Skip to main content

‘Concrete multinational’ Simem grows in scope and expands in all directions

Concrete specialist Simem’s most recent launch is the Bison mobile batching plant. Designed with road construction in mind, the Bison range benefits from a sophisticated weighing mechanism, created over a three-year research and development programme with input from the Politecnico di Milano’s mechatronic department.
July 10, 2023 Read time: 2 mins

 

“Despite the fact that it is very mobile and batches continuously, we have been able to achieve a very high level of accuracy with the weighing system which means that it produces consistent concrete mixes and performance,” says Simem CEO Federico Furlani. Bison can be used to produce concrete of any class, asphalt mixes or even stabilised soil.

The Bison does not require foundations or a crane, elevating itself via four hydraulic legs. This means it can be set up within a couple of hours, says Furlani. Compact in design, so it can be transported on roads without any special permissions, the Bison comes in two models: Bison 250, which can produce between 100 and 250tonnes of material per hour and Bison 500 which can produce between 200 and 500tonnes per hour.

Simem has been expanding on several fronts, adding to its products and ranges, increasing its geographical spread and growing the scope of its offering through the purchase of two new companies back in 2016.  Simem Spil, based in Treviso, Italy, is a specialist in precast concrete equipment while Simem Underground, based in Vancouver in Canada, provides all forms of concrete equipment for underground construction. “We are a mini multinational now,” says Furlani.

Simem exports to over 120 countries with factories in Verona, Italy and in Vadodara, India, which it has recently expanded to serve the African and Middle East markets. It also has sales and services centres in Germany and the US.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Road recycling
    September 27, 2023
    Easier to operate, thanks to the increasing use of GPS, and greener to run because of biofuels are two of the more innovative technologies being integrated into machine design by major road recycling equipment manufacturers.
  • Concrete paving carried out in Nigeria
    April 12, 2018
    A contractor in Nigeria has used concrete paving equipment from Wirtgen to construct a road surface in the south-west of the country AG-Dangote Construction Company used an SP 500 model to repave the road connecting Itori with Ibese, In Nigeria’s Ogun State. For this project, the contractor, a joint venture between the Brazilian company Andrade Gutierrez Company and Nigeria’s Dangote Group, relied on the Wirtgen slipform paver in inset application.
  • Concrete in the Philippines
    October 17, 2022
    The booming construction sector in the Philippines is said to be fuelling strong demand for concrete batching plants
  • It’s in with the new for asphalt plants
    April 4, 2013
    A leading asphalt plant manufacturer is playing a key role in the upgrade of a major European airport, while another is said to have created one of the most modern plants in Europe. Meanwhile, a host of new plants and plant concepts have been, or are about to be, unveiled. Guy Woodford reports Intrame says its ultra-mobile UM-280 asphalt plant has played a key role in the resurfacing of the runway and taxiways at Gatwick Airport in southern England – the busiest single runway airport in the world. Around 35