Skip to main content

Smart asphalt paving technology in Morocco

SEFIANI Enterprises is staying competitive against rivals firms in the asphalt and paving construction market in Morocco. Construction Company SEFIANI Enterprises fitted one of its pavers with the Leica PaveSmart 3D machine control system at the end of October 2015. The aim of this was to improve project quality and to reduce operating costs for the 224km project for the LGV Ligne à Grande Vitesse Tanger–Kénitra. “It is the first system we sold for an asphalt paving application in Morocco,” explained
May 16, 2016 Read time: 4 mins
The system also allows accurate paving to be carried out at nigh
SEFIANI Enterprises is staying competitive against rivals firms in the asphalt and paving construction market in Morocco.

Construction Company SEFIANI Enterprises fitted one of its pavers with the 265 Leica PaveSmart 3D machine control system at the end of October 2015. The aim of this was to improve project quality and to reduce operating costs for the 224km project for the LGV Ligne à Grande Vitesse Tanger–Kénitra.

“It is the first system we sold for an asphalt paving application in Morocco,” explained Slim Meslameni, the North African sales manager for Leica Geosystems. He added that the customer was keen to deliver paving standards that were better than the specifications for the job and stay ahead of the local market.

A paving expert from Leica Geosystems, Mihalis Karizonis, trained the operating asphalt team of SEFIANI Enterprises during the complete week and focused on three important performance factors; quality, quantity and simplicity.

The practical training started with the explanation of the hardware components as well as mounting the tools on the firm’s asphalt paver. In this case, the paver was a 1194 Vögele Super 1800-2 which was adapted with the Mobamatic 1 Levelling System. The Leica PaveSmart 3D equipment was quickly connected to the asphalt paver. This fast linking between the Mobamatic and the Leica Geosystems machine control technology is standard for major paver brands including 172 BOMAG, 206 Dynapac, ABG and 1194 Vögele.
Because the system can be changed easily from one type of paver to another, this allows customers to achieve better utilisation within a mixed equipment fleet according to Rainer Bippen, business development manager at Leica Geosystems. He said, “The cost savings are tremendous for construction companies,” and added that project owners benefit for the life-cycle calculation due to the delivery of a higher quality performance with this 3D Machine Control System.

On the second day, the team was ready to pave using the stringless technology. While paving the first metres, the surveying experts from SEFIANI Enterprises made quickly as-build checks, to compare the paving results with the project design. The surveyors measured the overall deviation as being just 3mm, while the requirements of the contract demanded a maximum deviation of 15mm. It was clear that the PaveSmart 3D System system had delivered the improvement in quality the contractor was aiming to achieve.

“The daily performance of 8,000m² Asphalt Road and the improvement of 12mm thickness results in best case costs savings of around €15,000/day. Within a very short time, the investment is easily covered,” said Tarik Elasri sales manager at Leica Geosystems MARCOTEC. In addition, the stake-out and surveying costs for the stringline affect no longer the project. This amounts to a saving of around €1,000/km for the project and on the 32km stretch SEFIANI has been working on, it equates to a saving of an additional €32,000.
Mossaddek Hicham, head of SEFIANI Enterprises has an additional interest in the improved accuracy and cost performance the system delivers. He believes that in coming years, many infrastructure projects with high quality requirements will be put out to tender by Morocco’s Ministry of Infrastructure. These will include high-speed railways, airports, highways and harbour projects. The requirements of these projects will likely be for high accuracy parameters to optimise both performance and working life and to deliver the best value for the government investments.

Now that SEFIANI has experience with machine control technology, the firm believes it will have a stronger chance to win some of these future tenders.

During the training week, Leica Geosystems dealer MARCOTEC supported the PaveSmart Training. The firm has now supplied 11 machines with 3D systems sold in the last few months.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Efficient slipforming with Wirtgen
    May 15, 2019
    A Kentucky concrete slipforming contractor is benefiting from new technology in optimising kerb and gutter work. Fox Enterprises now constructs offset kerb, gutter and parking lot island placements using an on-site guidance system. The system permits automated placement of those items, including tight radii. Its fleet recently expanded to include a larger slipform paver that can handle offset curb-and-gutter paving, but also inset pavement slab paving.
  • Digital solutions for accurate road construction
    November 19, 2021
    Construction firms are now delivering roads that are more durable and feature better surface quality due to the use of digital measurement solutions. These technologies help to transfer target values into precise actual values on the ground
  • New asphalt paving innovations from around the globe
    January 19, 2018
    Asphalt paving equipment manufacturers from around the globe are rolling out new and improved machines - Mike Woof writes The pace of development within asphalt paving technology is quick, with new machines being unveiled all around the world. Machine manufacturers in Europe, China and Japan have been re ning and developing their technologies, which are aimed at differing global markets.
  • Machine control boosting paving quality
    April 27, 2015
    The use of machine control technology on a bypass construction job has boosted quality quality control is a topic that clients as well as contractors are finding increasingly important. Control systems are being used more and more often on construction sites as a result, so as to collect data on a range of processes. This includes looking at the asphalt being supplied to site and on the quality of paving during construction. Using this data, processes can be optimised in the medium-term and, in the long-ter