Skip to main content

Concrete paving success with Power Curbers

A concrete paving contractor in Florida reports success in a range of projects. Brevard Concrete Paving started small, with one truck and trailer, and the firm’s initial projects were jobs such as the installation of residential kerbs, pedestrian walkways and driveways. Soon, the firm had branched out to a wide range of duties such as paving filling station areas and work for the Florida Department of Transportation.
August 31, 2022 Read time: 3 mins
Equipment from Power Curbers has proven highly versatile for a US contractor in Miami

As the firm grew, the projects it was asked to complete continued to grow in size and complexity, which meant the types of equipment to build them also needed to expand.

Brevard Concrete poured kerbing for a few years using two Power Curber 150 Extruders that were bought in 2017 and 2019. Then, as needs grew, the firm ordered a 5700-D curb and gutter machine that was delivered in 2020. It was immediately put into service, and in 2021, the company slipformed nearly 24,400 linear metres of kerb with it. As the work expanded even further and the company realised it needed an additional tool, a Power Curber 7700 Multipurpose Machine was ordered.

The firm won the contract to expand an aircraft taxiway at what used to be Patrick Air Force Base. Located just a little south of Cape Canaveral, the base is now Patrick Space Force Base, one of six active installations of the new service branch. Patrick was originally a Naval Air Station, opened in 1940, and then turned over to the Air Force in 1948. The recent change in status for the installation meant that improvements were needed to increase capacity.

Brevard’s work on the taxiway called for 2,354m3 of concrete, poured 584mm thick. The extreme paving depth required careful planning and preparation, including steel forms.

The firm had two months to complete the project and would pave around two times/week, with a total of ten pours. The firm would pave 6m sections, pour 6m, skip 6m and then pave the next 6m. Work started at 6am and continued until 10am.

The next Brevard project for their 7700 was another airport facility, Vero Beach Regional Airport, about seventy miles south of Cocoa. A few years earlier, Brevard had completed a ramp for the airport, and the new job was phase two of that project. Some 4,707m3 of concrete were slipformed in 4.6m-wide sections. The firm had a total of eighteen pours, each 206m long. Ultimately, the new ramp will have hangars built around it, and planes will use the ramp to access the taxiway to runways.

Getting the ramp finished and in operation quickly was critical for the client, so the construction contract included a penalty of ten thousand dollars per day in liquidated damages for each day the project was late. Brevard completed around 274m/day, starting at 4am and finishing around 10am, with machine pours every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, with Saturday as a backup. And they completed the project on time.

Even as that project was ongoing, other customers were lining up for Brevard’s 7700. Another Florida concrete contractor had a complex project in the area with two types of heavy-duty barrier sections. But it lacked the right equipment to handle the task. They contacted Power Curbers and learned only one company in the area had a big enough machine for the job: Brevard Concrete Paving.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Hot work for GOMACO at Doha airport
    November 2, 2012
    The country of Qatar, located on the Persian Gulf, developed a master plan to build a new replacement airport in its capital city of Doha, the New Doha International Airport, in 2003. Its goal is to have a facility capable of handling 50 million passengers; two million tons (1.8million tonnes) of cargo, and 320,000 aircraft landings and take-offs each year by 2015. Phase one of the aggressive project is scheduled for completion early next year. The Tayseeir Contractors Company Joint Venture, including Conso
  • U.S National Guard’s airport upgrade
    October 12, 2012
    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
  • A machine from Power Curbers has carried out productive barrier slipforming work
    January 4, 2013
    A contractor in the US has used a slipformer from Power Curbers to carry out a barrier installation project. The firm, Wisconsin-based Choice Construction, used slipforming machines from Power Curbers for the project. The worksite was located along Wisconsin State Highway 41, between Oshkosh and Green Bay along the west side of Lake Winnebago. The project entailed widening the highway from two to three lanes and adding barrier wall between the north and southbound lanes. Because the job has a number of di
  • Power Curbers is broadening its concrete paver model ranges
    February 27, 2017
    Power Curbers is introducing a new concrete slipformer. The Power Curber 7700 is a multipurpose slipform machine that is designed for a wide variety of both offset applications and paving up to 6m wide. Like the other machines from Power Curbers, it is as easy to operate as it is said to be highly versatile. The machine is aimed at contractors who carry out a wide variety of jobs, including road paving or offset applications like barrier and variable barrier, bridge parapet, ditches, and more. The machin