The dip in real estate is allowing tower cranes to flourish in the infrastructure segment.
Tower cranes have ubiquitous across skylines in most major cities. In fact, they are a common fixture at any major construction site. They’re pretty hard to miss as they rise hundreds of feet into the air, and can reach out just as far. At construction sites, the crew uses them to lift steel, concrete, large tools - like acetylene torches and generators, and a wide variety of other building materials.
Developers and site workers consider them as miraculous tools of efficiency, allowing for construction work at extreme heights. In many cases, during the construction of skyscrapers and high-rise buildings, a tower crane actually paves its own sky-bound path: as it creates higher levels of a building above itself, the crane is elevated to the newly constructed higher levels via a hydraulic cylinder at its base. This continues until the tower crane reaches the building’s peak, where it constructs smaller derricks that disassemble it so it can return to the ground.
Over the last few years, with the advent of technology, the tower cranes is back in demand. VG Sakthikumar, MD, Schwing Stetter Sales & Services; Convener for Membership committee, ICEMA; and Chairman of Mechanization committee, BAI, says, “After a long gap of nearly 2-3 years, the tower crane market is again gearing up due to RERA implications in real estate and new affordable projects. This is also due to a rise in major government projects like bridges, metro projects, smart cities, etc. A number of specialised applications brings bigger capacity tower cranes again in demand.”
The growth is also seen in both developed and emerging markets, although Asia-Pacific, with its large number of emerging markets, is leading the growth. Europe is the second largest market.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
INFRA COMPANIES
In a significant move to alleviate traffic congestion and enhance connectivity, the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority (MMRDA) appointed contractors for key road infrastructure projects in Mumbai and Thane.
Global standards
Glass Wall Systems has been revolutionising the facade industry
STRIKING THE PERFECT CHORD
The 14th Construction Week Awards was an evening to remember with 1 industry turning up in full strength
REAL ESTATE
For the past six years, we have resorted to ranking Top 100 real estate and infra companies.
THE DYNAMICS PROPELLING REAL ESTATE GROWTH IN KEY CITIES
Dr Gautam Kanodia, founder, KREEVA, co-founder, Kanodia Group, explains the trends
DESIGN PAR EXCELLENCE
Design International has been at the forefront of retail-led design for 60 years. Staying sustainable and contemporary is their mainstay
dormakaba EXPANDS ITS MARKET PRESENCE IN INDIA
dormakaba expands its presence in India with the opening of a new Customer Experience Center in New Delhi, joining its existing centers in Mumbai and Bangalore. These hubs offer customers direct access to products, solutions, and on-site training.
GODREJ PROPERTIES ACQUIRES ITS 11TH NEW PROJECT; TAKES BOOKING VALUE TO RS 22,950 CRORE!
Will develop a group housing plot at Golf Course Road in Gurugram
SIGNATURE GLOBAL AWARDS RS 1203 CRORE CONSTRUCTION CONTRACT TO CAPACIT'E
First phase comprises 2.1 million sq-ft
HOUSING SALES IN MAJOR CITIES DROP BY 11% IN Q3 2024, SURPASSING NEW PROPERTY LAUNCHES: ANAROCK GROUP
Six salient growth levers include urbanization, demographic shifts, digitalization, sustainability