Skip to main content

Rapid action by Rapid International for Scotland’s Collier Group

Batching plant supplier Rapid International has supplied the Scottish Collier Group with its first batching plant as it enters the ready-mix and precast concrete market. The plant was installed at Collier’s Goathill Quarry in Fife. Collier Group’s activities have included processing of inert rubble, muck and soil from building sites, transportation of ash from power stations, production of type 1 sub-base, rock armour, single size aggregates including high PSV and manufactured concrete sand from the washi
April 12, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Fast action: Rapid International’s mixing technology installed at Collier Group’s Goathill quarry site near Fife, Scotland
Batching plant supplier 316 Rapid International has supplied the Scottish Collier Group with its first batching plant as it enters the ready-mix and precast concrete market.


The plant was installed at Collier’s Goathill Quarry in Fife.

Collier Group’s activities have included processing of inert rubble, muck and soil from building sites, transportation of ash from power stations, production of type 1 sub-base, rock armour, single size aggregates including high PSV and manufactured concrete sand from the washing plant.

The Group’s batching plant from Rapid is built on a slope and includes five 4m-wide 80tonne capacity aggregate bins and three 160tonne capacity silos.

Two of the silos are divided in two and are accessed from the upper ground level. Filler hoses fill the four 2500litre admixture tanks in the mixer building.

The aggregates fall onto a 23m-long horizontal weigh-belt, which feeds directly into the Rapid planetary mixer to produce outputs of 80m³ of concrete per hour. This is the only conveyor belt used in the entire plant as the bins can be filled directly by loading shovel, dump truck or tipper.

The batch control cabin with computer controls made by Pneutrol, truck mixer loading point and wet hopper are all located on the lower yard level of the plant. This is where the blocks and precast are made, inside or outside depending on weather.

Rapid, based in Portadown, Northern Ireland, said it uses 3D modelling software to develop a plant to suit a customer’s site, budget and application. Apart from concrete, it can produce plants for soil or aggregate recycling, bulk material handling, glass production, mine backfill and foamed bitumen emulsion and bentonite landfill sealing.

Meanwhile, Rapid International USA recently supplied a Rapidmix 400CW mobile continuous concrete mixing plant to Andale Construction, based in Wichita, Kansas. The 400CW worked on the North Gate Improvement project at the Port of Virginia’s Norfolk International Terminals in Hampton, Virginia. Andale’s Rapidmix is now moving on to a road project for the North Carolina Department of Transportation.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • CDE looking to turn more North American dirt into dollars
    March 16, 2023
    CDE is primed for growth in North America as the region’s customers increasingly look to turn dirt into dollars.
  • Record breaking ABM bridge beams installed near Raith, Scotland
    September 30, 2016
    One of the largest mobile cranes in the UK, a 1,500tonne capacity unit, recently positioned nine 90tonne 42m pre-stressed bridge beams by ABM Precast Solutions. The massive W-beams were hoisted into place at Junction 5, the Raith Interchange, on Scotland’s M74 motorway – part of the M8-M73-M74 motorway improvements project.
  • Luck Stone targets success through multiple innovations
    December 3, 2013
    Luck Stone says it is the first company in the crushed stone and aggregate industry to launch a remote control pit loader. Based in Richmond, in the US state of Virginia, the firm collaborated with several partners, including experts from MIT, to develop the remote control tool. It is already being put to use extracting stone from Luke Stone’s Bull Run Plant in Chantilly, Virginia. “This tool gives us options that we’ve never had before and allows us to optimise resources at our plants while creating
  • BOMAG offering new asphalt feeder
    February 17, 2016
    BOMAG is now adding material feeders to its asphalt paving equipment range. The new BMF 2500 feeders can help boost paving efficiency, productivity and quality by allowing a more homogenous flow of asphalt into the paver. These machines reduce the problems of asphalt segregation as well as cold spots forming in the mat. Such issues can occur when the last of the mix from each truck load passes from the paver hopper to the screed. Using a BMF 2500, contractors can also boost output on large highway paving jo