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

  • Concrete paving meets demanding airport conditions
    July 11, 2012
    High speed, high quality concrete paving can be achieved in the demanding airport environment using the latest equipment. Minnich Manufacturing has developed a novel dowel pin drilling machine and has successfully tested this equipment at Tyndall Air Force Base in Panama City, Florida. The A-5SCW is a self-propelled, cantilevered machine that features a wireless remote control and is designed to install five dowel pins simultaneously. The control system has been developed by Wisconsin Kar-Tech and uses prov
  • Wirtgen KMA 220 passes with flying colours at Cologne/Bonn Airport
    July 25, 2018
    A Wirtgen KMA 220 produces hydraulically bound base using a mix-in-plant process for recycling at Cologne/Bonn Airport. With the mobile KMA 220 mobile cold recycling mixing plant from Wirtgen, road construction materials can be recycled or upgraded in just about any location. This avoids countless transport trips and is also sustainable and environmentally friendly. Finally, it is extremely economical, according to Wirtgen. This became clear from a job at Cologne/Bonn airport at the end of 2017. The plan
  • Innovations are pushing boundaries in the concrete road paving sector
    February 18, 2013
    The concrete road paving market continues to develop - Mike Woof reports Concrete road paving technology continues to evolve, with new equipment and techniques coming to market. Although concrete road construction has been used for many years, problems with early generation technologies affected this market segment. The first concrete roads were constructed in sections, which led to problems at joints but these were addressed many years ago with the advent of slipform paving. Concrete roads constructed in t
  • Meeting the challenge of desert runway resurfacing
    February 8, 2012
    Ferocious daytime temperatures can provide a tough challenge to construction firms working in desert conditions in Egypt's south. Despite the high daytime temperatures however, Egyptian contractor Orascom has managed to complete an airport project on budget and ahead of schedule, while meeting the client's tight specifications.