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

  • Novel dual layer paving work in Germany
    February 2, 2017
    A German contractor is now using two novel asphalt paving technologies from Vögele together for key projects The firm has acquired Vögele’s InLine Pave equipment with its innovative dual layer paving technology as well as one of the SUPER 1800-3i SprayJets for paving a surface course. This combination of technologies is allowing contractor Rask Brandenburg to carry out fast and efficient road rehabilitation work on some major routes, including a busy Autobahn stretch leading into capital Berlin. T
  • IRF members partner on asphalt pavement engineering research
    October 16, 2020
    Arizona State University’s Schools of Engineering and FORTA Corporation, a Pennsylvania-based leader in the synthetic reinforcement fibres industry have announced a partnership to support further research into the resilience of pavements.
  • Achieving a smooth road surface
    September 28, 2015
    Achieving a smooth road surface has helped a US contractor gain a bonus payment of US$605,000 on a paving job in Montana. A recently renovated 16km section of I-90, starting in Alberton, Mont., which is located on the Western part of the state near the Idaho border, and stretching East, received sterling commendations, beat target IRI scores, and earned the general contractor quality bonuses. The project also won the 2014 MCA Excellence Award for Best Paving Smoothness from the Montana Contractors Associat
  • 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