Underground streams, frost, and happy neighbours: Nielshenrik loves the unpredictable refurbishments
“I love refurbishment because we make here-and-now decisions every day. I feel really good about that. When we renovate a lot of apartments at once we need to do some pretty intense flows. We also need a clear structure for the execution of each stage. It's never an option to stand still just because a closet is placed differently in nr. 17 or because it's difficult to pass the waste pipe in nr. 36. We need to move on and that means constantly being ready to act.”
The words are project manager Nielshenrik Svenstrup’s.
In 2021 he is celebrating his 10-year anniversary in MT Højgaard Danmark. He started out here as an intern on the building project Landbo Midtøst. In the last five years Nielshenrik has spent most of his time on the refurbishment of a housing in Åbyhøjgård in Aarhus.
“Åbyhøjgård has entailed a lot of constructional challenges. That’s the way it always is with refurbishments. At one point we had to deal with an underground stream running right under where we were building an elevator shaft. To cast the shaft, we made a welded steal frame which we pushed down. We built the formwork inside of the steal frame while we pumped away water. That gave us peace to work so we could cast the bottom of the shaft.”
We recently handed over a refurbished youth housing consisting of 18 apartments. During the refurbishment the continuous frost created a new challenge that Nielshenrik and the team needed to solve.
“We were handing over the housing on the first of March and the residents were moving in on the 15th. But we had a lot of frost in January and February. That meant that we couldn’t make the front access level as required. The frost also meant that we couldn’t make the balcony on the first floor. To solve the problem, we had an excavator come and move half a meter of the frozen ground. After that we placed new gravel which we kept warm with winter mats. That meant that we were able to finish on time.”
