Skip to main content

New Holland machines help rebuild busy Italian airport

Italy’s Il Caravaggio International Airport handles close to 9 million passengers/year, making it the country’s fourth busiest. Originally called Bergamo Orio al Serio Airport, it is a popular facility for low cost airlines as it is close to Bergamo and just 40km from Milan, as well as being convenient for other destinations in Northern Italy.
August 18, 2014 Read time: 3 mins
The New Holland units have been equipped with machine control technology to help maximise productivity

Italy’s Il Caravaggio International Airport handles close to 9 million  passengers/year, making it the country’s fourth busiest. Originally called Bergamo Orio al Serio Airport, it is a popular facility for low cost airlines as it is close to Bergamo and just 40km from Milan, as well as being convenient for other destinations in Northern Italy. In view of the heavy demand the airport’s operator, SACBO, is investing in the facility so as to meet its long-term needs.

A key portion of the project has required resurfacing the entire 3km runway, which has required a three-week closure of the facility. Excavators and wheeled loaders from 5895 New Holland Construction have played an important role in the project, with 20 units in all working at the site.

The fleet includes New Holland’s top-of-the range E485C crawler excavators, as well as E385C, E265B, E245C and E215C crawler excavators, in addition to a number of mini excavators from the firm’s compact range. The machine fleet also includes a W190 wheeled loader and a W80 wheeled loader. This fleet has been augmented by additional units when required to carry out specific duties.

Performance and productivity have been crucial for the project, given the tight time constraints that have seen the units operating 24 hours/day for extended periods. The machines have been supplied by the  Maren-CMO, New Holland Construction dealership based in Curno, near Bergamo, to the contractors Vitali and Artifoni. These well-known Italian contractors form part of the consortium that has been carrying out the runway resurfacing work.

 Vitali has already refurbished the runways at Milano Malpensa and Cuneo Levaldigi airports and has carried out an array of operations at Orio al Serio. These works have included breaking up the old runway, replacing the runway lighting, cabling and water drainage system, paving of the new runway and installing its markings.

To maximise productivity, accuracy and uptime the contractor has used the New Holland equipment fitted with sophisticated machine control technologies, as well as the firm’s advanced telematics systems.

Meanwhile Artifoni  is a specialised company that carries out large-scale wastewater and drainage systems, hydraulic works, and surface paving. The company is a long-standing customer for New Holland Construction with a fleet of 27 units from this supplier. For this airport project, Artifoni has handled the civil works for the new runway, including hydraulic works and cable duct installations. The company also carried out excavation and demolition operations, as well as preparing the new runway’s sub-base.

The New Holland excavators working at the Orio al Serio airport were supplied by Maren-CMO, fully equipped units with equipment including hydraulic hammers and circuits for grabs and bucket crushers.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Rebuilding Milan’s Linate Airport runway with Case CE equipment
    February 19, 2020
    Over 100 pieces of construction machinery from Case CE have been used by Italian contractor Vitali Spa to help carry out important upgrade work at Milan’s Linate Airport.
  • New runway for US military airbase in Florida
    December 7, 2017
    A new runway surface has now been laid at MacDill Air Force Base in the US, located approximately 6.4km south-west of downtown Tampa, Florida. This facility is the base for the US Air Force’s Air Mobility Command, which provides airlift, special missions, aerial refuelling, and aeromedical evacuation for the armed forces. MacDill is home to 16 KC-135 Stratotankers and three C-37 Gulfstreams, which use the runway every day. At any point, there will be a steady flow of aircraft departing and landing on the
  • Asphalt plant assists at airport project
    December 19, 2017
    An asphalt plant from ADM has helped in the reconstruction of the runway at South Caicos Airport. Herzog Caribbean recently took delivery of its new asphalt plant to supply material for the runway overhaul on South Caicos Island. The plant, an ADM EX120, delivered 23,000tonnes of material for the project without any downtime, allowing for an April 2017 completion. A division of Missouri-based Herzog Contracting, Herzog Caribbean operates out of Providenciales, the capital city of Turks & Caicos, British We
  • Improved airport for Thimarafushi atoll
    August 29, 2014
    Thimarafushi forms part of the Thaa Atoll lying in the Indian Ocean but access has been limited in the past. However the construction of a new airport planned by the Maldives Government will help develop the tourist trade, boosting the local economy. Most visitors previously used the country’s two international airports, using these as hubs for flights to the country’s six domestic airports. This has limited travel to only a few of the country’s 1,192 islands, of which around 200 are inhabited. As a result,