 
     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, reaching most of the islands requires travel by boat.
     
A few years ago, the Maldives Government began to build its seventh domestic airport, on the island of Thimarafushi. The scenic island was chosen because of its natural beauty, and also because it could serve as a hub for those wanting to travel by boat to other nearby islands.
     
Maldives Transport and Contracting Co (MTCC), a customer of 
 
     
The  runway is surrounded by sea on the reclaimed land. Site preparation  included the placement and compaction of aggregate. Project  specifications required that 100% compaction densities were achieved on  four layers.
     
A 200mm  sub-base was placed first, and the Cat CS533E compacted it to 150mm. The  same process was followed for the second layer. The third layer  consisted of binding material that was placed at 130mm and compacted to  100mm.
     
The fourth layer  was asphalt with aggregates of 12.5mm, 9mm and 6mm. It was placed at  60mm and compacted to 50mm. A Cat AP655D asphalt paver with AS4251  screed handled the paving.
     
Paving  production was limited because of the hot mix plant’s capacity of  45tonnes. During the average day, the paver placed a strip that was 5m  wide and 700m long. Dump trucks hauled the mix the short distance from  the plant to the runway.
 
     
         
         
         
        


