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How an Intel super load weighing nearly 1 million pounds could delay traffic this week

View a previous report on the super loads heading through central Ohio in the video player above.

NEW ALBANY, Ohio (WCMH) — A super load weighing nearly 1 million pounds is expected to delay traffic in several central Ohio communities over the next week as the 13th of nearly two dozen such shipments heads to Intel’s Ohio One plant.


The Ohio Department of Transportation began moving the super loads in March. Most, but not all, have been transported to the construction site of the Intel semiconductor plant, with the first few going to a recycling facility near Hebron.

On June 25, the first of four “extra large super loads,” the largest shipments in the project, arrived at Intel. Measuring in at around 23 feet tall, 20 feet wide, 280 feet long and weighing in at 916,000 pounds, three more shipments will travel across Ohio in the coming weeks.

Measuring in at around 23 feet tall, 20 feet wide, 280 feet long, and weighing in at 916,000 pounds, this super load is the first of four “extra large super loads.” (Courtesy Photo/Ohio Department of Transportation)

Like the one before it, this extra large super load carries an air processor — or a cold box — used in Intel’s silicon chip manufacturing process.

On July 8, the second of these extra-large shipments will begin its journey, stopping in multiple central Ohio townships and cities along the way. It will continue along the following route, before its estimated arrival on July 16:

The load will then be delivered to its destination at the construction site of Intel’s Ohio One plant in New Albany, which was recently confirmed to be on a delayed timeline.