East Midlands steel construction system included in major US investment programme

Steel Bricks, a modular steel construction system manufactured in the East Midlands, has been included in a multimillion-dollar funding programme to be delivered by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) aimed at making advanced nuclear construction faster and more affordable.

The U.S. DOE’s National Reactor Innovation Centre is investing $5.8m to develop innovative construction technologies to help reduce the cost of new nuclear builds by more than 10% as well as significantly speeding up the pace of their development.

Developed in Scotland by Modular Walling Systems, the Steel Bricks system is fabricated by leading structural steelworks manufacturer Caunton Engineering at the company’s headquarters in Moorgreen, Nottinghamshire.

The system has been described as ‘high-tech LEGO pieces’ which could significantly reduce the amount of construction labour required to build nuclear reactors on site.

The Steel Bricks system is one of three development projects that will be funded by the U.S. DOE’s Advanced Construction Technology (ACT) initiative.

GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy, the world-leading provider of nuclear power plant technology, will lead a team to explore promising technologies from other industries, ensuring they are tested to meet the exacting requirements of the nuclear industry.

Steel Bricks™ was recently identified a major component for GE Hitachi’s next generation BWRX-300 Small Modular Reactor – targeting a market estimated to be worth US $1.2 trillion globally.

For family-owned Caunton Engineering, the U.S. DOE’s funding endorsement of the Steel Bricks system presents a significant opportunity for the company to benefit from advanced nuclear design – especially in the potentially lucrative Small Modular Reactor global market.

Simon Bingham, the company’s executive chairman, said: “Our 10-year collaboration with Modular Walling Systems to create the Steel Bricks system has established a ‘first of a kind’ concept in the fast-emerging world of steel composite construction.

“The system provides not just the walls and suspended floors or roofs in steel composite, but most importantly a basemat. This takes away the need for conventional foundations, eliminating the traditional Achilles’ heel of this form of construction which are the weak points of the basemat to wall connection. Many attempts have been made during the past 25 years to devise simple, safe and rapid fabrication methods to internally connect steel faceplates. But most have lacked commercial application due to being too expensive and labour intensive.

“We can now successfully deliver a solution which is technologically proficient whilst providing significant cost and time saving benefits. This could mark a major leap forward for advanced nuclear construction in its global drive to become a cost-effective, green and sustainable alternative to carbon-based energy provision.”

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