Skip to main content

Fast repair for key Cairo road

Fast repair of Cairo’s busy urban highway has been achieved using paving equipment. And MOBA levelling technology played an important role in ensuring finish quality met requirements. Cairo is Egypt’s fast-growing capital city, with an estimated population of around 20 million living in its catchment area. The city’s fast growth rate however has placed enormous demands on its infrastructure, with transportation creaking under the strain. An increasing numbers of people use the roads in and around Cairo ev
July 14, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
Using the MOBA equipment on the Cairo road project optimised paving quality and productivity
Fast repair of Cairo’s busy urban highway has been achieved using paving equipment. And MOBA levelling technology played an important role in ensuring that finish quality met requirements

Cairo is Egypt’s fast-growing capital city, with an estimated population of about 20 million living in its catchment area. The city’s fast growth rate, however, has placed enormous demands on its infrastructure, with transportation creaking under the strain. An increasing number of people use the roads in and around Cairo every day, resulting in ever more frequent and longer traffic jams, especially at peak times. This is also true for the city’s 100km long orbital highway, Cairo's most important traffic artery, which was built in the 1980s. In the 1990-2000 period, the number of vehicles rose from 38,000 to 100,000 per day. And this number continued to increase unchecked in the following years. Owing to repair backlogs and severe wear, the road surface had many cracks and potholes and was in dire need of repair. In spring 2015, the road surface along a 30km section of the eight-lane orbital route to the west of the city was removed and a new 50mm thick surface layer was laid.
Construction company General Nile Company for Road Construction (GNCRC) was able to optimise quality and productivity, however, using the 1228 MOBA-matic levelling system with the Big Sonic-Ski on either side of its 1222 Terex CR462 paver.

The Big Sonic-Ski is a combination of up to four ultrasound sensors attached to a flexible 13m long system. The Big Sonic-Ski uses this to scan the substrate at various, widely spaced points. Each Sonic-Ski emits five beams for height measurement. The measurement values with the greatest deviations are discarded in order to rule out false measurements caused by, for example, stones lying on the reference. The sensor derives an average value from the remaining measurements. With the Big Sonic-Ski, which combines three or four sensors, all of the sensors send their measurement values to the MOBA-matic. The MOBA-matic calculates an average value so that even long sections of unevenness can be detected and smoothed out during asphalting by means of automatic adjustment of the screed.
With this solution, it was possible to avoid complete closure of the highway and to complete the repair work quickly. And because the pavers only worked during the night, the effect on the traffic was minimised so that no additional traffic jams were caused. The use of the ultrasound system that operates without a reference was the best possible solution because the milled-off surface was extremely uneven and had many milling cavities.

Without a levelling system, this reference unevenness would have been copied – the new road would then be quickly damaged again because unevenness not only reduces driving comfort, it also increases susceptibility to potholes and cracks.

The only possible alternative to the Big Sonic-Ski would have been to use a levelling system in combination with a string line as reference because the kerbstone had too many holes and was too uneven to be used as a reference. But using a string line would not only have been expensive and more time-consuming, it would have made it necessary to close the road, which in view of the traffic situation was impossible.

The contractor was supported by Egytitans Engineering, MOBA partner in Egypt, that supervised equipment of the machinery.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Milling versatility on German road job
    March 22, 2017
    Milling efficiently with a versatile, mid-sized machine has offered benefits on a German road job. A German contractor has found that using a mid-sized milling machine from Wirtgen has offered a good combination of both versatility and productivity for a road rebuild job. Kassel-based milling specialist VORO has used a Wirtgen W 100 CFi to upgrade the surface of a section of the busy B3 route. The B3 is an important route and runs 755km from Buxtehude in the north of Germany through to the Swiss border in t
  • Infrastructure monitoring data acquisition
    February 3, 2017
    The first prototype of an innovative new sensor device and its data acquisition system has now been developed. This move has come during the first 18 months of the 42-month Horizon 2020 SENSKIN (SENsing SKIN) project, a research partnership being implemented by 13 partners from 7 countries. A key objective of the SENSKIN project is the development of a skin-like sensor that offers spatial sensing and can monitor large strains, for use in monitoring-based maintenance of transport infrastructure. The syste
  • Using technology so assess road surface quality
    April 4, 2014
    Advances in survey technology and the evolving face of road procurement are driving demand for highway condition data. Mark Thomas, infrastructure services manager at Fugro Aperio writes how surveys of new roads can improve long-term quality While a growing suite of non-intrusive testing, measurement and survey technologies are widely used to target highway repairs and to determine asset management strategies, the use of these powerful tools remains patchy in the early stages of the infrastructure life cycl
  • MOBA founder Paul Harms will be “sorely missed” after death aged 82
    March 4, 2013
    Paul G. Harms, founder and long-time managing director of MOBA, has died aged 82. For more than 30 years Harms led and shaped the German firm, from its foundation in 1972 to its current position among leading international companies in mobile automation. Born in 1931 in Osnabrück, Germany, on leaving school Harms completed an apprenticeship as an instrument mechanic then worked as thermal technician for Georgsmarienhütte AG. At the same time, Harms attended technical evening school and then studied mechanic