Access Equipment Hire From Altida

We mainly hire Genie products; the world’s market leader as a lifting equipment manufacturer, which underpins our ethos and reliability as a business as we are committed to providing you with the very best-of-the-best.

We also provide customers with a variety of different brands for access equipment to ensure that the most informed choice possible is made. These brands are powered by diesel, electric or bi-fuel, which only adds to our broad range.

Access Hire is a specialist in its field and we are proud to be a chosen and integral service partner, supporting our infrastructure clients to deliver fully outsourced specialist equipment solutions.



Hire a mobile crane


Tower crane hire meaning they arrive at the construction site on 10 to 12 tractor-trailer rigs. The crew uses a mobile crane to assemble the jib and the machinery section and places these horizontal members on a 40-foot (12-m) mast that consists of two mast sections. The mobile crane then adds the counterweights.

The mast rises from this firm foundation. The mast is a large, triangulated lattice structure, typically 10 feet (3.2 meters) square. The triangulated structure gives the mast the strength to remain upright.

To rise to its maximum height, the crane grows itself one mast section at a time! The crew uses a top climber or climbing frame that fits between the slewing unit and the top of the mast. Here's the process:

  1. The crew hangs a weight on the jib to balance the counterweight.
  2. The crew detaches the slewing unit from the top of the mast. Large hydraulic rams in the top climber push the slewing unit up 20 feet (6 m).
  3. The crane operator uses the crane to lift another 20-foot mast section into the gap opened by the climbing frame. Once bolted in place, the crane is 20 feet taller!
Once the building is finished and it is time for the crane to come down, the process is reversed -- the crane disassembles its own mast and then smaller cranes disassemble the rest.

Renting a Tower Crane

Most construction companies rent their tower cranes from a company like Heede Southeast. Heidi ships the crane to the site assembles it and charges a monthly fee while the crane is on the site.

The typical fee for installation and disassembly runs around $60,000. This price includes shipping the crane to the site, hiring a mobile crane used to assemble the tower crane, the cost of the crew that handles the assembly, etc. A typical monthly fee for a 150-foot-tall tower crane is approximately $15,000, with an additional charge to rent the climbing frame and extra mast sections.

The second way is the internal climbing method. The crane stands inside the centre of the building, in a kind of makeshift courtyard, where it constructs the skyscraper around itself about a hundred feet at a time. A hydraulic cylinder at the crane’s base elevates it through the hollow middle of the building to a higher floor. Then workers slide steel beams underneath the crane to give it a sturdy new footing, and the crane begins building again.

Hire crane from specialists

The third method is to have a heavy-lift helicopter (or "sky crane") fly the crane to the top of the construction site. This must be done piece by piece—just a single segment of a crane’s tower can weigh between 3,000 and 20,000 pounds. However, because of the cost, and because flying a load-bearing helicopter over a populated area is logistically very difficult, this method is the rarest, used only a few times a year nationwide.

Bonus Explainer: How do cranes get back down? Often by constructing the very gallows that will destroy them. To disassemble themselves, tower cranes construct derricks on the rooftop of the finished project. (Derricks are tower cranes’ simpler great-granddaddy.) These derricks then help dismantle the tower cranes, and—in the case of internal climbers—lower their parts one by one to the ground using extremely long cables. Once the parts reach the ground, they’re taken back to the rental service on flatbed trucks, then the workers take apart the derricks. Most of the derricks’ parts can just take the construction elevator. (External climbers, however, can jack themselves all the way back down.)



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