SECTOR REPORT Ӏ SELF ERECTING CRANES
j erecting cranes ever since we
acquired the Gru Comedil company, which made them close by in Milan, and that was 20 years ago. I believe the different geometries cope with different requirements in the job site. What all self erectors have in common is that they can be taken anywhere, and can get there simply and easily. I remember a wonderful project in Cambodia where we had to take one through the forest to reach a very ancient temple that need to be restored. That was a special place. But in Europe, if I drive from here to central Germany, just along the motorway I might count 200 self-erecting cranes. So they are a big sector. And they are shaping the infrastructure, and especially the residential areas, of our cities, of our towns, of our villages up in the mountains in places where it's very difficult for any other crane to go. “When I just look out of my office
window I can see three of them at work; they are building a warehouse and some houses. And building houses is one thing they are really good at. They have the height and the reach, and the capacity, to cover almost any residential building up to say four storeys high, and to do it from a single point so they need not be moved around. If you think of their geometry – a vertical tower with a horizontal beam at the top – that is the right shape for a house and sets it apart from other products: it is a much more convenient, and closer, fit than the oblique angle boom- from-ground-level geometry of an all-terrain mobile crane or a lattice crawler. “But they are not limited to
residential projects or warehouses. You seem them also on bridges, on motorway jobs, on different infrastructure applications “So they are eating into the
market of most other types of cranes: all-terrains, other mobiles, crawlers and, of course, tower cranes. They are quick to erect,
as well as needing no assist crane; and they are much cheaper than a standard tower crane, by perhaps an order of magnitude: a small construction company can easily afford to buy one and can tow it to the job site behind a standard builder’s truck. They need no ground preparation in the way of pouring concrete and waiting for it to set. “That last point is another plus
when you are talking of renovations of existing properties: they do not damage the landscape or garden around it. A homeowner having an extension built does not want all of his garden dug up! “You can add also that they
are electric-powered, and simple to operate. You can plug some of our models into a single-phase mains electricity. Here in Europe building your own home yourself is a romantic, perhaps even a passionate, dream that many people have; and self erectors are the ideal crane for self-constructors. It is not exaggerating too much to say that you can unplug your microwave oven and plug your self erecting crane into the socket! And that’s one of the things I like about self erectors: you might not be seeing them building big prestige projects, on dams or on the Shard in London, but you could call them a democratic crane. They do help people’s dreams come true... “So I really think there is a
potential for the self-erecting crane even to gain more space in the market compared to some other mobile cranes. “Self erecting cranes have
been very widespread in Europe for a long time. In Germany you buy a self-erecting crane like you buy bread. It is much the same in Belgium, France, Austria, and also when we come to Italy. They are in Scandinavia; in the UK, there are some but not too many: they are still a bit of a novelty but are now gaining acceptance. But the big new market for them is North
America. They are even more of a novelty there, but they are gradually gaining a bit of space. “I see that coming as a big potential market, and it is something that Terex is working on as a company. We have a few already in place there but obviously we want to enlarge our presence. We are developing the product, we are studying distribution channels. It is an area we are focussing on and pushing hard, and I don’t think we are alone in that. “I mentioned our CSE range
earlier. In that range we are working on a model with a 47 metre jib and that is one crane that we think will be ideally fitting the requirements in North America. Longer reaches, higher lifts, greater lifting capacities – those are what is wanted and what we can give them. “Of course, the trend towards size is happening everywhere, not only in the US. Our maximum capacity self erector at the moment is 4.4 tonnes, but the 47m jib version will be able to lift in the 6 tonne range. “We are seeing a big positive
trend in demand for self erectors. Terex recognised it three or four years ago and decided to move in that direction. In the past self erectors may have been seen, not just by us but by many, as a side- line, a sort of compliment to big, ‘proper,’ cranes; that has changed. So we now have an organisation in place here in Fontafredda dedicated to them, and a big engineering team to go with it, and that is also why we are bringing the new factory on stream. Generally the self erector seems to be the crane that that is expanding more than any other type of crane, and it has still got plenty of the market share to take from tower cranes and from mobiles. The overall market for them also is growing, in a positive way, and here at Terex we are also hoping to increase our share of it.”
CRANES TODAY 47
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