Assembly hall
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An assembly hall is a production hall that is used to assemble (i.e. assemble) larger product units in industry .
Situations of need for construction, purposes of use
The use of assembly halls is usually unavoidable when assembling smaller, mass-produced devices. But it can also make sense to build an assembly hall for the assembly of large objects. For example, at the Peene shipyard in Wolgast there is an assembly hall in which the ships are assembled, while other shipyards assemble their ships outdoors. Assembly halls are also common on construction sites, where they are set up by the delivery companies for the prefabrication of the components.
Hall constructions
Assembly halls should ideally not have any support pillars inside. That is why assembly halls are often designed as sheet-metal-clad steel structures or as reinforced concrete structures. Scaffolding should be provided inside assembly halls for large objects to give workers access to the objects to be assembled. There is always a bridge crane available. The Nissenhütte type is often found in assembly halls on construction sites .
Special designs of assembly halls are used on rocket launch sites in order to be able to carry out work on the stationary rocket . Such assembly halls can often be moved on rails. You will be driven away just before the rocket launches.
Some particularly well-known built assembly hall
- Production hall F1 in Peenemünde (destroyed in 1944)
- Assembly hall at test stand VII in Peenemünde ( blown up after the Second World War )
- Vehicle Assembly Building in Cape Canaveral
- Assembly halls of the Meyer shipyard in Papenburg
- Assembly halls of the Peene shipyard in Wolgast