Seaspan’s Vancouver Drydock is strategically located on the West Coast of North America, just north of the Canada-US border. The yard provides a full range of quality repair services and understands the importance of delivering vessels on time and on budget. Facilities include two Lloyds registered floating dry-docks and alongside pier space, a heavy machine shop with two 40 tonne overhead traveling cranes and lathes, capable of handling shafts up to 18 metres (50 feet).
The need to be more efficient and deliver projects quickly and at a lower cost is especially important in the shipbuilding industry. Additionally, new regulations mandated by the International Marine Organization (IMO) have resulted in many new system installations that will require implementation over the next five to 10 years. Many of these systems are related to environmental concerns, with Vancouver Drydock’s most recent project, the completion of the Ballast Water Treatment System upgrade, being a prime example. Seaspan recently installed Novarc’s SWR™ to help complete the Ballast Water Treatment System at their Vancouver Drydock. While the work itself was a new type of refit project for Seaspan’s Vancouver Drydock, according to Seaspan, the Novarc welding automation technology used in the installation process was an even more exciting and innovative first for the yard.
The Ballast Water Treatment system was installed with the assistance of Novarc’s SWR™. For Vancouver Drydock, automation solutions like Novarc’s Spool Welding Robot play a key role in delivering the projects faster and with a lower cost. While some shipyards are slow to adopt new technology, Seaspan knew that it was embracing technology that had the potential to give the company a significant leading edge in an increasingly competitive market.