Skip to main content

Doka eyes Grand Paris project

A huge tunnel formwork takes centre stage on Doka’s stand at Intermat, as the French arm of the business looks to Europe’s biggest infrastructure project, the €38.5 billion Grand Paris Express metro. “In the last few years, Doka has become well-known in the residential sector in France. Now we want to show that we are experts in infrastructure as well,” says Doka France’s head of product management and marketing, Oscar Castilla. The tunnel formwork, SL1, used to form the crown of a tunnel, has recently b
April 25, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
A huge tunnel formwork takes centre stage on 203 Doka’s stand at Intermat, as the French arm of the business looks to Europe’s biggest infrastructure project, the €38.5 billion Grand Paris Express metro.


“In the last few years, Doka has become well-known in the residential sector in France. Now we want to show that we are experts in infrastructure as well,” says Doka France’s head of product management and marketing, Oscar Castilla.

The tunnel formwork, SL1, used to form the crown of a tunnel, has recently been modified so that the face-forming element is steel rather than timber. “This means that it is more durable and therefore for a long tunnel, it makes it cheaper” says Castilla. “The second advantage is that the whole thing can be rented.”

Also on display was Doka’s STAXO 100 load-bearing tower which also boasted a modification. It now includes aluminium beams to transfer load from the structure to the tower where previously timber beams were used. This allows a capacity of the tower of 10 tonnes per leg with lightweight beams that can be assembled by hand.  Doka has already secured projects on the Grand Paris programme with this product, says Castilla.

Doka’s remote concrete monitoring technology, Concremote, is also new to the French market, says Castilla, and is being deployed in several projects for the first time now. Concremote measures the strength of the concrete in real time, through monitoring the heat, which means that formwork can be struck as soon as the required strength is reached, increasing productivity and ensuring quality and safety.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Doka pushes into Asia and Middle East with load bearing tower d3
    February 10, 2016
    With the Load-bearing tower d3, Doka is expanding its product portfolio for Southeast Asia and the Middle East. Load-bearing tower d3 is a product enhancement of a successful Doka load-bearing system and combines the benefits of existing systems. The d3 is designed for particularly tall shoring heights and high loads. Applications are in building construction as well as civil and industrial construction. It is not required to dismantle and reassemble the shoring towers for repositioning and manual reposi
  • Doka pushes into Asia and Middle East with load bearing tower d3
    January 6, 2017
    With the Load-bearing tower d3, Doka is expanding its product portfolio for Southeast Asia and the Middle East. Load-bearing tower d3 is a product enhancement of a successful Doka load-bearing system and combines the benefits of existing systems. The d3 is designed for particularly tall shoring heights and high loads. Applications are in building construction as well as civil and industrial construction. It is not required to dismantle and reassemble the shoring towers for repositioning and manual reposi
  • Load bearing tower wins European safety award
    February 21, 2012
    Highly integrated safety engineered into the Staxo 100 load-bearing tower has won Doka the European award for safety in structural engineering in Spain.
  • Lochkov bridge construction time 'cut'
    July 17, 2012
    As part of the R1 southern orbital motorway around the Czech capital, Prague, a joint venture is building a five-span, 461m long and approximately 65m high viaduct near the village of Lochkov, as a girder bridge construction. For the two steeply inclined twin piers, Doka has supplied an automatic climbing formwork solution that obviates the need for shoring and that will "cut more than 100 days from the construction period." Cast-in-place concrete construction of bridge piers with such a steep inclination