Skip to main content

Grading in tough conditions

Volvo graders have made an important contribution on upgrades to a 150km stretch of the NH7 highway, one of India's most important road links. The NH7 highway is an impressive 2,369km in length, linking the town of Kanyakumari, perched on the southern-most point of the Indian mainland where the Arabian Sea, Bay of Bengal and Indian Ocean meet, with the north-eastern holy city of Varanasi on the banks of the river Ganges.
July 6, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Despite high temperatures and humidity, JMC's Volvo graders performed reliably on a project to upgrade part of India's important NH7 highway
2394 Volvo graders have made an important contribution on upgrades to a 150km stretch of the NH7 highway, one of India's most important road links. The NH7 highway is an impressive 2,369km in length, linking the town of Kanyakumari, perched on the southern-most point of the Indian mainland where the Arabian Sea, Bay of Bengal and Indian Ocean meet, with the north-eastern holy city of Varanasi on the banks of the river Ganges.

India's national highways make up just 2% of India's massive 3,300,000km road network but carry 40% of all traffic. Most boast two lanes in each direction, rising to four lanes around major cities. As India's economy has boomed, so has vehicle ownership and so has road building. The need to upgrade the NH7 for a 150km section between Madurai and Trichi in the southern state of Tamil Nadu had become pressing.

JMC Projects used two Volvo G720A motor graders on the job, each operating for 12 hours a day. The graders performed well on the three year project, which was completed recently and JMC says that it will buy more Volvo machines in the future as the units proved their ability to cope with India's tough climate, with temperatures as high as 40°C as well as high humidity and monsoon rains.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Increased costs for new Duisburg bridge
    June 2, 2020
    Increased costs are now being anticipated for the new Duisburg bridge project.
  • Major new highway for Ecuador’s Piñas canton
    September 30, 2015
    Ecuador’s Buenavista – Zaruma Highway will provide a key route that will help boost economic activity – Mauro Nogarin writes Ecuador hopes to boost economic activity with the construction of new highway links. Most economic activity in the Piñas canton currently relies on agriculture, forestry and fishing. These sectors employ over 50% of the economically active population of the region. Meanwhile, most of the working population of the Portovelo canton is dedicated to mining and quarrying, with this area
  • Transylvanian motorway breaks new ground in engineering
    July 11, 2012
    Normally in hilly ground, we would use the excavated soil from the cuttings to fill the valleys," says Bogdan Sgarcitu, External Affairs Manager of construction company Bechtel. "But on this stretch the clay-like soil cannot be compacted, so we've had to use many more piles than normal: in just three months we installed more than 500, some drilled as deep as 24m. We've also had to transport millions of tonnes of materials over some less-than-perfect infrastructure."
  • India's first construction event a huge success
    February 13, 2012
    The first bC India event has exceeded all expectations and it is set to become a regular event. Patrick Smith reports A major new construction equipment show has been launched in a nation with a huge appetite for such machinery and a growth rate nudging 9% each year. With billions being spent on infrastructure (roads and highways, power stations, railways, ports and airports), India was a prime candidate for a trade fair to display the latest and local international construction machinery, building materia