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Heavylift@Sea Unveils Deck Carrier

Engineering firm HeavyLift@Sea has unveiled a new heavy cargo deck carrier, designed to transport breakbulk cargoes for offshore wind projects

Small port, big cargo, narrow waterways: the heavy cargo deck carrier for offshore wind projects in the North and Baltic Seas, which is currently being built at a Chinese shipyard, is the answer to a wide range of customer requirements for this special ship that initially seemed to be difficult to reconcile.

The Hamburg maritime engineering company HeavyLift@Sea presented the solution with an individual basic design for a high-performance heavy cargo deck carrier. “Our client for this project, a Hamburg-based shipping company specializing in offshore wind projects, is already operating a deck carrier, which is to be supplemented by a more flexible high-performance new-build. The ship will initially transport wind power components for offshore wind turbines in the North Sea and Baltic Sea,” says Hendrik Gröne, Managing Director of HeavyLift@Sea, explaining the project. This special area of application and the special ship’s type of employment required a very sophisticated, tailor-made design.

The heavy cargo deck carrier (DC 10000) has been designed to transport heavy cargo and large modules as well as components that cannot be lifted by crane due to their weight or structure – for example fragile steel structures for the oil and gas industry – but are rolled onto the loading deck.

Since the ports at which the ship will call include a very small one in Denmark, the HeavyLift@Sea team simulated these conditions at the Danish shipbuilding test facility in Copenhagen and included the result in the design’s calculations. “There were a number of requirements for this ship that seemed to be mutually exclusive at first,” reports Hendrik Gröne. “The width of the required cargo deck had to be reconciled with a ship width that was small enough for the approach to this particularly small Danish port. At the same time, in order for the ship to pass through the Kiel Canal, it had to be taken into account that the deck couldn’t be wider than the waterline.”

Optimization for North Sea and Baltic Sea deployment, flexibility for worldwide projects the team of shipbuilding engineers, designers and constructors from HeavyLift@Sea developed the solution: The loading deck of the new deck carrier has an area of 3,600 square meters and is therefore particularly large in relation to the overall dimensions of the ship, which has a length of 148.50 meters and a width of 28 meters. Among other things, this was achieved by designing the superstructures with the deck-house, which can accommodate a crew of 21, to be as compact as possible. Another special feature of the generous, flat deck is its extremely high load-bearing capacity, both in terms of distributed load and point and linear loads. This ensures a high degree of flexibility when using the
heavy goods transporter, which has a total load capacity of around 10,000 tons. “In the first few years, the deck carrier will transport wind power components in the North and Baltic Seas, and we have optimized it for this purpose,” says Hendrik Gröne. “At the same time, however, we
also designed the ship to meet the shipping company’s need for flexible worldwide deployment and maximum utilization of such a special vessel.” The heavy goods transporter is thus also prepared for equipping with DP2, making it suitable for work in highly complex offshore projects worldwide. To optimize the diesel-electric propulsion to the ship’s size and achieve maximum maneuverability, the generators under the aft deck were divided in an unconventional way, which also resulted in high energy efficiency. The deck carrier reaches a speed of around 12 knots with this propulsion.

The propulsion exceeds the current environmental requirements with exhaust gas purification using SCR catalytic converters.

The steel cutting ceremony for the heavy cargo deck carrier with the basic design DC 10000 was held at the end of November 2018; delivery is scheduled for the end of 2019. Meanwhile, the HeavyLift@Sea team based at Veritaskai in Hamburg-Harburg has already won the contract for the next basic design: a special ship for offshore wind operations.

Ship data heavy cargo deck carrier (Basic Design DC 10000)
Length over all: approx. 148.50 metres
Breadth moulded: approx. 28 metres
Depth to main deck: approx. 8 metres
Draught max. 5.60 metres
Load capacity at max. draught: approx. 10,000 tons
Speed: 12 knots
Working deck: approx. 130×28 metres
Deck load: approx. 20 tons/square metre
Cabin capacity: for 21-person crew
Classification: DNV-GL, General Cargo Ship, BWM(D2), DG

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