Crane assembly encompasses the professional setup, rigging, and commissioning of tower cranes, mobile cranes, and auxiliary cranes on construction sites and in deconstruction. It combines lifting technology, structural engineering, and construction logistics. In numerous projects—from concrete demolition and special demolition through strip-out and cutting to rock excavation, tunnel construction, and natural stone extraction—components are purposefully prepared so that lifting operations proceed safely, in a controlled manner, and efficiently. Segmenting cuts with concrete pulverizers and low-vibration splitting with rock and concrete splitters play an important role in reducing loads, optimizing geometries, and exposing sling points.
Definition: What is meant by crane assembly
Crane assembly refers to the entirety of steps from planning, construction site setup, erection and rigging through to inspection and release of a crane for operation. This includes selecting the appropriate crane type, defining the set-up area and support, joining mast elements, slewing platform and jibs, installing counterweights, reeving ropes, and documenting inspections. Subsequent dismantling is also part of the life cycle. The goal is safe, code-compliant lifting technology tailored to the specific load and environmental situation—from inner-city strip-out to heavy special demolition.
Planning and preparation of crane assembly
The quality of crane assembly stands and falls with preparation. A robust assembly concept clarifies loads, routes, areas, weather windows, and interfaces to parallel trades such as demolition, strip-out, or concrete placement. In many cases, components are deliberately downsized before the crane is assembled or between rigging steps—using concrete pulverizers or rock and concrete splitters—to reduce weights and create sling points.
- Location and subsoil assessment: load-bearing capacity, settlement risks, groundwater, edge distances, crane set-up area and outrigger pads
- Load and lift plan: hook heights, outreaches, load moments, load handling attachments, slings, spreader systems
- Logistics: access routes, road plates, laydown areas for jib sections, counterweights, and mast elements
- Safety organization: exclusion zones, traffic and pedestrian protection, communication, emergency plan
- Interfaces: time windows for cutting and splitting works, power supply for hydraulic power packs, coordination with deconstruction crews
- Weather and wind: thresholds, measurement and decision paths for interruptions
Assembly process for tower cranes
The erection of a tower crane follows a sequential process that varies depending on system, height, and approval. The steps must be coordinated and continuously documented.
- Check the foundation or crane runway: flatness, bearing capacity, attachment points, and anchors
- Rig the auxiliary crane or mobile crane for pre-assembly
- Set the base tower section and align it
- Install the slewing platform
- Attach jib and counter-jib, secure the jib sections
- Install and secure the counterweights
- Reeve the hoist and trolley ropes, functional tests
- Commissioning checks, test load, documentation
Specifics for confined sites
In inner-city settings, existing buildings, or special demolition, inserts, upstands, or protruding components often have to be removed to create swing radii, outrigger spreads, or assembly routes. Concrete pulverizers enable selective biting of reinforced-concrete elements to level sling faces. Rock and concrete splitters split massive components with low vibration, minimizing impacts on neighboring buildings and protecting sensitive installations.
Assembly of mobile cranes and auxiliary cranes
Mobile cranes are rigged for erecting tower cranes, repositioning heavy components, and for dismantling. Decisive factors are the correct configuration of boom, extensions, and ballast as well as the outrigger width. In deconstruction projects, the rigging configuration is often adapted to tight space conditions. Preparatory cutting and splitting reduce loads and component dimensions so that the lifting task fits the permissible load-moment charts.
Interfaces with concrete demolition and special demolition
Many lifting processes only become feasible through targeted preparation. This is especially true for selective deconstruction, strip-out, and cutting in existing structures.
- Concrete pulverizers create defined edges and openings for rigging gear, remove cantilevering components, and reduce the weight of slab fields before lifting.
- Rock and concrete splitters separate massive foundations, columns, or rock ledges with low vibration to level crane set-up areas or move loads in segmented form.
- Combination shears and multi cutters sever steel sections, reinforcement, and mixed structures, sizing components to suit crane lifting.
- Steel shears cut beams, trapezoidal sheets, and steel structures to optimize load distribution and make sling points accessible.
- Tank cutters are used on dismantled vessels when components must be subdivided into manageable segments prior to lifting.
- Hydraulic power units provide the energy supply, particularly where electrical power is limited or unavailable.
Load handling attachments, slings, and weight management
A robust weight concept is the core of every crane assembly. It combines realistic mass assumptions, suitable load handling attachments, and safe rigging techniques. Where weights are uncertain or limits are exceeded, prior cutting or splitting helps bring the load into permissible ranges.
Weight estimation and takeoff
For concrete components, mass is derived from volume and density (considering reinforcement ratios, embedded items, and voids). For steel, use cross-sectional area times length and material density. Additional moisture, adherences, and fillings must be accounted for. Planning conservatively increases safety.
Reducing loads by cutting and splitting
Concrete pulverizers are suitable for dividing slab fields, parapets, and walls into crane-suitable segments without introducing large-area vibrations. Rock and concrete splitters open cracks along defined lines, breaking massive components into controllable pieces. Advantages include reduced emissions, low peripheral vibration, and precise geometries for safe sling points.
Safety, environmental and health protection
Crane assembly requires a consistent safety organization. This includes personal protective equipment, clear communication paths, secured exclusion zones, verified rigging, and adapted measures in wind, rain, snow, or poor visibility. During cutting and splitting, dust and noise reduction as well as catching material must be addressed. Stated limits and procedures are to be understood as general; the specific case requires a project-specific assessment.
Ground, foundation, and support
The bearing capacity of the subsoil is crucial for stability in setup and operation. Required are flatness, sufficient contact areas, and, if necessary, load-distributing mats or road plates. In tunnel or rock environments, bearing pads are often created using splitting techniques, with rock ledges and concrete edges adapted using rock and concrete splitters. In natural stone extraction, cranes can be used to reposition blocks or equipment; defined splitting supports safe handling of heavy natural-stone segments.
Documentation, handover, and commissioning
A complete crane assembly includes test records, visual and functional checks, certificates for rigging and load handling attachments, as well as a comprehensible briefing on operation and emergency measures. A plannable dismantling concept should already be considered during the assembly phase, especially in temporary special demolition projects.
Typical mistakes and proven solutions
Common issues include underestimated component weights, unfavorable sling angles, insufficient support, or lack of swing clearance. Remedies include conservative mass assumptions, creating additional sling points, early creation of flat surfaces, and preparatory segmenting with concrete pulverizers or low-vibration splitting of massive elements. Tight coordination between the lifting team and the deconstruction crew prevents downtime and increases safety.
Application examples from the fields of use
- Concrete demolition and special demolition: Slab fields are divided into lift units with concrete pulverizers; mobile cranes move the segments across confined courtyards.
- Strip-out and cutting: Before tower crane assembly, upstands and built-ins are removed to create set-up areas; hydraulic wedge splitters reduce massive core walls.
- Rock excavation and tunnel construction: Splitters shape bearing pads in rock galleries; cranes lift formwork travelers and equipment under limited headroom.
- Natural stone extraction: Defined splitting produces crane-suitable blocks with clear sling edges, facilitating load handling.
- Special operation: In facilities with restricted access, steel beams are shortened with steel shears before an auxiliary crane swings the segments out in a controlled manner.
Tool selection for preparatory works
The choice between cutting, sawing, and splitting depends on material, boundary conditions, and target geometry:
- Concrete pulverizers: selective biting of reinforced concrete, good edge quality, suitable for sling faces and weight reduction
- Rock and concrete splitters: controlled, low-vibration opening in thick concrete and rock, ideal for creating crane set-up areas
- Combination shears and multi cutters: flexible for mixed structures when concrete and metal alternate
- Steel shears: efficient shortening of sections and beams to crane-suitable lengths
- Tank cutters: segmentation of vessels prior to lifting, especially in tight interior spaces
- Hydraulic power packs: power supply for the tools, important for autonomous assembly or limited power connections




















