Recycling Wind Turbine Blades To Make A Bike Shelter — Bravo, Aalborg

Sign up for daily news updates from CleanTechnica on email. Or follow us on Google News!

Brian D. Rasmussen, who works with port constructions and the environment at the Port of Aalborg, has skillfully accomplished a fresh new use for a wind turbine. He recently wrapped up the recycling of a wind turbine in service to zero-footprint travelers, bicyclists. Through reinventing the purpose of the wind turbine, adapting a spent turbine, he has shown that wind turbines can continue their life-protecting purpose even beyond end of life.

“We were going to have a new bike shed, and then I sat and flipped through the net to see what was available. Then there was a really smart one in New York, where I thought it looked like a wind turbine blade, and then the idea came, says Brian D. Rasmussen,” according to the English translation of a Danish article.

If you are in Denmark, the raw materials are at hand to lend themselves, artistically, to the reformed utilitarian end. In Aalborg, perhaps one is dreaming wings, as the factory is one of the world’s largest wing factories.

Rasmussen has a degree in civil engineering, which he used to redesign the once airborne turbine — grounded in the land. The composite is a light material, even though a weighty wind turbine blade is part of this solution.

There were none of the original drawings to make use of the turbine wings, no construction plans or data provided to Rasmussen. “I made a model at home over the weekend in cardboard and wood, and then I started cutting it to find out how to get a stable structure out of it. Because as soon as you start cutting a hole in a pipe, it becomes very lively, says Brian D. Rasmussen, who has a degree in civil engineering, and thus has the prerequisites to work with statics and strength.”

Since the turbine was designed for another purpose originally, Rasmussen gathered the expert help of Brunø Stål, a blacksmith in Aalborg. Brunø Stål made the bearings on which the unique bicycle shelter would rest and be tethered.

After concrete foundations, the Kærsholm Diamond Drilling cut away what was not needed.

As Rasmussen expresses, “Instead of chopping a wing into small pieces and using it for fuel, you might as well use it for something else. It is both strong and almost indestructible — and I actually think it is quite beautiful, he states.”


Have a tip for CleanTechnica? Want to advertise? Want to suggest a guest for our CleanTech Talk podcast? Contact us here.

Latest CleanTechnica.TV Video

Advertisement
 
CleanTechnica uses affiliate links. See our policy here.

Cynthia Shahan

Cynthia Shahan, started writing after previously doing research and publishing work on natural birth practices. Words can be used improperly depending on the culture you are in. (Several unrelated publications) She has a degree in Education, Anthropology, Creative Writing, and was tutored in Art as a young child thanks to her father the Doctor. Pronouns: She/Her

Cynthia Shahan has 947 posts and counting. See all posts by Cynthia Shahan