Venice Port: New Layout to Generate Significant Savings

International engineering and project management consultancy Royal HaskoningDHV has completed the final layout of the new Port of Venice onshore offshore container terminal.

The layout and equipment optimization will generate significant capital and operating expenditure savings for the Venice Port Authority. The new solutions were presented to the financial community and ship operators earlier this month at the Italian Embassy in London.

The key to the new offshore port design lies in an innovative logistics concept comprised of cranes, barges and semi-submersible vessels. Acting as a continuous conveyor belt, containers are transferred from the offshore to the onshore terminal and vice versa. This process will enable the port to eliminate ‘dead time’ during loading, unloading, and transfer of the containers, and will allow more flexibility during peak operating times.

The terminal will be able to move approximately 1 million TEUs per year which is a significant portion of the container volumes estimated for the Northern Adriatic Sea by 2030. This way the Port of Venice will contribute to opening up the Northern Adriatic to large ocean going vessels. It will also help fostering the integration of Northern Adriatic ports into the core European road and rail freight corridors.

Benefits

Captain Antonio Revedin, Director Strategic Planning and Development at the Venice Port Authority, said: “The integrated design of the onshore-offshore terminal and the water transfer system have resulted in performances that are equal to those of the best container terminals in the world. In addition to making this significant cost saving, the way in which the terminal will operate will bring numerous benefits. We will be able to accommodate the latest ‘super-sized’ container vessels, greatly reduce travel time, operate at full capacity without double handling, and manage with maximum flexibility. We are now in a very good position to begin the next phase of the project.

Developing a terminal capable of handling Ultra Large Container Vessels (ULCV) at the original port location was not an option due to the port’s unique set of characteristics and the regulatory and environmental constraints on the development of navigation channels within the Venice Lagoon.

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