Skip to main content

VIDEO: Multiple pavers for Netherlands air base

August 2, 2016
A large fleet of asphalt road construction machines has been used at the Eindhoven Airbase in the Netherlands to reconstruct the runway.

Contractor 7456 BAM Infra carried out the work to resurface the runway to the tight specifications and tight time frame requirements of the Royal Dutch Airforce.

In all, nine asphalt pavers were employed simultaneously to lay the new runway surface. Running the nine machines in echelon allowed hot-to-hot paving, effectively without a joint in between. Working together the pavers were able to resurface the 3km long runway to a width of 45m within 11 hours.

To achieve this high-production, high-quality project, some 130 trucks were used to supply the 10,500tonnes of asphalt needed for the work. The material was produced in five separate asphalt plants in the Netherlands, which are operated by the contractor. Controlling this complex logistics operation efficiently was crucial to the delivery of the project, with BAM making extensive use of its APEX software for this key task.

This package allowed the firm to monitor the progress of all the asphalt supply trucks and see when they would arrive onsite. BAM also monitored the consistency of the asphalt being produced in the plants continually, to ensure that the material was both homogenous and to the specification required.

The use of nine pavers was selected because of the slope of the mat, the design of the binder layer and above all the very strict requirements of the Airforce considering the flatness of the mat. This paving method has been used by BAM Infra for other runway projects, at Leeuwarden Airport and Volkel Air Base, where the technique has been both proven and refined to optimise efficiency.
The nine pavers were all from 1194 Vögele, with five Super 1800-3i models, three Super 1900-3i units and one 2100-2 machine. The contractor has been a strong customer for road machines from the 364 Wirtgen Group for the last five years. However, a 1252 Roadtec Shuttle Buggy was used to supply a continuous flow of asphalt to the paver located in the middle. The pavers on either side of the central machine also had screeds set to a slightly wider paving width, as this better suited the arrangement of the equipment.

These machines were operated in a v-formation, with the Shuttle Buggy supplying the central paver. It would have been difficult for trucks to tip into this central unit otherwise, due to the close proximity of so many other vehicles and items of equipment.

The v-formation, with the sides ahead, was chosen to give the roller operators the opportunity to change direction at the side of the runway and not in the (more critical) middle of the mat.

In addition to the nine pavers, BAM also assembled a fleet of no less than 27 compactors. The firm used 10 228 Hamm tandem drum models (a combination of DV70 and DV90 units), as well as 15 of the HW 90 dead weight types, while a further two rollers were kept in reserve as back-up units. Another important tool used by the contractor was the Hamm HCQ system, which was employed to coordinate the most important work carried out by the tandem drum rollers and optimise the compaction work. This allowed the operators of the compactors to see the mat on a screen, with colour coding showing the work still to be carried out. Because all 10 HCQ-systems were communicating and sharing data through a Wi-Fi connection, all operators were aware of the compaction carried out by the colleagues within the compaction-team.

Assistance was given to BAM by Wirtgen NL, to ensure that all of the machines and technology ran as required.

Images courtesy of the Netherlands Ministry of Defence

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • SANY Road Machinery is looking to increase export levels
    March 4, 2015
    SANY Road Machinery says that its machines offer customers a very good return on investment - Mike Woof writes. SANY Road Machinery looks set to boost its profile outside of China. The company has been focussed on the Chinese home market in recent years, due to the massive highway expansion programme in the country. However with 80% of the country’s highway construction programme now complete, SANY Road Machinery is looking to further develop its export business. Wang Zuochun is senior vice president at SAN
  • Lima's massive $2 billion airport project
    March 4, 2025
    Peru’s capital, Lima, is to benefit from a massive new international airport, which will be one of the largest in Latin America – Mike Woof writes
  • Exports are strong for SANY Road Machinery, which is also launching new models
    October 16, 2013
    SANY Road Machinery is widening its product line and is also building its sales outside of China. The company is a strong player in the asphalt batching plant sector in China and is also now exporting this equipment to markets including Africa, the Middle East and parts of South East Asia. Xie Zhixia is chairman of SANY Road Machinery, one of the group’s best established divisions and said, “Our overseas sales revenue keeps growing.” And he added that around 50% of the machines the firm builds are now expor
  • Continuous transfer
    May 22, 2018
    Roadtec is unveiling its new MTV-1100e material transfer vehicle. The firm says that the new model has been designed from the ground up using experience developing MTVs, combined with customer feedback. It will not replace the existing and well-proven 2500 Shuttle Buggy, but will instead broaden the firm’s offering for the material transfer vehicle (MTV) market. The machine is being developed as an evolution of the firm’s MTV-1100e feeder model however and will not feature the remixing capability of the S