Skip to main content

Mongolia’s capital Ulaanbaatar is redeveloping its airport

Mongolia’s economy is growing fast, with capital Ulaanbaatar the centre for activity. Being landlocked, the country depends heavily on aviation to carry passengers and cargo. The existing Chinggis Khaan International Airport was built in 1956 and upgraded in 1987 and 1997 for international traffic. But the old airport cannot meet demands and boosting the country’s capacity to handle flights is essential. The New Ulaanbataar International Airport (NUBIA) will triple passenger capacity to approximately 3
August 23, 2016 Read time: 4 mins
Paving work is being carried out at night
Mongolia’s economy is growing fast, with capital Ulaanbaatar the centre for activity. Being landlocked, the country depends heavily on aviation to carry passengers and cargo.

The existing Chinggis Khaan International Airport was built in 1956 and upgraded in 1987 and 1997 for international traffic. But the old airport cannot meet demands and boosting the country’s capacity to handle flights is essential. The New Ulaanbataar International Airport (NUBIA) will triple passenger capacity to approximately 3 million/year and boost cargo handling by a factor of 10. According to project director Enkhbat Navaantseden, “The current airport faces safety, usability and operation difficulties.”

For this reason, the new airport has been located in the Khushigiin Khundii valley, 52km from Ulaanbaatar. NUBIA is built on an elevated plain with no mountains in the immediate air corridor.

The airport is designed with a robust 3.6km runway, which is being built from concrete. This will allow the runway to withstand the harsh weather conditions of the extreme continental climate. This runway will be stronger structurally and will handle large aircraft, while the facility is also benefiting from a sophisticated new 24-hour all-weather air traffic control system.

To finance the airport project, the Government of Mongolia signed a 40-year loan agreement for US$645 million with the Japan Bank for International Cooperation. The Mitsubishi-Chiyoda Joint Venture (MCJV) won the tender process for the contract. In May 2013, the main construction package was signed between MCJV and the Civil Aviation Authority of Mongolia.

The construction work was awarded to the prime subcontractor 1026 Samsung C&T, while the specialist concrete paving work is being carried out by South Korean firm Sungdo Construction. The Korean company specialises in slipforming work and concrete paving started onsite in May 2014, using its 2395 Wirtgen SP 1600 and its smaller SP 500.

Dongin Park, Samsung C&T project manager for NUBIA explained, “We have to face the extreme climate with short, hot summers and long, icy winters. This gives us a construction time window of only three to four months during summer time. The wind from the Gobi desert and the intensive sunlight quickly dries out the concrete. That’s why the main paving operation with the SP 1600 had to happen during night shifts.”

For the new airport, the SP 1600 is paving the 45m-wide and 3.6km-long runway in several segments with a paving width of 11.25m and a paving thickness of 380mm on average. For this airport job, the machine was fitted with a second concrete paving kit, allowing it to pave dual-course concrete slabs in a single operation. The first layer paved by the SP 1600 is a 270mm-thick slab, followed immediately by the second 110mm-thick layer. Paving wet-in-wet delivers an effective bond between the top and bottom layers. Wire bar fabric between the two layers provides additional reinforcement, having been specified by Japanese consultant Azusa Sekkei and 1426 Oriental Consultants Joint Venture, which developed the airport design. Material compaction is delivered by up to 48 electric vibrators while the required concrete surface is being achieved using the SP 1600’s oscillating beam and super smoother.


“Instead of using four SP 500 pavers, we decided to go just for one SP 1600, as we have had good experiences with this high-performance paving train in the past. Dual-layer paving with one machine speeds up our operation. We are paving concrete with a material cost of around $20 million and using around 135,000m3 of concrete for the runway, taxiways and aprons,” explained commercial manager Seunghwan Lee.

The SP 500 meanwhile is being used for the 7,500m2 of aprons and 50,000m2 of taxiway sections. It is set to a paving width of 5.625m and is being used to construct up to five adjoining, parallel slabs.

Sungdo Construction brought stores of parts to the jobsite, with support being supplied by Wirtgen’s regional service network. If there is a need for additional parts, these can be flown in from South Korean Wirtgen dealer Sambo Heavy Industries, or ordered from Wirtgen in Germany. Service engineers from Wirtgen China or Wirtgen Germany can be onsite within 24 hours.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Developments in concrete road construction
    February 7, 2012
    Innovative developments are pushing forward concrete road construction techniques. The concrete road sector looks to benefit from some key innovations and developments now coming to market or being employed in different territories. Irregular weather and environmental conditions can alter the rate at which concrete cures, with a risk of plastic shrinkage cracks that can compromise the integrity of a pavement. Contractors cannot control the environmental conditions of a paving project and when weather patter
  • Innovations in concrete paving technology
    March 16, 2012
    Paving with concrete offers a strong and long life base for a roadway, with manufacturers continuing to develop technologies – Mike Woof reports. Innovation comes fast in the concrete paving market with a number of specialist suppliers offering an array of solutions to meet the needs of slipforming contractors. These machines can be used for a range of applications from large-scale airport runway or highway construction duties, tunnel jobs, bridge decks, barriers, traffic islands and kerbs. Because the app
  • Wirtgen milling machines and soil stabilisers land in Sardina
    July 26, 2016
    Wirtgen cold milling machines recently demonstrated their ability on runway rehabilitation work at Alghero-Fertilia Airport in Sardinia. Alghero-Fertilia Airport, about 8km northwest of Alghero, is one of three commercial airports on the Italian island. Built as a military airport in the late 1930s, Alghero-Fertilia still occasionally serves this purpose today. It is also a major hub for low-cost carriers that ferry many of the annual 1.7 million passengers who pass through the airport. Summer tourist mo
  • Technology and collaboration bring massive time savings
    December 2, 2021
    The link between any major city and its airport is a crucial one. In Auckland, New Zealand, State Highway 20B connects the city of 1.6 million people with the rest of the nation and the international airport, one of only two roads leading there