From a cruise ship in the north Atlantic, Brave Tern may look like an uncharted island rising from the sea. But sail closer and you will see an unusual ship making history. The boxy, 132-meter-long, 39-meter-wide wind turbine installation vessel framed by four soaring steel columns is carrying five massive nacelles for Deepwater Wind’s Block Island Wind Farm, America’s first offshore wind farm. The wind farm will be located off the coast of Block Island, Rhode Island, which is also Brave Tern’s destination. Owned and operated by the Norwegian company Fred. Olsen Windcarrier, the ship left the port of Saint-Nazaire in France last week.
A nacelle is the box that houses the wind turbine’s power-generating components. The nacelles aboard the Brave Tern were manufactured by GE Renewable Energy in Saint-Nazaire and can produce 6 megawatts each. They are as large as a school bus and weigh as much as 400 tons. They will sit some 330 feet (100 meters) above the waves—as high as the Statue of Liberty—when they are installed atop the wind turbine towers.

A tern’s eye view shows The Brave Tern as it waits Saint-Nazaire harbor loading wind turbines for Block Island.
How the nacelles get up there is another engineering marvel. That’s because once on Block Island, the Brave Tern will become a real-life Transformer robot, changing from a ship into an at-sea construction platform. The four massive legs will drop down through its deck to the seabed, jacking up the entire ship high over the waves. Then, an 800-ton crane will position the generating equipment on the towers and fasten the blades onto the structure over several intense weeks of installation.
If everything goes as planned, the project will be in service by the end of the year, generating 125,000 megawatt-hours of electricity. That’s enough to meet 90 percent of Block Island’s power needs and even supply surplus electricity to the mainland via undersea cable.

Look what I can do. Once in Block Island, the four massive legs will drop down to the seabed, jacking up the ship high over the water for a stable platform to install the turbines.
It will take the Brave Tern about two weeks to sail the roughly 3,300 miles to reach its destination. The exact length of the voyage depends on the weather. Even in the summer, the Atlantic can produce 18-foot waves.
Our photographers caught up with the ship just before it left the port and in the Bay of Biscay during its voyage. Take a look.
More great images here: http://www.gereports.com/meet-the-strangest-sight-in-the-north-atlantic/
Filed Under: News, Offshore wind