay - the area
between each set of piles - was complete, the walkway was
moved to the next. “We had to take fire damaged beams
off and put new beams on,” says Wicken. Height extensions
also had to be added to the timber piles, to bring them back
up to the level of the pier deck. The extra height was added
with a section of timber and splice jacket which is a type
of metal connection.
“We had to cut away the tops of timber piles and extend
them with splice jacket and timber,” says Wicken. “We
extended the level by 256mm. Then we replaced all the timber
that had burnt away”
Where possible, steel beams were replaced with timber. “Changing
the steel for timber offered a cost saving,” says Nuttall
John Martin assistant engineer Ben Goodman. “At the
time of procurement steel prices were high with the strong
pound against the euro, which the timber was bought in, meant
the timber was the cheaper option.
“Using timber bearers also allowed standardised deck
panels to be prefabricated offsite, speeding up the decking
process and reducing the risks of laying planks at height
over water.”
Secondary beams at 1.3m centres were screwed to panels of
decking. About half of the decking area was laid down using
this method. One of the biggest challenges was transporting
materials from suppliers to site. Nuttall John Martin hired
a quay at nearby Leigh-on-Sea and a 100t Thames lighter barge
to get supplies to site. But it had to make sure deliveries
coincided with high tide, at the quay and at the site.
Meticulous coordination
“We towed out the barge for deliveries,” says
Wicken. “The barge leaves Leigh and has about an hour
and a half travelling time. The wharf dries out so you have
to plan delivery times, to get the high water at site and
then get back in time. We have a mooring buoy if we don’t
manage to get the barge back in time, but that puts 12 hours
on the turnaround time.” The lifting of material and
equipment on site has been serviced by a 50t crawler crane
with a 31m boom on board a jack up barge, which could be moved
depending on which area is being worked on. The barge can
take around a day to move from one area to another so it is
important to plan work to minimise doubling back. “There
are lots of pockets in the sea bed (where the barge legs can
get stuck),” says Wicken. “We have to jack the
barge down at low tide and use the buoyancy of the crane to
pull it out. Then a tug comes just before high tide. It all
needs coordination.”
Railway tracks
The railway tracks on the new section of pier are being laid
by contractor Allen Keef. It is running the rails into a new
station, which features distinctive canopies under which visitors
can wait in inclement weather. It also has a new ticket office.
Solar panels on the canopy roofs will collect electricity
to power the ticket office.
However it is important that the train continues to run throughout
the works to service the visitors who come to take in the
sea air, but don’t fancy the lengthy walk both ways.
To this end, the trains run on their original tracks, but
stop at a temporary station before they get to the fire damaged
part of the pier. An extra train is put on first thing in
the morning and last thing at night for the site crew. It
has been useful for transporting the odd box of nuts and bolts
and other small pieces of equipment to the site.
Southend
Pier history
1887 - Work on iron pier begins
1907 - Upper deck added to the pier head
1927 - Pier extended to accommodate larger steamboats
1959 - Major fire destroys pier pavilion
1976 - Fire destroys the 1908 Pier Head including the
cafes, theatre and amusement arcades
1980 - The council announced that the pier was to close.
Protests led the council to allow the pier to remain
open until a solution could be found
1983 - Historic Buildings Committee gave a grant to
allow repairs to be made
1985 - Pier reopens
1986 - MV Kingsabbey boat slices through the pier between
the Old and New Pier Head, severing the lifeboat slipway
1995 - Bowling alley destroyed by fire
2005 - Fire strikes the Old Pier Head and South station
section of the pier
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Article courtesy of NCE - june 2009
Further Info
Peter Bishop - Head of Public Relations & Corporate Communication
BAM Nuttall Limited
St James House, Knoll Road, Camberley,
Surrey GU15 3XW
Tel: 01276 63484
Fax:01276 66060
peter.bishop@bamnuttall.co.uk
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