Skip to main content

U.S National Guard’s airport upgrade

In Kansas, specialist contractor Pavers has carried out important work for the National Guard. The aim of the work was to rehabilitate a WWII era hangar apron for the Kansas National Guard. The project required extensive repair work, including pavement patching, dowel bar retrofitting, partial depth patching and joint sealing. Pavers had to overhaul a 305m x 91.5m apron at Army Aviation Support Facility No 2 that suffered from poor drainage. The project included milling 152mm of old asphalt and concrete and
October 12, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
In order to keep on the tight schedule, contractor pavers needed to drill two lanes at a time and more than 32,000 holes were required

In Kansas, specialist contractor Pavers has carried out important work for the National Guard. The aim of the work was to rehabilitate a WWII era hangar apron for the Kansas National Guard. The project required extensive repair work, including pavement patching, dowel bar retrofitting, partial depth patching and joint sealing. Pavers had to overhaul a 305m x 91.5m apron at Army Aviation Support Facility No 2 that suffered from poor drainage. The project included milling 152mm of old asphalt and concrete and replace it with a fresh concrete overlay.

The company has plenty of experience in airport paving and repair work in Kansas and the Salina airport project for the National Guard had the company facing 610mm of concrete and asphalt. The scope of the project meant sharing responsibilities with other contractors. One contractor did the milling for the top 152mm of old concrete and asphalt that needed to come out, while another company was needed to install a 25.4mm thick asphalt bond separation layer. A third major subcontractor provided traffic control, installing barriers around the work area, and doing striping. Pavers focused on the drilling, doweling and concrete overlay work.

For the dowel drilling work Pavers used pneumatic equipment from Oklahoma-based 2976 E-Z Drill. Two slab rider drills helped speed along the Kansas National Guard project. When Pavers set to work with a crew of about 15-18 employees to reconstruct the apron for the Guard, it divided the 27,870m2 tarmac area near the hangar into 18, 4.88m-wide lanes, along with a few smaller areas. The company drilled more than 32,000 holes to complete the work, with about 875 holes for each lane edge. In just a day and a half, Pavers was able to finish four 305m -long edges, a very high productivity rate. The process consisted of the crew pouring two lanes at a time, then coming back to drill the edges on both before moving to the next lanes.

Pavers employed the E-Z Drill Model 210B-2 SRA, a two-gang slab rider drill, and the Model 210B-3 SRA, a three-gang version, to drill the thousands of 2.22mm diameter, 457mm deep holes needed for the project. Once Pavers had each lane’s holes drilled, it epoxied the dowels into place and finished off the lane with fresh concrete.

Having the right equipment and experience had Pavers completing the project in time — and getting the Kansas Guard fully operational again. The facility is now used for 10 helicopter pads for the Kansas Army National Guard’s UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters. A thicker concrete area allows heavier transport planes, such as the National Guard’s KC-135 refuelling aircraft when required.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • 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
  • Overlay extends bridge's life
    July 24, 2012
    More than 3,000 vehicles a day pass over the US-95 Bridge over Lake Creek near the Coeur D'Alene Tribal Casino in Worley, Idaho, USA. The original deck, built in 2007, was poured concrete with a micro-silica layer added for protection. A QTT weather station with FreezeFree anti-icing technology is mounted in the bridge rail. With big variances in temperature and a lot of wind in this region, the original deck material became thick causing a near 80m length of micro-silica to over-harden. Idaho DOT engineers
  • Multiple milling machines removing surface
    April 24, 2019
    Milling subcontractor Pavement Recycling Systems removed thousands of tonnes of reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP) from a runway at Oakland International Airport in California recently. The firm used a fleet of six Wirtgen W 210i cold milling machines to remove the asphalt in less than 60 hours from Runway 12-30, along the shore of San Francisco Bay. In total, 47,000tons of asphalt were milled within a 60-hour time frame, nonstop day and night, plus a single-shift second phase a week later. The firm start
  • Surfaces made safe
    April 4, 2012
    Spanning Manahawkin Bay, and carrying traffic along Route 72 between Long Beach Island and Manahawkin, New Jersey, USA, the Dorland J. Henderson Memorial Bridge, known as the Manahawkin Bay Bridge, was in need of repair. New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT) specified Transpo T-17 MMA polymer concrete patch and T-18 MMA polymer concrete slurry overlay as approved materials for the 12,000m² bridge rehabilitation project on the steel girder bridge. All the bridge deck spalls were prepared and patche