Skip to main content

Hot work for GOMACO at Doha airport

The country of Qatar, located on the Persian Gulf, developed a master plan to build a new replacement airport in its capital city of Doha, the New Doha International Airport, in 2003. Its goal is to have a facility capable of handling 50 million passengers; two million tons (1.8million tonnes) of cargo, and 320,000 aircraft landings and take-offs each year by 2015. Phase one of the aggressive project is scheduled for completion early next year. The Tayseeir Contractors Company Joint Venture, including Conso
November 2, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
The GOMACO GP-2600 with Auto-Float paved at various widths and thicknesses

A GOMACO paving train overcame challenges on the New Doha International Airport

The country of Qatar, located on the Persian Gulf, developed a master plan to build a new replacement airport in its capital city of Doha, the New Doha International Airport, in 2003.

Its goal is to have a facility capable of handling 50 million passengers; two million tons (1.8million tonnes) of cargo, and 320,000 aircraft landings and take-offs each year by 2015.

Phase one of the aggressive project is scheduled for completion early next year.

The Tayseeir Contractors Company Joint Venture, including Consolidated Contractors International Company (CCIC), is one of the many contractors on site finishing its share of the first phase. CCI¬C has been at work slipforming approximately 100,000m³ of new concrete aprons on the airport with its new 218 Gomaco paving train. The train includes a PS-2600 placer/spreader, four-track GP-2600 slipform paver with an Auto-Float attachment and a T/C-400 texture/cure machine.

Challenges abounded on the project, including an airport design plan which did not consider slipform paving; daytime summer temperatures averaging 40ºC; a crew new to slipforming, and varying paving widths and depths, all while working around hundreds of other contractors trying to complete their portion of the project.

The challenges caused CCIC and its concrete paving manager Kevin Robinson to look at the project differently as they worked to maximise the utilisation of the GOMACO paving train.
“The project was just an obstacle course with us having to go over or around lamp post bases, fire hydrants, fuel pits, electrical pits and all the other different types of pits,” says Robinson.

“We really had to be on top of our game and keep everything carefully coordinated and planned so we could put concrete on the ground every day with the GP-2600. That was our goal, to always get concrete on the ground. We were able to achieve that goal, even if we only paved 200m³ that day.”

CCIC slipformed the new airport’s aprons on a 100mm thick asphalt base applied over a rock sub-base. The Portland Cement Concrete (PCC), without air entrainment, was produced on site by three different mobile batching plants with the capacity to produce 100-110m³ of concrete per hour. Slump averaged between 25-35mm.

Concrete was delivered to the paving site by dump trucks carrying 8m³ loads.

The trucks dumped their load onto the belt of the PS-2600 placer/spreader working in front of the GP-2600 paver or, when project logistics did not allow enough room for the PS-2600, concrete was dumped directly on the grade.

The GP-2600 paved a maximum of 6m wide on the project and up to 550mm deep. Baskets were placed on grade every 6m.

 “There was a grated water trench just inside the aprons that varied in size in different areas, so we had to alter the width of the paving equipment nine different times to suit the design,” says Robinson.
“On any other project we’d be able to pave 2,000m³ per day, but this one was just so difficult. The most we ever accomplished was 856m³. It’s all due to the difficult areas of design, which would have up to 20 headers and footers per shift, as we paved around the various obstacles.”

A T/C-400 texture/cure machine followed the paver applying a burlap drag finish, transverse tine and white spray cure. Contraction joints were sawed into the new slab every 6m and expansion joints were placed every 75m.

“When we first started, the paving crew was very inexperienced, but now I would rate them as good as anyone I?know,” says Robinson. “The GP-2600 performed very well through all of it and the crew learned quickly how to work on and around the GOMACO equipment. We met all of the tolerances specified by the engineers and the paver laid the concrete as flat as you can get. I’m really proud of the concrete we produced in such challenging conditions.”

CCIC is currently finishing its portion of the concrete pavement at the New Doha International Airport.
Some hand pours and a few other details are all that is left to complete.

The GOMACO paving train and Robinson have already moved onto another project, Muscat International Airport in Muscat, Oman, where the GP-2600 is slipforming approximately 140,000m³ of stands and aprons as part of the airport’s expansion project.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Wirtgen machines help stabilise industrial area in Germany
    May 13, 2015
    Equipment from the Wirtgen Group has played an important role in stabilising the area being developed for a new industrial zone in Germany. The site of a new factory located in Backnang, including access roads and parking areas has seen the use of the Wirtgen machines to help address poor ground conditions. The contractor employed a Wirtgen WR 200i soil stabiliser, two Hamm compactors and a Streumaster SW 16 MC binding agent spreader to improve the ground properties the soil. The firm, Riva, expanded
  • Tunnel project of Chilean capital Santiago
    April 8, 2015
    Tunnel construction in Chilean capital Santiago will help cut chronic congestion – Mauro Nogarin & Mike Woof write. Chile’s capital Santiago is a thriving city having benefited from the country’s economy growing strongly in recent years. The massive copper mining sector has helped boost the country’s GDP significantly in the past few decades, also aided by the growing international reputation of Chile’s large wine industry. The steady economic growth has resulted in an equally steady growth in average incom
  • Ammann adds more paving courses at its Czech training campus
    April 13, 2015
    Swiss mechanical engineering company Ammann is increasing the frequency of its successful global paving campus training courses in the Czech Republic. These four-day-long expert knowledge sessions are run at the Ammann International Training Centre (AITC) in Nové Město nad Metují and, according to after sales projects manager and training centre boss Martin Sedláček, the idea is “to ensure that Ammann has a globally consistent (approach) to presenting, selling and servicing” the company’s fast-developing r
  • LeeBoy expansion strategy targets emerging markets
    March 12, 2014
    During the recent Conexpo event in Las Vegas, Kelly Majeskie, President of The LeeBoy Group, spoke about his expansion plans for the business “We’ve been working on a couple strategies for LeeBoy” said Majeskie, “an overseas growth strategy and a more focused approach to the US market. Like most businesses we saw a major downturn when the US housing market took the big hit in 2008/9.