Skip to main content

Airbase refurbishment with Volvo CE pavers

Asphalt pavers from Volvo CE have played an important role in the renovation of an airport runway at the Wunstorf air base in Germany. The contractor Strabag faced the challenge of placing new asphalt on the runway in the shortest possible time.
May 13, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Volvo CE pavers working in echelon were able to pave a military airbase runway in a single day

The firm used three pavers working in echelon for the large-scale project, which presented challenges in terms of both planning and precision. The firm used modern Volvo P7820D ABG pavers and also benefited from support of paving experts from Volvo CE.

The Wunstorf air base handles large transport aircraft in the shape of Airbus A400Ms as the Air Transport Wing 62 of the German armed forces (Bundeswehr) stationed at the military airfield, which is located north-west of Hanover.

Jörg Hebemeyer, road construction manager at Strabag's Hanover division explained that the firm had been rehabilitating the second runway in Wunstorf for over a year before the pavers could be used. Trucks carrying fresh asphalt had to drive up almost every minute once paving commenced so as to supply the three asphalt trains, each consisting of a road paver and a feeder. To complete the work, the teams were followed by rollers to finish the paving job.

With this setup, the firm was able to finish asphalting the entire runway within three days.

For Hebemeyer, who has been working at Strabag since 2018, it was a challenging project that demanded a lot from everyone involved. "In the end, we never had any problems with this project at any time.”

Michael Weinhold, one of the responsible paving foremen on site, commented that using the three pavers in echelon meant a paving width of 30m could be achieved.

Frank Dörrie, product manager Road Pavers at Volvo CE, and André Sebastian Meier, product manager Road Pavers & Rollers Germany, Austria, Switzerland, travelled to the site for the job. “You don't experience a project like this every day," said Dörrie.

Although the area was large, using three of the Volvo P6820D ABG pavers allowed Strabag to asphalt the entire runway in just one day.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Granite pilots Volvo’s Compact Assist to new heights in Sacramento
    November 9, 2017
    While not required for its Sacramento Airport contract, Granite Construction* is getting to grips with IC specifications thanks to Volvo CE’s Compact Assist. In the US, 23 states have written intelligent compaction (IC) specifications for asphalt paving jobs and more states are expected to follow. Among those states with IC specs is California.
  • Strabag on the edge with a Dynapac DF145CS paver from Atlas Copco
    June 10, 2015
    When asphalting the inside of the newly raised edge of a water dam, Austrian road construction company Strabag faced a challenge. The paver had to be operated at an angle of between 34-41 degrees with material fed into the hopper from a ledge just 2.8m wide on the edge of the dam. The Waldeck 2 kidney-shaped hydroelectric station is located on a mountaintop about 500m above sea level on Lake Eder in central Germany. The dam, owned by global energy group E.ON, has a perimeter of about 3km. An important pa
  • Lima's massive $2 billion airport project
    March 4, 2025
    Peru’s capital, Lima, is to benefit from a massive new international airport, which will be one of the largest in Latin America – Mike Woof writes
  • Hamburg-Finkenwerder airport has new runway surface
    August 21, 2013
    Hamburg’s Finkenwerder airport is now benefiting from a new runway surface following work carried out by contractor KEMNA BAU. The company recently used machines from Dynapac to resurface 36,000m2 of the runway track in Hamburg-Finkenwerder, a facility used by Airbus. The airport handles around 10-15 take-offs and landings/day when aircraft are either undergoing flight testing or being delivered to customers, as well as for deliveries of components by transport aircraft. The project was tricky as the