The partnership combines engineering, technological selection, constructability, logistics and installation to optimise wind projects from their earliest stages and reduce risks, costs and construction times.
TYPSA and Optimus Crane have joined forces to create “TYPSA Heavy Lifting & Constructability powered by Optimus Crane”, a strategic partnership designed to tackle one of the main challenges currently facing the wind power industry: integrating engineering, technological selection, constructability, logistics, transport and installation into a single optimisation strategy.
TYPSA’s international engineering and consultancy capabilities, combined with Optimus Crane’s expertise in assembly methodologies, crane strategies, specialised transport and heavy lifting operations, create a unique offering in the market, linking project design with its future execution, thereby ensuring that all solutions are viable, efficient and optimised from a construction perspective. In contrast to the traditional separation between design on paper and on-site execution, the new partnership will operate under the motto ‘Designed to be built’.
This partnership enables transport and assembly logistics to be integrated into every phase of the project, from the initial stages of preliminary engineering through to the advanced construction phases.
Optimising the LCOE (Levelised Cost of Energy) is a process that begins in the earliest stages of a project’s development. It requires not only the optimisation of construction costs, but also a comprehensive strategic approach to tackling technological selection in conjunction with constructability and transport and assembly logistics, as well as effective management throughout the entire process of negotiating construction contracts and wind turbine supply agreements.
This partnership is suitable for any national or international wind power project.
The increasing size of wind turbines and the complexity associated with their transport and installation make the early integration of these factors an increasingly critical necessity for the sector.
Through this partnership, engineering, constructability and installation are integrated to set a new standard in the development of wind power projects.



