A NEW milestone has been reached in the construction of the £500 million Mersey Gateway.

Two of the six giant bridge building machines that will create Halton’s new river crossing have been launched in the Mersey estuary.

The form traveller machines have been moved apart for the first time at the south pylon.

They will now enable construction of the 1,000-metre long reinforced concrete bridge deck across the River Mersey to get underway.

The 270-tonne machines act as movable concrete moulds, operating in a similar way to the movable scaffold system which is building the elevated approach viaducts.

The form travellers were assembled at the south pylon earlier this year before being lifted to their starting position around 25 metres above the riverbed.

Construction teams will cast a pier table – a rectangular shaped platform – around the bridge pylon before preparing to start work on the main bridge deck.

Merseylink’s Kyuyoung Choi, operations manager for the main crossing, said: “Each segment of the bridge deck is made in the same way.

“Reinforced steel is placed into the mould and we then pour around 130 cubic metres of concrete inside to create each segment.

“From the third segment onwards, we install the connection boxes, which are called ‘delta frames’, for the steel stay cables, which are then attached to the upper pylon.

“The form travellers, which are powered by a hydraulic system, then move forward on a set of rails to the next position and the process is repeated.

“The deck segments are cast simultaneously, which allows the bridge deck to ‘grow’ from either side of the pylons until it meets the connecting bridge deck and the structure is complete.”