Skip to main content

Meeting the challenge of desert runway resurfacing

Ferocious daytime temperatures can provide a tough challenge to construction firms working in desert conditions in Egypt's south. Despite the high daytime temperatures however, Egyptian contractor Orascom has managed to complete an airport project on budget and ahead of schedule, while meeting the client's tight specifications. The firm has just completed the project to revamp Suhag Airport in the south of the country. This airport now features a new runway, taxiways and aircraft hard standing, as well as n
April 13, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
For the asphalt paving duties at the airport Orascom used two Vögele Super 1800-2 finishers working together

Ferocious daytime temperatures can provide a tough challenge to construction firms working in desert conditions in Egypt's south.

Despite the high daytime temperatures however, Egyptian contractor 2414 Orascom has managed to complete an airport project on budget and ahead of schedule, while meeting the client's tight specifications. The firm has just completed the project to revamp Suhag Airport in the south of the country. This airport now features a new runway, taxiways and aircraft hard standing, as well as new perimeter and access roads. Orascom carried out all of this work for its client, the Egyptian Army, which will operate the facility as a joint civil/military airport.

Because the operation has employed an all new fleet of machines combined with the latest construction techniques and tight control of specifications, both structural and finish quality are high. According to one of the project team at Orascom, "This is one of the best runways in Egypt." The one year project to rebuild the runway started at the end of 2008 and took one year to complete, with the perimeter road, taxiways and concrete hard standing having all just been completed in May of this year.

In all Orascom says it paved around 34km of roads at the site, including the perimeter road around the airport. The runway itself measures 3km long by 70m wide while there are three taxiways of 400m each and two concrete aircraft parking aprons measuring 37,900m2 for military aircraft and 40,000m2 for civil aircraft.

The runway features three layers of asphalt, a wearing course, binder course and base course. Under this are two layers of compacted soil and aggregates, built to tight specifications to meet Egyptian requirements and regulations. The aircraft parking areas are made of high quality concrete and were laid in two layers, each 150mm thick and with a 700mm structure of earth and aggregate underneath. After laying the concrete was cut with slots every 5m and these were then filled with sealant.

In all nine 178 Caterpillar 14M graders were employed to lay out the site and also carry out the majority of the earthmoving duties. Egyptian practice is to make extensive use of graders for earthmoving, so these were key prduction tools. For the surfacing two Vögele Super 1800-2 pavers were used to lay the asphalt while the concrete paving for the aircraft parking areas was carried out with a 2395 Wirtgen SP1500.

In addition, 14 single drum soil rollers and twin drum asphalt rollers of various makes were used for compaction of the earth and asphalt surfaces. A 273 Marini Ultima batching plant able to deliver 120tonnes/hour produced the asphalt used on the runway and roadways around the airport, with the high specification concrete coming from an outside supplier.

Because the asphalt and concrete paving work had to be carried out to high specifications, total stations were used to monitor progress throughout and a tolerance of +/- 2mm was allowed on the concrete surface for instance. The concrete paving job was only carried out at night to save the crew from working with the material during the fierce daytime temperatures that can hit peaks of 45ºC.

Orascom had to build five concrete culverts along the length of the runway as well as two for each of the taxiways although these are all for electrical cabling rather than drainage, as rainfall in these desert conditions is a rare event. The new airport is now open to traffic and also benefits from a brand new control tower and terminal building, as well as other new facilities.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Advances in road markings
    March 16, 2012
    Recent months have seen many major and vital road marking projects and products completed and tested in different parts of the world. Guy Woodford looks at some of them in Europe, North America, the Middle East and Africa. The London borough of Kensington and Chelsea now has one of the most dramatic streetscape designs in Europe. Exhibition Road’s striking chequered granite design, featuring a single surface running from South Kensington Station to Hyde Park and the full width of the road from building to b
  • Lower noise surfaces under spotlight
    July 31, 2012
    Research is paramount in the development of better roads and safety. In a new series, Eurofile looks at the work and programmes of organisations dedicated to that end. In this issue: The German Federal Research Institute (BASt) The aims of BASt (an arm of the Federal Ministry of Transport) are to improve the cost-effectiveness of building and maintaining federal trunk roads, to increase the safety of road transport, to reduce the environmental impact produced by road traffic and construction and to improve
  • Kraton expands duty range of its polymer products
    August 23, 2013
    The pavement industry needs to come up with novel solutions in order to meet the twin challenges of climate change and squeezed budgets. This was the message from Kraton Polymers market development manager Rombout Hartemink when he addressed FIRM13. Hartemink illustrated the properties of Kraton’s modified bitumen with the aid of his stretchy bar. This 250mm-long bar of Highly Modified Bitumen stretches to five or six times its length, returning to its original state in around five minutes. “It changes
  • Increased use of recycled asphalt pavement
    February 29, 2012
    Increasing material costs mean that the US highway sector is looking to increase the use of recycled asphalt pavement (RAP). At the recent World of Asphalt conference and exhibition in Orlando, Florida, two presentations explained the latest developments.