Skip to main content

New runway for US military airbase in Florida

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
December 7, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
Work carried on roudn the clock during the 96-hour possession

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 base’s sole runway, Runway 4-22. The runway is 2,871m long by 46m wide and usually requires resurfacing every 15 years or so. In 2016 the surface had provided MacDill Air Force Base with 16 years of service and wear and cracks had developed, with even the best pilots finding it rough for smooth landings.

The US$8.1 million runway resurfacing project was awarded to Danner Construction Company, Tampa, FL, as the general contractor on the project. Ajax Paving Industries, North Venice, FL, completed the paving and Turtle Southeast, Largo, FL handled all of the asphalt milling of the old surface.

The overall project is expected to close the runway for about two months. The aircraft traffic was redirected to nearby Tampa International Airport and to Joint Base Charleston to continue the base’s operations.

“The challenge we faced was time,” stated T Allen Gill, general manager with Turtle Southeast, “Our window for milling the entire runway was set at 96 hours.”

To complete the project on time, Turtle assigned much of its equipment and staff. The company has 50 employees and a fleet that includes 13 1252 Roadtec milling machines, 13 service trucks, nine transports, five water trucks and various ancillary vehicles.

The total milling depth of the project was 108mm and required a total of 400 machine hours to complete. Turtle milled the first layer of asphalt at 57mm and then milled the second layer to final grade using a machine control GPS system. The company had 30 employees working on the project and dedicated eight of its Roadtec RX-700e cold planers to ensure the project was done accurately and within the tight timeframe.

Additionally, Turtle Southeast needed to ensure that the milled grade was tight enough so that Ajax could achieve finished paving tolerances of 6.35mm or less to meet FAA standards.

The firm said it ran its milling machines 20 hours/day without a single minute of downtime, with some older units included in that group but proving as reliable as the new ones.

The RX-700e features a 563kW Caterpillar engine and the machines have the exclusive Roadtec Guardian Telematics System, which monitors the machine in real time through a wireless signal, and can address any issues that may arise while the machine works. The telematics system also allows Roadtec service personnel to remotely view the machine in real time. 

“We worked hard on this project and put in some long hours,” stated Gill, who also credits Ajax for its support throughout the project and staging the trucks, so the milling could continue uninterrupted. “When we started the day on Saturday morning there were a total of 130 trucks lined up and waiting to be filled.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • A macro website launched for microsurfacing processes
    October 9, 2018
    RoadResource.org as a go-to website for surfacing information is now live When RoadResouce.org went live – quietly - in July it was the end of two years of hard work by three major US associations for pavement preservation. But there was no grand party or ceremonial pushing of the “go live” button, says Doug Hogue, vice president and general manager of VSS Macropaver. “For all of us in the industry July is a busy period that left little time to celebrate on the opening day,” says the 51-year-old chartere
  • Concrete paving job for Wirtgen machines in Nigeria
    May 14, 2018
    Concrete paving equipment from Wirtgen has been used to slipform a concrete road surface in south-west Nigeria Anew concrete roadway connects the towns of Itori und Ibese in Nigeria’s Ogun State. The construction work has been carried out by AG-Dangote Construction Company and made use of the sophisticated technology offered by Wirtgen’s SP 500 slipform paver. For this project, the contractor, a joint venture between the Brazilian company Andrade Gutierrez Company and the Dangote Group from Nigeria, rel
  • Kenya rehabilitates, widens, tolls Northern Corridor
    November 8, 2017
    A massive highway project in Kenya will boost transport for the country as well as its neighbours - Shem Oirere reports. Kenya has commenced the process of rehabilitating, expanding and tolling of 657km of East Africa’s Northern Corridor that is anchored on the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa and which links the gateway with landlocked countries of Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and parts of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
  • Sri Lanka Airport runway upgrade
    December 7, 2017
    Sri Lanka’s main international airport now features a new runway surface that will help improve air transport efficiency at the facility The project was carried out successfully, despite a tough time schedule, boosting safety at the airport. This new runway will help increase capacity at the airport, allowing Sri Lanka to develop the tourist sector on which the country depends heavily for its economic growth. The work at the international airport for Sri Lanka’s capital Colombo was carried out with the