Bluegrass companies

Bluegrass Company
Private
Industry Non-Explosive Demolition
Engineering
Founded 1979 (1979)
Headquarters Greenville, AL
(Headquarters)
Broussard, LA
(Registered office)
Houston, TX
(Registered office)
Hanford, WA
(Registered office)
Dubois, WY
(Registered office)
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Nicholas Jenkins (CEO and Owner)
Services Diamond wire sawing, Concrete shaving, Robotic hammering, Expansive-grout supplier
Number of employees
50+ (August 2015)
Website Bluegrassbit.com

Bluegrass companies is a non-explosive demolition company headquartered in Greenville, Alabama. It was founded in 1979 by CEO and owner Nicholas Jenkins.[1] The business would comprise the sub-companies: Demolition Technologies, The Machine Shop, Bluegrass Concrete Cutting Inc. and Bluegrassbit. Bluegrass Company have always been headquartered in Greenville, Alabama though now incorporated in Wyoming.[2] The company would become known for the advancement of diamond wire sawing as a technique for non-explosive demolition, later for the creation and patenting of an underwater diamond wire saw,[3] and for assisting the U.S. Department of Energy with various tests[4] as well as nuclear decommissioning.[5]

Credentials

Bluegrass is registered and certified with ISO 9001:2008, the International Organization for Standardization. The company also meets standards of compliance with Avetta (formerly PICS), BROWZ, and ISNetworld.

Nuclear

Power Plant Decommissioning

Bluegrass has performed reactor vessel cutting and steam generator replacements at Sequoyah, Watts Bar, Browns Ferry, Waterford Nuclear Generating Station, Connecticut Yankee, Humboldt Bay, and Big Rock Point Nuclear power plants over the course of the last 30 years.[6]

Plutonium Immobilization Project

The company has worked for the government of the United States of America: Department of energy on their Plutonium Immobilization Project, "After the low pour rate and instrumented canisters cooled, Bluegrass Bit, Inc. used a diamond wire saw to section them at four heights. The sections were then studied for evidence of hardware deformation and glass voids" .[4] This project focused on the finding a way to disposition excess plutonium of a weapons grade classification.

Diamond Shaving of Contaminated Concrete Surfaces

The company helped to test using diamond shaving to decontaminate radioactive surfaces.[7]

The Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR)

In 1997 Bluegrass with the help of the Princeton Physics Laboratory offered a demonstration of how the TFTR could be dissembled with diamond wire sawing, “Based upon the demonstration at PPPL on the TFTR surrogate, the diamond wire cutting technology is superior to the baseline technology for both cost and safety considerations. The combination of void filling with this cutting technology will significantly reduce personnel radiation exposure through shielding, remote operation (normal application of this technology), and radionuclide stabilization”.[8]

Waste Management Symposia

Bluegrass been an exhibitor and participant at this international conference for the management of radioactive materials since 2012.[9]

Civil

Transportation: Highways, Railroads, Ports

By using diamond wire saws specifically designed and fabricated for cutting concrete and metal structures such as piers, caps and columns above and below water, Bluegrass has supported a broad spectrum of bridge and pier maintenance, decommissioning, demolition, modification, and retrofitting projects. Often running multiple saws simultaneously on these critical path outages, this strategy minimizes closure times. Railway bridge projects include a Union Pacific Railroad over the Willamette River in Oregon, and a BNSF pivot bridge over Bayou des Allemandes. Highway bridge projects include the Dumbarton Bridge in California and Wisner Boulevard bridge in New Orleans, LA. At the Port of Los Angeles, CA, an underwater wire saw cut Berth 29 for removal.

Hydroelectric

Bluegrass Slot Cut at Hiwassee Dam

Projects such as Hiwassee Dam[10] have been a focus of the company as well, also see their work with Tennessee Valley Authority.[11] With regard to dam remediation and upgrades, slot cutting projects are the company's main focus. It is akin to slicing a concrete dam like a piece of birthday cake. The technique is simple but very difficult, rotate a loop of cable strung with diamond embedded beads through the structure — essentially, like using a loop of fishing line to cut a cake. Slot cutting is employed to create expansion joints in dams afflicted with compression stresses due to concrete swelling. Alkali Aggregate Reaction, or AAR, is a chemical reaction in concrete created where the aggregate has a high silicon dioxide content. The southeast USA is one such region, and dams in that area require periodic slot cuts to avoid cracking, leakage, and interference with mechanical components such as gates and turbines. The time intervals depend on the AAR specifics of each structure, but 10 years is an average.

Bluegrass participated in the Saluda Dam Remediation project in South Carolina, a requirement by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission which involved seismic upgrades to the dam and building a backup dam immediately downstream. Bluegrass was contracted to assist with removal of concrete piers and retaining wall to provide access to the penstock towers which supply water to the turbines in the hydroelectric plant. Bluegrass diamond wire saws were ideally suited to the job because of the minimal vibration emitted, therefore avoided the potential hazard of vibrating debris into the draft tubes. Expansive grout and robotic hammers were also used to break the concrete blocks for removal.

NASA

Cell B&C are demolished to make room for new SLS tooling.

After having just recently retired a successful shuttle program NASA is once again looking into deep space (where no human has gone), only not to probe but to actually go. The spacecraft (currently labeled Orion) must first reach orbit before attempting a journey to mars. Nasa has designed what they call the S.L.S. or space launch system to perform this first critical task. Much like the space shuttle booster rockets, the S.L.S. will be assembled at the Michoud Assembly Facility and then transported to the launch location. The S.L.S. will be more powerful than any other similar system Nasa has designed with an expected 8.4 million pounds of thrust at launch. This larger scale and thrust meant facility wide upgrades at the Michoud Assembly location would be required. The task of removing the existing concrete silos, originally built for assembling the space shuttle booster rockets, to make way for larger SLS core stage assembly towers was estimated to take three months. Bluegrass was called in to regain schedule for the overall project eventually completing the demolition of cells B and C in a month.

Offshore

In 2006 Bluegrass created an underwater saw and had it patented for its use of hydraulic motors in combination with diamond wire to create a new sawing platform which was operational underwater. The continuous loop, four wheel drive diamond wire saw reduced cut times by providing greater torque and consistent wire grip. These improvements reduced slippage and subsequent wire breaks. Since then the patented underwater saw has been used domestically and globally on offshore decommissioning jobs including cutting single- and multi-string conductors, pipelines, seabed umbilicals, pilings, mooring chains, wellheads, risers, slot recovery and jacket lets. On platforms this technology can be applied to perform modifications, maintenance upgrades, to remove crane pedestals, compressors and topsides, and for hurricane remediation. Sub-sea saws can be installed by divers while being monitored and powered from a barge or platform, or they can be installed and powered by working class ROV’s.

U.S. Patent #8,286,625

Bluegrass Underwater Saw

The patent[3] was filed with the advantages being summarized as follows:

  1. An advantage of the present invention is a diamond wire saw assembly that provides the ability to cut large diameter heavy walled multi-string pipes remotely, safely and quickly.
  2. Another advantage is a diamond wire saw assembly that eliminates labor-intensive methods requiring the use of divers at extreme depths.
  3. Another advantage is that the diamond wire saw assembly can be deployed by remotely operated vehicles.
  4. Another advantage is that the diamond wire saw assembly can be used for removal of damaged offshore oil platforms as well as for decommissioning of oil platforms that have reached their useful life and are being removed.
  5. Another advantage is a diamond wire saw assembly that is portable.
  6. Another advantage is a diamond wire saw that eliminates wire breakage.

Hurricane Remediation

Bluegrass was involved in the arduous post-Katrina and -Rita cleanup of toppled or damaged offshore production platforms. Operating from work vessels chartered by Chevron, the cleanup team moved from platform to platform in the Gulf of Mexico, cutting structural platform members, stringers and caissons underwater and on deck to comply with BOEM and BSEE federal requirements to remove O & G (Oil and Gas) production debris from the seafloor.

Industrial

The techniques used by Bluegrass are particularly advantageous when applied to heavy industry. Diamond wire sawing allows for precise cutting of concrete and metal with the benefit of being free of vibration, debris and dust. It does not compromise the integrity of adjacent structures, leaves a smooth exposed surface, and can be deployed in confined spaces by using remote control operations and/or free-form saws. Also, and often the most significant factor, is the advantage of supporting project schedule by providing a predictable outcome. Examples of application to heavy industry include foundation removals and modifications, chest removals in the pulp and paper industry, brick and refractory removal primarily using robotic hammers, and boiler segmentation. In many industrial plants such as cememt, lime, copper, aluminum, and chemical, the kiln's refractory lining wears out and needs to be replaced, or is compromised by lime buildup which must be removed. For these demolition jobs, remotely operated robotic hammers are used to break up the refractory for removal, and for chipping off lime deposits.

Paper Mills

The production of wood pulp and paper products requires extensive concrete structures including foundations, walls, raised platforms and kilns. Refractory in kilns needs to be replaced periodically. A variety of maintenance, upgrade, retrofit, and replacement projects in this industry calls into service the full array of demolition equipment: core drills and diamond wire saws for cutting concrete bases, walls and foundations, and for releasing and cutting tanks and chests. Robotic hammers are able to work in the limited space of kilns to effectively break refractory and lime buildup for removal.

Chemical Plants and Refineries

The structures, mechanisms and environments of chemical plants and refineries are ideal candidates for the spark-free and vibration-free concrete and metal cutting technologies used by Bluegrass.

Heavy Metal

Los Alamost National Laboratories (LANL) Technical Area 54 contracted Bluegrass for assistance with a stockpile cleanup project.[12] The inventory of 84" diameter exotic steel spheres needed to be segmented into sizes suitable for containment and disposal. Bluegrass designed a saw to these specifications: it had to make a continuous cut, without stopping, through steel nearly 3" thick, and to avoid creating contaminated slurry it could not be cooled with water. Bluegrass engineered a saw that could hold double the usual amount of diamond wire, with an effective air-cooled system.

References

  1. "Bluegrass Revenues and Legal Records" (PDF). Alabama Department of Revenues. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  2. "Wyoming Refile". StateLog. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  3. 1 2 "U.S. Patent #20130000451". Fresh Patents. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  4. 1 2 "Plutonium Immobilization Project Cold Pour Phase 2 Test Results (U)" (PDF). United States Department Energy.
  5. "Federal Contractors E-Verify" (PDF). United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  6. "Nuclear Experience". Nuclearmarket.com. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  7. "Diamond Shaving Contaminated Concrete Surfaces". OSTI.GOV. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  8. "Demonstrating Diamond Wire Cutting Of The TFTR". Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory.
  9. http://www.wmsym.org/archives/2014/ExhibitorsCompanyDescription.pdf
  10. "Hiwassee Dam Slot Cut Project Completed Successfully By Bluegrass Concrete Cutting Inc.".
  11. "Bluegrass TVA".
  12. "Facility Deactivation and Decommissioning". Department of Energy - Los Alamos National Laboratory. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.