After this year’s devastating hurricane season, Hennigan Engineering wanted to help those most in need. Our friends in Puerto Rico were stuck with a critical lack of clean drinking water following the storm, and the damage to the infrastructure persists. Hennigan Engineering partnered with SIFAT.org (Servants in Faith and Technology) to deliver enough Sawyer Water Filtration Systems to produce 300 million gallons of drinking water within weeks of the crisis.
Hennigan Engineering has enjoyed a long-lasting relationship with the people of Puerto Rico via our business with PREPA (Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority) and our local business associates at Environics Group, San Juan, P.R. We wish for the quickest return to normalcy for the good people of Puerto Rico. If you would like to join us in supporting the efforts there, please log onto the link here to SIFAT and donate today.
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Come visit us at the following upcoming trade shows !
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Thanks to the Hennigan folks for working with us to get it done correctly and safely. I know it was a difficult task to take on, but well worth the end result. I believe, with some flow balancing, this will get us plenty of much needed flow margin. “
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Job Location: National Park Service – Fort Jay, Governor’s Island, NY
Hennigan Engineering was retained to perform a Utility Pipeline Infrastructure Condition Assessment for the National Park Service on Governor’s Island in New York Harbor. Our client for this project is a global engineering company that provides consulting, design, construction, and operations services for corporations, and federal, state and local governments around the world. The firm ranks in the top 3 of Engineering News- 2016 list of Top 500 Design Firms.
Fort Jay wa
Upon completion of the work, Hennigan Engineering developed a detailed report that included down-pipe snapshots taken from the video and other graphics as necessary for the owner to understand the status of their storm and sewer system. This included our recommendations to effect repairs and maintenance of the system in the future in support of the impending site rehabilitation.
The owner and our client have reported that they intend to re-engage Hennigan Engineering to execute the recommendations made in our Fort Jay report and also; to repeat this performance at Castle Williams on Governors Island in 2017.
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Hennigan responds to customer’s request to remove 7 inches of overhead concrete from an intake bay under critical path schedule. Hennigan completes 1st bay 7 days ahead of schedule, safely and under budget.
Hennigan Engineering Co., Inc. was called in to perform a concrete demolition operation at a Nuclear Power Plant after 21 days of jackhammering by another contractor failed to achieve the specified results. The failed pneumatic demolition effort during this outage caused a work stoppage and steel reinforcing beams needing to be installed to allow the plant to operate an ICW pump bay.
Because of live electrical lines and numerous pipe interferences and other obstructions in the work area, robotic concrete demolition technologies could not be used. Hennigan was hired to design a concrete removal system to remove overhead concrete material and allow the plant to make the necessary structural repairs to satisfy both the Nuclear Plant and NRC.
Hennigan Engineering designed a remote cleaning system that allowed individual tool operators the ability to hand control the path of the water jets, 40,000 psi was used to remove the concrete at high rates of production.
In addition to the ceiling removal, Hennigan personnel removed a thrust beam that housed pump bracing.
Hennigan Engineering was able to map out electrical lines using Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) and safely hydrolase concrete to the desired depth without incident.
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