Van Oord completes Saint-Brieuc jacket job
Posted on 16 October 2023

62 foundations installed at 496MW French offshore wind farm.
Van Oord has completed the installation of 62 jacket foundations at the 496MW Saint-Brieuc offshore wind farm in France.
The project is being constructed in the Bay of Saint-Brieuc, 16.3km off the coast of Brittany. It is the first wind farm in France with jacket foundations.
Once operational, the site will generate enough clean energy for 835,000 inhabitants.
Ailes Marines, owned by Iberdola, contracted Van Oord for the transport and installation of 62 jacket foundations for the wind turbines (three pin piles each) and the four foundation pin piles for the offshore substation.
Van Oord deployed its offshore installation vessel Aeolus (pictured) to install the 190 pin piles and teamed up with other industry partners to install the jackets.
Conditions for building a wind farm in the Bay of Saint-Brieuc were challenging said Van Oord. The extremely hard and rocky seabed and Atlantic environmental conditions challenged its equipment and expertise.
The Aeolus was therefore upgraded and an extensive spread of project-specific installation equipment was engineered, constructed and utilised on the installation vessel.
To ensure the Aeolus could be safely jacked above sea level, the feet of the jacking system were modified with a flex-pin construction.
Due to the geotechnical conditions at the site, an innovative drilling method was used to install the foundations. Project-specific drills were jointly engineered and constructed with partner Bauer Spezial Tiefbau and a newly designed drilling template functioned as a positioning and casing drilling tool to ensure the precise placement of the pin piles.
“After executing a variety of projects in France, Van Oord reached a huge milestone by completing our very first highly complex offshore wind project here,” said Van Oord project director Ivar Daemen.
“Thanks to the great collaboration between our client Iberdrola, partners and dedicated project team, we have now finished our work on the Saint-Brieuc project. We’re proud to have contributed to France’s energy transition.’