Osborne Naval Shipyard

The Osborne Naval Shipyard is a multi-user facility at Osborne on the Lefevre Peninsula in South Australia. It was established in 1987 for the Australian Submarine Corporation, and the first products of the facility were the six Collins-Class submarines.

Osborne Naval Shipyard
View of shipyard from the Port River
Location of Osborne Naval Shipyard
Osborne Naval Shipyard (South Australia)
Osborne Naval Shipyard (Greater Adelaide)
LocationOsborne, South Australia
Coordinates34.785°S 138.511°E / -34.785; 138.511
Industryshipbuilding
ProductsRoyal Australian Navy ships
Owner(s)Australian Naval Infrastructure (ANI)[1]

Facilities

The ship building precinct includes a number of discrete facilities, as it has grown over the time it has existed.

The Government of South Australia built a "common user facility" that includes a wharf and Shiplift constructed between 2007 and 2010, known as Techport Australia. It was designed by Aurecon and constructed by McConnell Dowell and Built Environs.[2] Techport was sold by the state government to the Federal Government in 2017 for A$230 million.[3]

The shiplift was supplied by Rolls-Royce and is 156 metres (512 ft) long and 34 metres (112 ft) wide. It can lift 9,300 tonnes (9,200 long tons; 10,300 short tons) from a water depth of 18 metres (59 ft). It is designed to allow for future expansion to 210 metres (690 ft) length and lifting capacity of 20,000 tonnes (20,000 long tons; 22,000 short tons).[2]

Between 2017 and 2020, an extension was built behind Osborne South to construct the Hunter-class frigates. The largest building in the new complex is known as Building 22, and is 80 metres (260 ft) high with a footprint of 170 by 50 metres (560 ft × 160 ft), large enough for assembly of two frigates other than the upper superstructure.[4]

In 2019, a new extension to Osborne North was being built by Laing O'Rourke to build the Attack-class submarines.[5]

Tenants

Products

The list of ships constructed at the Osborne facility include:

gollark: Everyone does this, and there are probably hundreds or thousands of them.
gollark: Yeeees.
gollark: Anyway, it is of course only possible to hardcode all primes within Haskell, due to its lazy evaluation.
gollark: Not in a fast-to-index way without horrible amounts of RAM.
gollark: The lookup table? It isn't unless you hardcode all primes ever.

References

  1. "Australian Naval Infrastructure Pty Ltd Annual Report 2018-19, ANI's Assets". Transparency Portal. Australian Government. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
  2. "Techport Australia's Common User Facility (CUF), Adelaide". Ship Technology. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
  3. Shepherd, Tory (12 May 2017). "The Federal Government has bought Techport from State Government for $230 million". The Advertiser. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
  4. Willis, Belinda (21 May 2020). "Frigate build site ready to launch $35 billion naval project". The Lead South Australia. Adelaide: Solstice Media. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  5. Keane, Daniel (13 December 2018). "Future submarines renamed 'Attack class' but concerns remain about project rollout". ABC News. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
  6. Zerbe, Ryan (15 November 2018). "Construction begins on Arafura Class patrol vessels". Navy Daily. Royal Australian Navy. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.