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LBX excavators do it all on solar projects

Site prep, profile levelling, road construction, trenching and post hole drilling

Link Belt 130 X4 excavator

Lawrence Knapp saw the light soon after the government of Ontario introduced programs to encourage solar development in 2009. He quickly went to work building a new equipment fleet to provide specialized construction services to solar operators.

Site prep

Based in Brockville, Ontario, L.A. Knapp Construction has now won numerous contracts in eastern Ontario to convert marginal agricultural land into productive solar farms. In just a few years, Ontario has become a world leader in solar energy production. Investors are attracted to Knapp’s area, where bedrock lying just below the thin soil provides a sound footing for the collector panels.

Under current energy contracts, investors have 20 years to recover their investment. “My customers are in a high risk, high reward business,” says Knapp. “They have to move quickly to secure their contracts and come on-stream while conditions are favourable.”

To get on board, Knapp had to move quickly, too. Instead of going through his typical negotiation process with dealers, he took the unusual step of putting his equipment needs out to tender. In short order, Knapp was signing purchase orders with Top Lift Enterprises of Stoney Creek, Ontario.

Top Lift’s Chris Anderssen recalls, “It was an interesting approach. Lawrence put together a complete set of bid documents just like a municipal buyer would. So we reviewed his requirements and bid our best price.”

“It was just luck that I found Top Lift,” Knapp admits. “I saw their name on the side of some Link-Belt equipment on a jobsite, so I sent them my bid package. Now I’m in my third season working with them.”

Knapp’s initial orders to Top Lift included five models of Link-Belt excavators ranging in size from 18,500 pounds to 66,000 pounds.

Knapp had already been established in the paving business for over 25 years when he added the Link-Belt fleet as the base for a new business division he created to pursue civil projects in the solar industry. His crews, numbering up to 100 employees, are equipped to take on every step of solar site development. Once the woodcutters have removed the marketable trees, Knapp moves in to clear the stumps, then level the profile to suit the rows of solar arrays. The team then builds access roads for installation crews, and completes the trenching to bury the electrical cable.

For one recent project, more than 5,000 posts were driven into the rock across 120 acres. This site will generate 10 megawatts of electricity for Ontario’s power grid, enough to power more than 2,000 homes. Connecting the arrays to the grid can require 3 km to 5 km of buried cable.

Continuing opportunities

Since the division’s startup, Knapp has completed eight utility-scale solar projects. More than 70 large solar farms are already up and running in Ontario, making the province a world leader in solar development. New projects are under way to farm the sunlight on as much as 750 acres. Ontario will soon reach 2 gigawatts (2,000 MW) of solar-generated electricity.

According to Knapp, Top Lift has been a valuable asset to his new business and to his customers. “I just needed the right mix of tools to make the projects profitable for the owners,” he explains. “Top Lift has done a good job advising us on the mix of equipment and then supporting it.”

Once the equipment was delivered, Top Lift’s Service Manager, Steve Cargill, and technician Shawn Ellis got to work with Knapp’s crews at the jobsite. Top Lift completed the configuration of the machines to suit Knapp’s particular requirements and also provided onsite training for operators and technicians.

“Time is money at every step with these projects,” says Knapp. “We had to have our guys right up to speed on the new Tier 4 technology. We can’t afford any downtime or delays with these machines.” Along with maintenance training for Knapp’s technicians, Top Lift instructed operators on new shutdown procedures to ensure easy startups each morning.

“The service team at Top Lift, they’re pretty bright young fellows. One of their technicians from the Montreal office even made up some special decals for the cabs, as guides for the operators. Since those have been installed, we haven’t had to have a Top Lift technician come out to our jobsites yet.”

Anderssen sums up Top Lift’s service policy this way: “When he calls us, we come. We fix what needs to be fixed. We modify what needs to be modified and he knows that we can take care of him.”

Year-round service for sites

The current boom in solar isn’t expected to last for long, but Knapp is prepared for that, too. He has continued to build his fleet with Top Lift, so he now provides year round maintenance services to the sites he built. He again turned to Top Lift to supply Takeuchi excavators with attachments custom-modified for the job. “We were brought in to do maintenance on the site and, the next day, that solar farm produced more in one day than it had in the previous two months!”

As a long-time equipment sales specialist, Chris Anderssen recognizes the unique opportunity that Lawrence Knapp has pioneered. “We’re still working on new ideas for his fleet. This relationship has really grown, from a basic tender document to the personal connections we’ve made with him throughout the company.

“From our Managing Director, David Shea, to our people in the field, we use those connections to better understand the needs of our customers at every level. That’s how new opportunities turn into wins for everyone.” 

Company info

2004 Buck Lane
Lexington, KY
US, 40511

Website:
lbxco.com

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519 Bonnie Valentine Way
Pendergrass, GA
US, 30567

Website:
takeuchi-us.com

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