Skip to main content

Asphalt paving in island paradise

Praslin, the second-largest of the Seychelles Islands with roughly 6,500 inhabitants, is a tropical paradise of white sandy beaches, dense jungle and crystal clear seas. Tourism is the island's main source of income, and luxury tourism at that. A road had to be diverted for a new five-star hotel and property development project which will create jobs for around 400 people. The road would have obstructed the residents' access to the sea. Sey-Afrique Exporters from Pinetown, South Africa, won the contra
May 9, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The Vögele paver is coping with tough conditions

Praslin, the second-largest of the Seychelles Islands with roughly 6,500 inhabitants, is a tropical paradise of white sandy beaches, dense jungle and crystal clear seas.

Tourism is the island's main source of income, and luxury tourism at that. A road had to be diverted for a new five-star hotel and property development project which will create jobs for around 400 people. The road would have obstructed the residents' access to the sea.

Sey-Afrique Exporters from Pinetown, South Africa, won the contract to build the new, approximately 1.5km stretch of road, and the company chose a 1194 Vögele paver for the construction work.

Temperatures of between 35-40°C with relative humidity of over 90% made this a physically gruelling job. The topography, with gradients of more than 20% and tight hairpin bends, was also tricky.

The small SUPER 800 which handles pave widths from 0.5-3.2m, was said to be ideal for the job. Its asymmetrical material hopper allows it to work close to the edges, even in tight bends.

To obtain asphalt on an island just 12km long and 5km wide, Sey-Afrique Exporters had to revive an old government-owned mobile asphalt mixing plant in order to prepare bitumen-coated material.

Although the mix did not meet the standard asphalt specifications, the SUPER 800 was able to produce good results with it. Combined with an AB 200 extending screed in TV version, the paver placed two asphalt layers on a roughly consolidated base. The first, a level-regulating layer between 3 and 12cm thick, was paved to equalise the considerable unevenness of the base. Then a 5cm wearing course followed.

Around 80tonnes of mix was paved every day for the roadway, which varied in width between 7.5m-10.5m.

Helmut Bethge from 2395 Wirtgen South Africa trained and supervised the paving team throughout the job.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Asphalt paving is seeing innovative new technology
    April 4, 2013
    With new machines coming to market, the asphalt paving sector is seeing an array of sophisticated technology now available
  • Wirtgen: low-emission recycling near Legoland
    March 22, 2024
    Wirtgen, Vögele and Hamm were on a section of the busy E45 highway close to the famous Legoland resort at Billlund, Denmark.
  • The “rollercoaster in the dunes”: Circuit Park Zandvoort
    June 14, 2021
    Some projects are so specialist that there are hardly any construction companies with significant experience to draw on - another reason why it is so valuable to have a partner with the expertise and experience to take things forward. The rehabilitation and modification of the race track in Zandvoort was a project like this.
  • Paving giant in action
    February 20, 2012
    The project to build a new orbital motorway to bypass the Spanish city of Barcelona has benefited from the use of the world's largest asphalt paver. This represents one of the first jobs in Europe for the power paver, Vögele's SUPER 3000-2, which was first launched at the Bauma exhibition in Munich in 2010.