
From 5 to 7 August 2021, the King Khufu Solar Boat was relocated from the Solar Boat Museum in Giza to a new dedicated building within the Grand Egyptian Museum complex. This extremely delicate transport operation was carried out under the responsibility of the BESIX-Orascom Construction Joint Venture and with the support of their subcontractor Sarens, in perfect cooperation with the Egyptian authorities.
The operation began on Thursday 5 August with the careful extraction of the King Khufu Solar Boat. Weighing 45 tonnes, with a length of 43.6 metres and a width of 5.9 metres, it was lifted and installed to the centimetre in a secure 60-tonne steel cage, made to measure for the operation.
This extraction was carried out by driving a self-propelled modular transporter (SPMT) into the building, in such a way as not to jeopardise the integrity of the ship, which required taking into account multiple parameters, including the relatively strong wind on the Giza plateau and very little room for manoeuvre due to the narrow structure of the existing building and the delicate archeological environment.
The transport itself started on Friday 6 August. The convoy was fully remote-controlled and reached its destination at a speed of 1 kilometre per hour. It left the pyramid area via a narrow ramp winding between the Giza monuments and then travelled a distance of 8.5 kilometres before reaching its final destination. The route chosen, which was much longer than the bird's-eye distance between the pyramids and the Grand Egyptian Museum, is explained by the stability of the roads used, the size of the convoy and the necessity to navigate safely through an area abounding with archeological heritage.
On Saturday 7 August, the King Khufu Solar Boat was placed in its new dedicated building within the Grand Egyptian Museum complex. To do this, it was raised by 800-tonne crawler crane to a height of 30 metres so that it could enter through the roof of the building and be installed with centimetre accuracy in the exact position where future visitors will be able to admire it.