08.02.2022 | A gigantic construction: Building a wind power plant

Before the rotor blades start turning

Jeanette Schranz

Author

Email

 

Thirty-five tons of reinforcing iron, over 300 cubic-metres of concrete, tower elements up to 30 metres long: The construction of a wind power plant is a logistical tour de force. Once the various components of the wind power plant are on site, the erection and commissioning of a wind farm only takes 8 to 12 weeks thanks to coordination and precision.

The foundation of a wind power plant is a reinforced iron construction filled with concrete that has to harden for at least 4 weeks. After that everything goes very quickly. Various specialists work hand in hand according to a tight schedule: The tower is placed into the foundation (Fundament), the nacelle that houses the gearbox (die Gondel mit Getriebe), brake (Bremse) and Generator (Generator), and the hub (Nabe) with the rotor blades (Rotorblättern) are mounted on the tower.

Then the interior work begins, which includes the installation of the power cables from the nacelle to the foundation. After successful commissioning including safety tests, the wind power plant under goes a test operation phase. In the test phase the plant must produce during 120 to 240 hours without any intervention from the technicians. The plant must successfully pass this test before final acceptance.

Once the plant is in operation, it generates electricity for some 1650 households.

Axpo subsidiary Volkswind

The Axpo subsidiary Volkswind GmbH has been part of the Axpo Group since the fall of 2015 and has developed more than 80 wind farms in Germany and France with an installed capacity of over 1,350 MW. In France, Axpo is already one of the leading companies in the development and construction of wind energy plants. 

More articles for you

Show all

Energy market

Navigating structural tightness and growing uncertainty as winter approaches

European Energy Markets Monthly, November 2024

Read more

Renewable energy

‘Humans remain the deciding factor’

The Mauvoisin power plants were also severely affected by the storms

Read more

Renewable energy

‘How can we better protect our installations?’

The Saas Valley in the canton of Valais was hit by two severe storms this summer

Read more