Skip to main content

G&Z paving Canada’s longest runway

A contractor in Canada, Dufferin Construction, is using three items of new equipment bought from Guntert & Zimmerman to pave the country’s longest runway. The project is extensive, featuring a new runway measuring 4.3km long by 60m wide, an apron area measuring 145,000m2 and two taxiways, each 3.8km long by 25m wide. In all, the work requires 1.5 million tonnes of base aggregate, and 200,000m2 of cement-stabilised base. Dufferin Construction Company, a division of Holcim (Canada) already owns two other G&Z
October 12, 2012 Read time: 3 mins

A contractor in Canada, Dufferin Construction, is using three items of new equipment bought from Guntert & Zimmerman to pave the country’s longest runway. The project is extensive, featuring a new runway measuring 4.3km long by 60m wide, an apron area measuring 145,000m2 and two taxiways, each 3.8km long by 25m wide. In all, the work requires 1.5 million tonnes of base aggregate, and 200,000m2 of cement-stabilised base.

6695 Dufferin Construction Company, a division of 2813 Holcim (Canada) already owns two other G&Z pavers, and added an S1500 four-track Slipform Paver, a PS1200 Placer Spreader, and a TC1500 Texture Cure Machine to its fleet for this project. The project is at Calgary International Airport in Alberta, where Dufferin’s contract calls for more than 1 million m2 of new concrete surface. Construction has started and Dufferin is working through two construction seasons – 2012 and 2013 – to complete the work, which is scheduled to wrap up by May 2014.

According to project superintendent Mike Cristinziano, one challenge is to place and pave the sheer volume of aggregates and concrete required. “You need to take into consideration that our construction season up here in Calgary is not as long as in other parts of the country,” said Cristinziano. “Depending on the weather, our season runs from May or June until October, and that’s it.” The weather is a major factor in the operation, with the construction team prepared to work around the clock, and seven days a week, in order to finish on time, according to John Zavarella, superintendent of concrete plants and equipment for Dufferin.

The concrete for runways and taxiways will be 435mm thick, while the apron concrete will be 415mm.

The firm bought its first G&Z paver, an S1500, in 1995 when it was working on Highway 407 in Ontario and later added an S850 to the fleet. Zavarella said, “When we were looking at the Calgary site, it called for paving 12.5m at the widest, and we have already tackled airport jobs of that width with that type of pavement.”

Cristinziano said Dufferin is using two pavers – the S1500 and the S850 – on the Calgary airport project, with the S850 handling narrower widths and shorter stretches of pavement.

Several features of the G&Z machines come in useful for Dufferin’s needs. The paver has split guillotine side gates that allow it to back onto existing slabs at the start of the day, while reducing the need for handwork. The new TeleEndXL telescopic end section allows quick width changes between 12.5m and 10m, which are frequent for this project. All three machines – the paver, the placer and the texture cure machine – have 90° steering capability, boosting their manoeuvrability. Because of this feature, each machine can turn the tracks 90° and move directly across to the next slab, reducing set up time. The PS1200 allows Dufferin to place dowel baskets well out in front of the paving train. And the placer spreader also has a 1.626m belt that slides in and out and allows Dufferin to place concrete faster and more efficiently.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • G&Z launching new concrete placer
    March 3, 2015
    New material placer being introduced by G&Z – Mike Woof writes. Guntert & Zimmerman is now lifting the wraps from its new MP550 material placer, having announced last year that design work was underway. This machine is designed to boost throughput and overall productivity on site, while being versatile, easy to maintain and service and offering low running costs. According to the firm, the MP550 is the most versatile material placer on the market as it can handle a wide variety of concrete slumps as well as
  • RCC road paving technology growing in demand
    November 13, 2014
    US contractor Robert Smith based in Chattanooga has long experience in the asphalt paving market but has recently added roller compacted concrete (RCC) to its paving portfolio. This heavy-duty cement mix can be poured as quickly as asphalt and the company has now developed its skills at laying large areas of RCC in just a few days for its industrial client base. Demand has grown and RCC work now accounts for over 90% of the firm’s workload, which it carries out using a Volvo CE paver.
  • Efficient concrete overlays
    February 15, 2012
    Concrete overlays have a long history and proven success in the state of Iowa. Mitchell and Worth counties in north central Iowa have led the way. In the past three years, they have put down approximately 241km of 102mm concrete overlay. Concrete Foundations Inc. (CFI), based out of Hiawatha, Iowa, has slipformed almost 80km of the counties' overlays, including 45km this paving season near the town of Osage. CFI has slipformed most of the overlays with its GOMACO two-track GP-2600 paver. This season, the co
  • Concrete paving carried out in Nigeria
    April 12, 2018
    A contractor in Nigeria has used concrete paving equipment from Wirtgen to construct a road surface in the south-west of the country AG-Dangote Construction Company used an SP 500 model to repave the road connecting Itori with Ibese, In Nigeria’s Ogun State. For this project, the contractor, a joint venture between the Brazilian company Andrade Gutierrez Company and Nigeria’s Dangote Group, relied on the Wirtgen slipform paver in inset application.