Skip to main content

Machine guidance system aids asphalt runway construction

Automatic 3D machine guidance is a highly sophisticated area and a high level of expertise is often required to ensure applications of the advanced technologies work as desired. Fugro is a specialist firm that has gained experience using 3D guidance tools over many years and for certain tricky projects, Hexagon, the parent of Leica Geosystems, has turned to Fugro for assistance. For one difficult job in particular, Fugro's specialists were brought in at the request of an Icelandic contractor. The project ca
July 16, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Fugro supplied specialist surveying skills to help the contractor meet the tight specifications for the project to resurface an airport runway in Iceland
Automatic 3D machine guidance is a highly sophisticated area and a high level of expertise is often required to ensure applications of the advanced technologies work as desired. Fugro is a specialist firm that has gained experience using 3D guidance tools over many years and for certain tricky projects, Hexagon, the parent of 265 Leica Geosystems, has turned to Fugro for assistance.

For one difficult job in particular, Fugro's specialists were brought in at the request of an Icelandic contractor. The project called for the construction of a new runway for Akuryi Airport in the north of the country. Because the runway was to be surfaced with asphalt, the project faced a very limited time window when the work could be carried out. As its name suggests, the island of Iceland is a cold country and there is generally only one month in the year when the temperatures are moderate enough to permit asphalt paving.

The new runway is 2km long by 60m wide and to allow the work to be carried out the job had to be split into two. The first portion of the surfacing work was carried out in 2008 with the second half having been carried out this year.

The first task was to mill off the old surface using planing machines, with the contractor then laying the new asphalt in two layers. Because the surface is for an aircraft runway the contractor had to meet strict requirements for surface smoothness, skid resistance and compaction density. To ensure that the last factor in particular could be achieved, the contractor had to pay careful attention to the weather conditions, as asphalt cannot be compacted effectively to a suitable density when the temperature drops below 5ºC. This is because the asphalt cools too quickly for the compaction rollers to carry out their work.


To ensure that the paving and compaction operations could be carried out effectively within the tight time-frame, the 3D system has to take all the various parameters into account.
Fugro carried out the surveying activities necessary for automatic machine guidance. These included equipment testing, carrying out measurements and altering the design for the machines being used. Due to the short lead time, five surveyors worked continuously for three weeks in shifts for 24 hours/day. And the 24 hour working was possible because in Iceland, it does not get dark at night during summer. For one week the work could only be carried out during the night, to prevent disruption to daytime air traffic.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • THIS is a Paving Project– The I-15 CORE
    December 20, 2012
    Provo, Utah – The scope of the I-15 Corridor Expansion Project (I-15 CORE) in the state of Utah is nearly unprecedented because of the size of the project and the short completion deadline. Twenty-four miles (38.6 km) of removal and replacement of Interstate 15 between Lehi and Spanish Fork, widening the number of traveling lanes by two, for up to six lanes in each direction in 35 months. The new 364 lane miles (586 km) of concrete roadway will be slipformed 12 or 12.5 inches (305 or 318 mm) thick for a tot
  • GPS machine control systems reduce survey time
    February 14, 2012
    Innovative uses are being made of GPS technology, Mike Woof reports. US firms Creighton Manning Engineering and Delaney Construction have made a novel use of GPS technology in a project for the Route 85 Slingerlands bypass extension in the US.
  • Innovative, quality asphalt surfacing solutions
    February 22, 2012
    An array of innovative mix designs and special processes have been introduced to the paving market in recent years. These are now being used in many site applications and are offering contractors the benefits of fast application and high surface quality while providing safe, cost-effective and hard wearing solutions with long life for clients.
  • 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