Skip to main content

Speedy airport upgrade

Increases in flight numbers from the Frankfurt Hahn airport have resulted in necessary improvements to the facility, including new runway surfaces. The former German military airbase has been used as a civilian airport since 1993 but is now Germany's fifth largest air cargo hub and handles some 40,000 flights/year.
February 15, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
A team of Vögele pavers working echelon was used to place the new runway surface and this helped ensure a good quality bond between joints for a better quality finish and a longer working life
Increases in flight numbers from the Frankfurt Hahn airport have resulted in necessary improvements to the facility, including new runway surfaces. The former German military airbase has been used as a civilian airport since 1993 but is now Germany's fifth largest air cargo hub and handles some 40,000 flights/year. Coupled with the effects of a harsh winter, the runway was in need of resurfacing so a team of machines, including six 1194 Vögele pavers and numerous other machines from the 364 Wirtgen Group, was brought in to handle the job.

The first section of the runway was upgraded in April 2010, while the Icelandic ash cloud held air traffic in check. Later in the year, the six Vögele pavers and other machines were brought to the site to finish the rest of the runway. The airport had other improvement plans too. During the break in flights, the aim was to replace the navigation beacons, carry out work on the drainage system and repair the edges of the runway, with all the work having to be completed more or less simultaneously.

High-precision work at maximum speed was required, as the aim was to minimise disruptions to flight operations. The contract for rehabilitating 65,000m2 of runway was awarded to a consortium comprising the contractors 2710 Bopparder Asphaltbau, 2711 Thomas Bau, Faber and Asphaltbau Hunsrück. The team had no more than three days in which to complete the job. This called for numerous operations to be carried out simultaneously, with logistics a key part of the project.

The equipment fleet deployed for the project included seven milling machines, six pavers and a host of rollers. There were also numerous lorries supplying mix, as well as vehicles from companies carrying out the other construction tasks. The seven Wirtgen milling machines started the runway repair by removing the wearing course and binder course to a depth of 140mm. The milling machines were given a four-hour head start in order to prepare enough of the runway for asphalt paving. This allowed the first four pavers to set to work while the milling machines were still busy on other sections. Two Vögele SUPER 2100-2 pavers worked alongside two Vögele SUPER 1800-2 machines and all four machines were fitted with the TP-2 extending screeds, featuring tamper and two pressure bars. The pressure bars came in useful for achieving the high pre-compaction of the base course required for this job. At Frankfurt-Hahn Airport, the paving team was also able to take advantage of the capability of having the high compaction system switched on and off as required.

Grade and slope control was a challenge as the runway had to be even and free of irregularities. The paver operators used Vögele's NIVELTRONIC Plus system, which was combined with multi-cell sonic sensors referenced from the edges of the previously paved strips. Equipped with high compaction screeds and multi-cell sonic sensors, the four pavers placed the new binder course and wearing course in strips, 5-6m wide and hot to hot. As work progressed, a total of six Vögele pavers were in operation and these laid roughly 14,400tonnes of mix for 90mm binder course and 8,400tonnes of mix for 50mm wearing course.

Logistics were important and the continuous supply of asphalt by the truck fleet was vital to the project, while 228 Hamm rollers played a crucial role in the compaction duties. However, despite the complexities of the project and the large working crew required, the work was finished one hour ahead of the set 67.5 hour schedule.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Maputo Airport runway rebuild
    March 26, 2019
    Rebuilding work has been carried out on the runway and taxiways at Maputo International Airport in Mozambique. The work was carried out for Aeroportos de Moçambique, with the engineering handled by NACO and US$64 million of funding being suplied by Agence Française de Dévelopement.
  • 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.
  • Surface quality a key trend in asphalt paving
    March 7, 2012
    Improved surface quality and improved machine design are key trends in the asphalt paving sector, Mike Woof reports There is a big difference in asphalt paving techniques in North America and Europe. In North America, the need to construct long stretches of highway quickly resulted in wide pavers offering high throughput capacity, with compaction equipment then being used to achieve the required density of the various courses. In Europe's highway construction projects, distances tend to be shorter and contr
  • Paving a Japanese airport within strict time constraints
    September 19, 2012
    In Japan, major efforts are being made to both conserve energy and materials, while also delivering high quality airport runways. At Haneda Airport, as well as at the Fukuoka, Chitose and Sendai airports, innovative use is being made of asphalt paving equipment from Sumitomo. The latest model HA60W J paver from Sumitomo is being used to lay warm mix asphalt, while the contractors is also using sophisticated control technology. To minimise disruption to flight schedules, construction work at Haneda has been