Entering the 5m entry pit, Horizontal Directional Drilling, Tru-Line Civil, documentary photography, Parklands West, Christchurch, New Zealand, Gravity Wastewater Replacement, HDD

Horizontal Drilling: Parklands

TruLine_Civil_logo_radiused_256pxContinuing the ongoing project to photograph TruLine Civil’s range of work methodologies and then follow through by writing them up as Case Studies on their website. I was contracted to document the span of a day on location in Akaroa. The brief is to record a fine-grained record of TLC’s capability in the relatively new Civil Engineering field of “Trenchless Technology”, in this case specifically Horizontal Directional Drilling (HDD). This fast and highly accurate “Horizontal Infrastructure” laying technique is achieved by way of a synchronised deployment of highly skilled and experienced operators, high tech machinery and tight coordination between the project team members. From skilled labourers and drivers up the chain to the site engineer—close communication is maintained between the project team members via modern telecommunications.

The brief was to document the highly accurate and technically difficult drilling required to install new Parklands West Area Infrastructure Gravity Wastewater line at over 4m depth in very challenging, “running sand” or water saturated sandy ground, and all achieved within 2m of an existing, “pumping” half metre diameter wastewater pipeline from the Belfast Freezing Work. I used the novel approach with this case study of interviewing the site foreman as he walked me around the job site and explained the HDD project in overview, and the specific characteristics of the sub-task I was there to photograph.


Client: TruLine
Photographer: Shaun Waugh


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Phil Price Sculpture Zephyrometer re-install

The reinstallation of the Zephyrometer wind sculpture, after scheduled maintenance and repairs, April 10–11, 2014, eleven years after it installed on the Evans Bay foreshore site. Two days of the work involved to reinstall the sculpture are chronicled in this slideshow of Phil and his highly skilled employees and sub-contractors at work.

Zephyrometer wind sculpture reinstallation

Sculpture artist Phil Price at Evans Bay, April 2014.

The sculpture gets a real workout from Wellington’s winds, but soon after the refurbished work was reinstalled on August 14, 2014 it was dramatically struck by lightning, but not defeated.

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Description


Project name: Zephyrometer installation chronicle
Client (Industry): Phil Price Sculpture / PKP Kinetics (Fine arts)
Discipline: Photography
Format: Slide show
Date: 2014

Nb. On the work safety side, it is important to point out that I comply with all Occupational Safety and Health guidelines on site and hold a current Trans-Tasman ‘Workplace Health and Safety’ card.

Phil Price installing the Tree of Life, Karingal, Melbourne, Australia.

Phil Price Sculpture Tree of Life install

The 10 metre tall wind-activated kinetic sculpture “Tree of Life” is a major, permanent Public Artwork designed and made by Phil Price of Christchurch, New Zealand.

The work was commissioned by Peninsula Link[1] and installed over 10–12  December 2012 at the Cranbourne Road exit site, on the Langwarrin exit ramp from the new motorway. This is one of the exit points for access to the McClelland Gallery + Sculpture Park[2].

Crane lifting the Tree of Life into position, Karingal, Melbourne, Australia.

Shaun Chamberlain steadies the second branch of pods as they are crane-lifted up to the crown of the work. Phil Price is waiting at the crown on the cherry picker platform to affix it there.

Tree of Life is one of Peninsula Link’s featured major permanent sculptures and is part of Southern Way’s unique partnership with the McClelland Gallery + Sculpture Park in Langwarrin, which was established to manage the selection and installation of sculptures on Peninsula Link. Tree of Life is part of an ongoing project that will alternate sculptures on the Peninsula Link Freeway with the McClelland Gallery collection.

Tree of Life measures 10 meters high and is made of composite materials; carbon fibre, fibreglass, kevlar high temperature epoxy, along with custom, one-of-a-kind precision bearings and various kinds of steel.

The large tree like form is a wind-activated kinetic sculpture that makes an obvious reference to the eucalypt—an Australian icon. As such Tree of Life functions as a landmark for the natural beauty of the Mornington peninsula.

Tree of Life documentary photography

This project forms part of an ongoing collaboration between myself and Phil Price that got underway in 2006, it is a work in progress that aims to progressively document both Phil’s completed works and methodologies. Heroic photos of completed work have been shot and select, significant episodes of work process events such as this one have been journaled. This slideshow chronicles two days work in Karingal, Melbourne by Phil, his highly skilled employees and sub-contractors.


[1] Peninsula Link: A Public Private Partnership between; Linking Melbourne Authority (Victoria State Government) / Southern Way.

[2]McClelland Gallery + Sculpture Park:


Description


Project name: Tree of Life installation documentary photography
Client (Industry):
 Phil Price Sculpture / PKP Kinetics (Fine arts)
Disciplines:  Photography / Video
Format: Slideshow / short film
Date: 2012

Nb. On the work safety side, I comply with all Occupational Safety and Health guidelines on the construction site and hold a current Trans-Tasman ‘Workplace Health and Safety’


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card.

Box Culvert install methodology 1/5

Tru-Line Civil Logo. Brands for New Zealand companies, Greymouth, New Zealand.First of five galleries documenting the install of a 10.5m reinforced concrete box culvert beneath the Christchurch—Greymouth “Tranzalpine” railway shot on the night of Sunday July 3, 2016 for client TruLine Civil’s website case study portfolio project. The shoot documents the methodology for installing one of six under-rail culverts on the Otira riverbed just to the east of Arthur’s Pass township. The task is part of a package of civil works on the road & rail network TruLine is contributing to the Mingha Bluff road realignment project.

This documentary photography major archive project for TruLine began in 2004 and since 2008 the chronicling of significant Civil Works events has been an ongoing, consistent project for MagentaDot Brands’ professional photographer Shaun Waugh, who observes:

“The client brief is to shoot photos that accurately document their civil works methodologies. By document I mean to photograph to accurately describe otherwise forbidden, difficult to access places or sets of circumstances that are hidden in plain sight. The photos range from dry records of excavation to photojournalistic, more personal evocative images of men collaborating or immersed in their work. The documentary photography of men and machines at work in the Civil Engineering field is building TruLine an archive of historical significance which was intended, from the outset, to be distributed primarily to the narrow audience of their customer base via the TruLine website case study portfolio.”

By following through with research and then writing the case studies, creating custom maps as required, the case study portfolio Shaun is developing is partly an educational in-house resource, partly a business-to-business marketing communications web platform, and with the slideshow feature and the inclusion of videos, a capabilities brochure sales tool used by TruLine’s marketing and sales team, and in competitive tender bid documents. Shaun adds:

“To the extent that students, media and the public are interested, the case studies also have a role in changing public perceptions of the work experience of modernity, of workers, their works, and the conditions of work for people, mostly men, such as drainlayers, road workers, earthmoving and other heavy machinery operators, truck drivers, and civil engineers.

Inevitably because the photography is documenting “the way we do things” in Civil Works today, it intersects with the prevalent complex of organisational culture that is good workplace Safety Culture. The photography documents that adequate attention is being paid to safety issues by capturing workers’ realistic practices for handling hazards as well as compliance to standards, rules and procedures by the workforce. It is also aimed to contribute to sharing critical information within TruLine’s workforce and management that powers the “engine” of ideal safety culture, being a constant high level of respect for anything that might defeat safety systems.”

4:00–5:00 pm. Site overview, start excavating the 5m under-rail trench

From the time the Tranzalpine train passed over the culvert installation site the TruLine Civil crew had 17 hours in which to install the 10.5 m reinforced concrete box culvert and reinstate the railway.

NEXT GALLERY MINGHA BLUFF 2


Description


Project name: Tru-Line Civil Website case studies portfolio
Client (Industry):
TruLine Civil (Construction/Contracting)
Discipline: Documentary photography / Corporate communications design / Infographics  / Technical writing / Web content management
Format: Website / Case Studies / Methodologies
Location: Mingha Bluffs SH73, Arthurs Pass, New Zealand
Date: July 2016


Credits


Design firm: MagentaDot Brands
Photographer: Shaun Waugh
Client: Tru-Line Civil


Horizontal Directional Drilling, Tru-Line Civil, Akaroa, documentary, photography, Akaroa Water Supply Stage 3, Reticulation Upgrade, Vermeer HDD,

Horizontal Drilling Akaroa methodology

TruLine_Civil_logo_radiused_256pxDocumentary location photography chronicling Horizontal Directional Drilling (HDD) construction method practiced by client, Tru-Line Civil. This “trenchless technology” slideshow documents the drilling of a pilot bore and the subsequent back-reaming of a 120m long drinking water supply pipeline up to the summit of Coachmans Road, Akaroa—a small very busy tourist destination located on scenic Banks Peninsula in the South Island of New Zealand.

Horizontal Directional Drilling, Tru-Line Civil, Akaroa, documentary, photography, Akaroa Water Supply Stage 3, Reticulation Upgrade, Vermeer HDD,

Summit of Coachmans Road Akaroa. The HDD drilling unit operator Grant Senior, with the the pilot bore entry trench to the left. Akaroa Harbour basin and the township form the backdrop..

Background to the HDD drilling event

The HDD drilling and back-reaming was a sub-task of the Akaroa Water Supply Stage 3, Reticulation Upgrade carried out in 2014 by Tru-Line Civil for the Christchurch City Council (sub-contracting to Hawkins Infrastructure). The 180mm ø pipeline is designed to carry treated drinking water pumped up from a new water treatment plant and pump booster station on the slopes of Coachman’s Road to a new 500 m³ reservoir situated on the ridge between Akaroa and Takamatua.

The big picture

This day of shooting is part of a larger, long term project which I commenced for the client in 2008, to produce a high quality image archive of their construction methods and completed projects—the photos are both of historical significance to Tru-Line Civil and for immediate use to illustrate the civil engineering case studies, like the Akaroa HDD case study I researched and co-wrote on their website and the competitive tender bid documents that are produced as part of their day-to-day operations.

Horizontal Directional Drilling, Tru-Line Civil, Akaroa, documentary, photography, Akaroa Water Supply Stage 3, Reticulation Upgrade, Vermeer HDD,

The crew detach the back reaming head from the drill stem and remove it from the entry trench prior to relocating the HDD drilling rig to the next drill site for the day.

The photojournalistic objective is always to produce a series of truthful, descriptive, and candid photos of two broad subjects; Tru-Line’s Civil Engineering projects and the disciplines and methodologies used to complete them. The work is objective, I learn about the subject so I may anticipate and flow with the action on the day. Due to the nature of the Civil Engineering and Drainlaying industries, documenting their methods most often involves pictures of people, specifically men, at work, using tools and skilfully operating vehicles and heavy equipment.

Civil engineers build…

Civil Engineering will always involve moving dirt, the design, planning and building of structures like bridges, infrastructure, water supply systems and roads. Modern, affordable earthmoving plant and new technologies like HDD are revolutionising the industry in ways most engagingly shown via photography and video. Combined with modern methods, materials and large civil works programmes such as the Christcurch post-quake rebuild, involve water and sewage reticulation networks and the roll-out of Ultra-Fast Broadband. Civil engineering is a very engaging and rewarding subject to document as a photographer.


Description


Project name: Tru-Line Civil Website case studies portfolio
Disciplines:
 Photography / Technical writing / Typographic design / Web design / Web content management
Client (Industry): Tru-Line Civil (Construction / Contracting)
Format:  Website / Case Studies / Methodologies
Location: Akaroa
Date: June 2014


Credits


Design firm: MagentaDot Brands
Photographer: Shaun Waugh
Client: Tru-Line Civil


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Nick Thomson, Eldee T.T., lightweight, Velocette special, side elevation, starboard side, petrol tank, new Eldee Velocette badge, carbon fibre petrol tank and fairing, rider, Bill Swallow, flying swallow mark, publicity photo, photographer, Shaun Waugh, MagentaDot Brands

Eldee-2 Velocette I.O.M. Classic racer launch

Before and after gallery of the equipped and race-ready Velocette special Eldee-2. These publicity photos were shot for the launch announcement and publicity purposes.

The slideshow documents the transformation from the 1950s Les Diener Eldee-2 to 2014 Nick Thomson Velocette Eldee-2 carbon fibre racing machine representing New Zealand at the Isle of Man Classic T.T., August 2014, ridded by Bill Swallow.

Eldee Velocette, front three-quarter, poster, A2, portrait, Craftsmanship

Eldee-2 Craftsmanship A2 Poster. One of a series of publicity posters designed using the publicity photos. Bike automotive engineering Nick Thomson, carbon fiber faring, seat and tank by Phil Price sculpture, “Race ready” livery photoa and publicity poster design by MagentaDot Brands.

The name ‘Eldee’ is the eponymous name that gifted Australian engineer and champion racer Les Diener (L.D.) dubbed this ‘lightweight special Velocette’ when he home-brewed this pioneering overhead-camshaft racing bike in Australia in the 50s.

July 31, 2014, Christchurch, New Zealand:
The V.R.N.Z team is proud to announce the launch of the new Nick Thomson DOHC, Dual Ignition Velocette ‘Eldee-2’, the 250cc lightweight special is equipped and ready for the Isle of Man Classic T.T., August 2014. Our rider, multiple Manx Grand Prix race winner Bill Swallow, will be competing for the new 250cc class Phil Read Trophy (the new Phil Read Trophy, will go to the first 250cc machine in the Monday’s Okells 350cc Classic TT Race). Bill Swallow is to ride the Eldee Special in the Junior Classic, 25th August.

Eldee Velocette classic racing motorcycle, Isle of Man Classic TT 2014, ClassicRacer Magazine, half page horizontal colour advertisement. Advertising design, copywriting, photography.

ClassicRacer Magazine, VRNZ half-page horizontal colour advert featuring the Eldee-2 classic racing machine in its sporting new race-ready livery. Livery, poster and logos by MagentaDot Brands.


Description


Project name: Eldee Velocette launch / publicity photos
Client (Industry): Velocette Racing New Zealand (Classic motorsport)
Disciplines: Copywriting / Digital Illustration / Photography / Promotional design and advertising / Vehicle livery / Web design
Format: Announcement / Corporate communication  / Digital Illustration / Information graphic / Social media / T-shirt / Website
Date: 2014


Credits


Design firm: MagentaDot Brands
Copywriter: Shaun Waugh
Art direction / graphic design / photography: Shaun Waugh
Font credits: Helvetica Inserat (racing numerals and decals on bike)