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SGB Distills The Essence Of Acces Expertise

17 Apr 09 Two Mastclimbers™ from scaffolding and access specialist SGB have been used by builders Rok in the cladding of the futuristic sloping façade of Diageo’s new distillery at Roseisle, Speyside.

Two Mastclimbers鈩 from scaffolding and access specialist SGB have been used by builders Rok in the cladding of the futuristic sloping fa莽ade of Diageo鈥檚 new distillery at Roseisle, Speyside.

The 拢40 million building is the first new malt whisky distillery to be built in Scotland for 30 years. A marriage of age-old whisky-making methods and dramatic architecture, the building houses traditional copper stills, made by skilled coppersmiths, inside a futuristic steel framed building designed by leading architects Austin Smith Lord.

One of the unique features of this building is a long ten-bay 15m high fa莽ade, which, inclined at 15 degrees to the vertical, proved a major access challenge. Cladding panels are often installed from mobile scissor lifts, but as these machines only operate in a vertical plane, the sloping facades could not be accessed without considerable difficulty.

SGB鈥檚 solution was to use Mastclimbers鈩, which, with their wide work platforms travelling on towers running parallel to the fa莽ade, could reach every part of the sloping elevation.

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The two 15m high masts were installed twice: first on one half of the fa莽ade and, when that was fully clad, they were dismantled and re-erected on the other half enabling the rest of the cladding to be completed.

Working closely with Rok, SGB developed a design which optimised the access solution to produce a method that was quick, cost-effective and minimised interference with installation of the cladding and insulation materials.
The two twin Mastclimbers鈩 would also allow the cladding subcontractor to install thermal insulation and cladding panels over the steel frame.

鈥淲e were originally going to use scissor lifts with extending platforms, but this presented problems of instability at maximum working height鈥, comments Rok senior project manager Tom McLaughlan. 鈥Scaffolding seemed to be the only alternative until we consulted SGB who proposed the use of Mastclimbers鈩, which they have used on inclined facades before.鈥

To support the inclined towers, SGB designed special base units, offset by 15 degrees, to transfer the loads to the ground. The lattice towers were also supported at the top of the fa莽ade and at intermediate points to provide the necessary lateral stiffness.

鈥淪GB was very involved in the design process, working with us and the designers to determine the anchor points for the masts, taking into account the position of the various openings in the fa莽ade. What started out looking like a very complicated access problem actually turned out to be a straightforward operation that worked well and went very smoothly鈥, adds Mr McLaughlan.

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