November 24, 2025
Redpath & Herrenknecht Push the Boundaries of Hard-Rock Mechanization
Six smiling representatives from Redpath and Herrenknecht pose with mining photos in the background.

In a focused multi-day workshop at Redpath’s North Bay Canada offices, key leaders from across the global shaft-sinking community convened to advance one of the industry’s most anticipated innovations: the Hard Rock Shaft Boring System (SBC).

 

Representing Redpath were Kevin Melong, Vice President – Technical Services & Shafts (Canada); Matt Swanson, General Manager – Shafts & Technical Services (USA); and Frank Otten, Senior Vice President International Projects, Redpath Deilmann (Germany), and Tyler Foy Manager Engineering Redpath (Canada). They were joined by mechanical mining equipment specialists from Herrenknecht Germany — Patrick Rennkamp, Divisional Manager Mining; Dieter Troedel, Mining Manager Canada; and Johannes Betzler, Mechanical Engineer - Shaft Sinking Solutions — whose expertise in mechanized excavation continues to set global benchmarks. 

 

The workshop focused on the current system designs and included a structured, comprehensive risk evaluation addressing all constraints associated with hard-rock shaft construction, ensuring that every foreseeable challenge is engineered into the system’s solution set.

 

One of the most significant outcomes of the workshop was the enhanced ability to accurately forecast sinking rates across a range of rock types and shaft diameters, supported by a detailed generic schedule and cost estimate that enables project owners to clearly evaluate the value proposition the system can deliver.

 

This workshop builds on several years of collaboration between Redpath Deilmann, Germany, and Herrenknecht, uniting world-class shaft-sinking know-how with industry-leading mechanized excavation technology. Together, the teams are progressing a full-scale innovation pathway that aims to fill a long-standing gap in the hard-rock mechanized shaft-sinking market.

 

 

Engineering for the Next Frontier

Deep hard-rock shafts present extreme geotechnical and logistical challenges — high in-situ stresses, abrasive rock conditions, restricted excavation profiles, and demanding hoisting and material-handling requirements. Each of these constraints is being thoroughly engineered into the evolving SBC system design.

 

Recent scaled trials of the cutterhead and pneumatic mucking system have produced expected results, performing as designed. These tests confirm the viability of the excavation and rock movement concepts designed to date and open the door to the next stage of further detailed mechanical, structural, and process engineering.

 

 

A Proven Partnership with Global Reach

The Redpath–Herrenknecht partnership already has a strong foundation. The Shaft Boring Roadheader (SBR) has successfully advanced multiple shaft projects across the globe, demonstrating the power of combining innovative engineering with practical contractor experience.

 

The SBC initiative builds directly on that proven success — pairing Herrenknecht’s technological excellence with Redpath’s deep history in hard-rock shaft construction across the Americas, Europe, Asia, and Australia.

 

Shaping the Future of Shaft Sinking

As the workshop concluded, one message stood out clearly: Mechanized hard-rock shaft sinking is on the brink of a major evolution.

 

With aligned vision, integrated engineering, and a shared commitment to innovation, the Redpath–Herrenknecht partnership is poised to deliver a step-change in shaft-sinking safety, productivity, and predictability.

 

Exciting times lie ahead for the global shaft-sinking fraternity — and the future is being engineered today!

 

     Sketch showing Hard Rock Shaft Boring System (SBC).3D sketch of Hard Rock Shaft Boring System (SBC).