Skip to main content

Cemex materials at Jamaican airport

Technology supplied by Cemex has helped repave taxiways at the International Sangster Airport in Montego Bay, Jamaica. The firm supplied a concrete plant, a paver, and other supplies from Mexico to guarantee the durability and quality of the airport’s facilities.
June 10, 2019 Read time: 2 mins

 

The team comprised Mexican and Jamaican professionals and worked with the control tower to complete the project without affecting the airport’s operations.

The team of specialists had the job of renovating 35,000m2 of taxiways at the airport. From Mexico, Cemex provided a specialist construction team, a concrete plant, materials that were not available in the area, and a sophisticated paver. The team used the equipment and materials to place 22,500m3 of concrete within the time schedule required.

The taxiways needed repaving due to the wear and tear caused by aircraft manoeuvring. Rubén Hernando Ceña, project manager of INECO, the company in charge of project supervision explained, "Concrete is a solution for safety improvement, reduces the risk of aircraft damage due to the irregularities of old pavement.”

With the equipment on site, CEMEX Mexico’s 30 specialists in pavement, maintenance, topography, quality, management, and control worked to complete the project without interrupting the airport’s operations. "The CEMEX team collaborated with the airport’s authorities to produce high resistance concrete and execute the project without affecting air traffic," explained Alejandro Vares, Infrastructure and Government vice president of CEMEX Mexico.

With the project completed in less than six months, the new taxiway´s lifespan will extend up to 20 years; a change that will reduce maintenance frequency and benefit the airport’s 4.5 million annual users.

The international project was led by a Mexican team from CEMEX in collaboration with CEMEX Jamaica and Caribbean Cement, CEMEX’s local subsidiaries, and local builder S&G Road Surfacing Materials.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Asphalt paving is seeing innovative new technology
    April 4, 2013
    With new machines coming to market, the asphalt paving sector is seeing an array of sophisticated technology now available
  • Concrete plants: flexibility and efficiency
    March 17, 2016
    Concrete mixing plants are becoming more flexible and innovative to ensure they meet increasingly stringent construction schedules. Increasing demands are put on contractors to cut down the transportation of material to construction sites in the name of efficiency and the environment. For that reason concrete mixing plants are increasingly flexible in their transportation to sites, their set up times and their output. Ammann Elba, the company created when German-based Elba was acquired by Ammann in 20
  • Paving runways at airports in Russia and Cambodia
    June 15, 2021
    Asphalt plants from Lintec are helping with the construction of runways in Russia and Cambodia
  • Cat paver helps ''safeguard Venice''
    July 23, 2012
    For centuries Venetians had given in to the Adriatic Sea, learning to celebrate its unique challenges rather than trying to hold back its tides, but that is changing. Built on an archipelago of 118 islands, with over 150 canals and over 400 bridges connecting the islands, visitors and residents to the old lagoon city travel only by water or on foot: it is considered Europe's largest car-free urban area. So the sight of a state-of-the-art Caterpillar AP655D asphalt paver is unusual, but it is assisting in a