Crash Barriers
How to Move a Jersey Barrier: Crane, Forklift & Rigging Guide
Cojo
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6 min read
A 10-foot concrete jersey barrier weighs about 4,000 pounds and needs either a 30-ton crane with a 2-point spreader bar, or a forklift rated for 8,000 to 10,000 pounds with the section cast for fork-pocket handling. Setting or relocating jersey barriers is a load-handling operation governed by OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart CC for crane work and OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart N for forklift operation. Trying to move a jersey barrier with under-rated equipment, single-point rigging, or no spotter is the failure pattern that drives most jobsite incidents on barrier work.
This guide covers the lift-planning steps our crew uses on Pacific Northwest barrier work — crane sizing, rigging selection, spotter protocol, and the common errors that produce damaged barriers, damaged equipment, or injured crew.
Lift planning starts with the actual section weight, not a guess.
| Section Length | Profile | Height | Approximate Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 ft | F-shape | 32 in | ~4,000 lb |
| 12 ft | F-shape | 32 in | ~4,800 to 5,200 lb |
| 20 ft | F-shape | 32 in | ~8,000 lb |
| 10 ft | F-shape | 42 in | ~5,200 lb |
| 10 ft | TL-5 reinforced | 54 in | ~6,400 lb |
Three lift-point configurations dominate the market:
Inspect every lift point before rigging:
OSHA 29 CFR 1926.1417 requires the crane to be capable of the load at the working radius, with safety factor. Practical sizing:
Industry Baseline Range
| Section Weight | Working Radius | Recommended Crane Capacity |
|---|---|---|
| Up to 4,500 lb | Under 30 ft radius | 30-ton at the load chart |
| 4,500 to 6,000 lb | Under 30 ft radius | 35- to 40-ton |
| 6,000 to 9,000 lb | Under 30 ft radius | 50-ton |
| Long-radius lifts (over 30 ft) | Any | One size up from above |
Always size to the heaviest section on the project plus rigging weight (a 2-point spreader bar at 350 to 600 pounds), with a 25 percent safety factor over the certified capacity at the actual working radius. The load chart on the crane is the authoritative reference, not a generic per-ton number.
For cast-in pickup eyes, the standard rigging is a 2-point spreader bar with a 4-leg sling configuration:
Single-point rigging (one sling around the barrier or one chain through both pickup eyes) is hazardous and should not be used. The single-point lift can rotate the barrier in flight and damage both the barrier and the rigging.
A 2-person crew is the minimum for any barrier lift: the crane operator and a ground spotter with hand-signal control or a 2-way radio.
The spotter:
Per OSHA 1926.1419, the spotter must be qualified to give signals. On our crews, the spotter is always either the foreman or a senior tech with documented signal-person training.
The placement sequence:
Total lift cycle time on a clean job is typically 4 to 6 minutes per section. A 50-section perimeter installs in a single 8-hour shift on level firm grade.
Forklift placement works only when:
Forklifts are faster than cranes on tight job sites with level grade but lose the long-reach capability needed for most permanent perimeter work.
Crane and operator rates have moved up roughly 18 percent across the I-5 corridor since 2024. A 30-ton crane with operator runs $1,800 to $2,800 per 8-hour shift in 2026. Forklift placement has remained more stable in cost. The most reliable cost-savings move on a barrier project is consolidating placement into one mobilization rather than spreading across multiple days. Spreader bar and rigging gear is typically included in the crane day rate but verify at quote -- some operators charge $150 to $300 per day for project-specific rigging.
Five recurring failure patterns we see on inherited or non-professional barrier work:
Any one of these pauses a barrier-lift on our crews until it's corrected.
We run barrier-lift operations across the Oregon I-5 corridor with a standardized 2-person lift crew, OSHA-trained signal-person, certified rigging gear, and crane sizing matched to the heaviest section on the project. For a city-specific install record, see jersey barrier rental in Portland.
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