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READY MIX FOCUS
page 24
INSIDENEWSNew HSE rules put pressure on Abu Dhabi contractorsPAGE 9
LEGALLeonora Riesenburg on the importance of the right advicePAGE 12
SITE VISITSharjah’s Al Wahda street project passes important milestonePAGE 21
CITY FOCUSAnalysis of the latest news and updates from Amman, JordanPAGE 28
SAUDI ARABIA BAHRAIN UNITED ARAB EMIRATES QATAR OMAN KUWAIT
ConstructionWEEK NEWS, ANALYSIS, PROJECTS,
TENDERS, CLASSIFIEDS, ANDJOBS IN THE MIDDLE EAST
MAY 8-14, 2010 [320]CONSTRUCTIONWEEKONLINE.COMAn ITP Business Publication | Licensed by Dubai Media City
SPECIAL REPORT
EXPERTS EXPLAIN HOW TO WORK AT HEIGHT SAFELY
importaPAGE 21
EXPERTS EXPLAIN HOW TO WORK AT HEIGHT SAFELYHIGH RISK
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Alte
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Cer
tifica
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Aut
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Pem
brok
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Seve
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131X
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Tele
phon
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s.com
CAR
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Briti
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outC
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-dat
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tofm
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CA
RES
certi
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seco
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tthe
CA
RES
web
site:
ww
w.u
kcar
es.c
om
Alte
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ivel
y,co
ntac
tthe
offic
e:-
UK
Cer
tifica
tion
Aut
horit
yfo
rRei
nfor
cing
Stee
ls,
Pem
brok
eH
ouse
,21
Pem
brok
eRo
ad,
Seve
noak
s,Ke
ntTN
131X
R
Tele
phon
e-0
1732
4500
00Fa
x-0
1732
4559
17E-
mai
l-ge
nera
l@uk
care
s.com
or H
igh
Ris
k
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atno
n-C
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prov
edste
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eis
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exist
ent
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atth
este
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ntly
mee
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ents
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itish
Stan
dard
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nfor
min
gste
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inda
mag
eto
pers
onne
lort
hestr
uctu
re
?
Con
fiden
ce in
Stee
lfor
Con
cret
e C
onst
ruct
ion
Wh
y t
ak
e t
he
RIS
K?
1MAY 8–14, 2010 CONSTRUCTION WEEK
CONTENTS
FEATURES12 LEGALFront end advice from senior legal consultant Leonora Riesenburg on making the most of federal laws.
REGULARS2 ONLINE4 MAIL
FRONT9 HSE COMPLIANCENew regulations mean that 190 construction fi rms in Abu Dhabi need to implement health and safety management systems.
10 CEMENT SALESThe relative drought in cement demand is affecting sales fi gures among the industry’s biggest cement suppliers.
11 NEWS IN BRIEFHighlights of the week.
14 WORKING AT HEIGHTWhy working at height safely is one of the toughest things to achieve in construction.
20 SITE VISITAn update on the progress of central Sharjah’s ongoing road renovation project.
24 PRODUCT FOCUSA look at the pros and cons of using ready mix concrete and why the price is set to increase 10% later this month.
MAY 8-14, 2010 | ISSUE 320
DIRECTORY26 SECTOR FOCUS28 CITY FOCUS30 SPECIALIST SERVICES
BACK32 DIALOGUENigel Hawley, the new GM for Trane in the Middle East, Africa and India region, talks to CW about business strategies, expansion plans and outlook for growth.
09
12
14
21
24
26
28
CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8-14, 20102
FEATURESSector focus
ROADS Why new and improving infra-structure means big business for road contractors.
City update
MUSCATCW looks at how the quietest capital of the GCC may have weathered the worst and is looking toward growth.
The Rolex Tower, designed by SOM, is set to be the fi rst of a new generation of tall towers on Sheikh Zayed Road. This modern-looking high-rise is due to be completed later this year, with the hopes of replicating a ‘shim-mering desert image’. At the top of the 61-storey building, which will be surrounded by a glass façade, a number of exclu-sive penthouses below a clear glass beacon will be visible all over the city. The ground fl oor will be mostly retail, and the rest of the building will be fi lled with a mixture of several commercial and residential units. To read more visit www.ConstructionWeekOnline.com
IN PICTURES: ROLEX TOWER
ONLINEwww.ConstructionWEEKonline.com
MOST POPULARAL FUTTAIM CARILLION WINS ABU DHABI UNIVERSITY JOB ZAMIL GROUP NAMED ‘MOST INFLUENTIAL’ SUPPLIER MOST INFLUENTIAL CONSTRUCTION SUPPLIERS IN THE GCC AED1000 CHARGE ADDS TO DUBAI LAGOON INVESTOR BILL
TO VOTE IN THIS WEEK’S SPOT POLL GO TOwww.ConstructionWEEKonline.com
HAVE YOUR SAYBURJ OBSERVATION DECK TICKET PRICESShould it be lowered? Is it fair for ‘At the Top’ to charge as much as it does for viewing?
JOBS OF THE WEEKBi-Lingual Secretary, DubaiQuality Assurance Manager, RiyadhProjects Administrator, Dubai
ONLINE POLLWHAT IS EMAAR’S PROFIT A SIGN OF?
29.6%A bail-out bonus.
25.9%Burj Khalifa good will
22.2%An economic recovery
22.2%Stringent fi nancial management
Design
DESIGNER BATHROOMS The mod-cons that have transformed the bathroom into one of the hippest rooms in the house.
Analysis
BOARD MEETING How formwork technology is being developed to cater for modern construction: CW investigates.
CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 20104
Registered at Dubai Media CityITP Business PublishingPO Box 500024, Dubai, United Arab EmiratesTEL +971 4 210 8000 FAX +971 4 210 8080Offices in Dubai, Manama, Mumbai & London
ITP BUSINESS PUBLISHINGCEO Walid AkawiMANAGING DIRECTOR Neil DaviesMANAGING DIRECTOR ITP BUSINESS Karam AwadDEPUTY MANAGING DIRECTOR Matthew SouthwellEDITORIAL DIRECTOR David InghamVP SALES Wayne LoweryPUBLISHING DIRECTOR Jason Bowman
EDITORIALSENIOR GROUP EDITOR Stuart MatthewsTEL +971 4 210 8476, EMAIL [email protected] REPORTER Ben RobertsTEL +971 4 210 8318, EMAIL [email protected] REPORTER Carlin GerbichTEL +971 4 210 8519, EMAIL [email protected] Elizabeth BroomhallTEL +971 4 210 8142, EMAIL [email protected] DEPUTY EDITOR Sarah BlackmanTEL +971 4 210 8363, EMAIL [email protected] EDITOR Gerhard HopeTEL +971 4 210 8305, EMAIL [email protected] EDITOR Greg WhitakerTEL +971 4 210 8150, EMAIL [email protected]
ADVERTISINGPUBLISHING DIRECTOR Jason BowmanTEL +971 4 210 8351, EMAIL [email protected] SALES MANAGER Scott Woodall TEL +971 4 210 8595, EMAIL [email protected] DEVELOPMENT MANAGER (Saudi Arabia) Rabih NaderiTEL + 966 50 3289818, EMAIL [email protected]
STUDIOGROUP ART EDITOR Daniel PrescottDESIGNERS Simon Cobon, Lucy McMurray, Nadia Puma, Angela RaviDIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY Sevag DavidianCHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER Khatuna KhutsishviliSENIOR PHOTOGRAPHERS G-nie Arambulo, Efraim Evidor, Thanos LazopoulosSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS Isidora Bojovic, George Dipin, Lyubov Galushko, Jovana Obradovic, Ruel Pableo, Rajesh Raghav
PRODUCTION & DISTRIBUTIONGROUP PRODUCTION MANAGER Kyle SmithDEPUTY PRODUCTION MANAGER Matthew GrantPRODUCTION COORDINATOR Devaprakash V.A MANAGING PICTURE EDITOR Patrick LittlejohnIMAGE EDITOR Emmalyn RoblesDISTRIBUTION MANAGER Karima AshwellDISTRIBUTION EXECUTIVE Nada Al Alami
CIRCULATIONHEAD OF CIRCULATION & DATABASE Gaurav Gulati
MARKETINGHEAD OF MARKETING Daniel FewtrellDEPUTY MARKETING MANAGER Annie ChinoyTEL +971 4 210 8353, EMAIL [email protected]
EVENTS & CONFERENCESDIRECTOR, CONFERENCES, MARKETING & EVENTS Kimon AlexandrouPRODUCER Oscar Wendel
ITP GROUPCHAIRMAN Andrew NeilMANAGING DIRECTOR Robert SerafinFINANCE DIRECTOR Toby Jay Spencer-DaviesBOARD OF DIRECTORS KM Jamieson, Mike Bayman, Walid Akawi,Neil Davies, Rob Corder, Mary Serafin
CORPORATE WEBSITE www.itp.comCIRCULATION CUSTOMER SERVICE TEL: +971 4 210 8000
WEB www.ConstructionWeekOnline.comITPIMAGES Certain images in this issue are available for purchase. Please contact [email protected] for further details or visit www.itpimages.com.SUBSCRIBE online at www.itp.com/subscriptions
NOTICE The publishers regret that they cannot accept liability for error or omissions contained in this publication, however caused. The opinions and views contained in this publication are not necessarily those of the publishers. Readers are advised to seek specialist advice before acting on information contained in this publication, which is provided for general use and may not be appropriate for the readers’ particular circumstances. The ownership of trademarks is acknowledged. No part of this publication or any part of the contents thereof may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form without the permission of the publishers in writing. An exemption is hereby granted for extracts used for the purpose of fair review.
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Audited by: BPA Worldwide.Average Qualified Circulation 10,400 (July - Dec 2009)
MAILRE: STILL NO BANG FOR BIM BUCK IN MEP BIM MEP is great software, and it is sure to dominate the market in the future by saving companies a signifi cant amount of money. 3D service layouts provide support documents for material orders, and the 3D software generally allows companies to ensure effective coordination with suppliers before they start work on a site. The problem at the moment is that no one in the Middle East is prepared to invest in training, and some companies are reluctant to use new systems. Time for change in company attitudes perhaps?SRIDHAR SHETTY
Software does not achieve results, people do – and computers never do what you want them to do – they do what you tell them to. So in the end, it is up to us. The term BIM is too often thrown around as an acronym without people really understanding what it means. Most importantly, it does not just mean 3D modeling but the synergy of the digital model and the data. Companies cannot expect the software to vendor to create a database specifi c to their fi rm. It is up to the companies themselves to do this if they want to get the most out of the BIM tools.
What software a company uses is also signifi cant. A lot of vendors claim that their software does everything, but it is not the case. No one vendor, no matter how big, provides solutions for all facets of the correct and full BIM implementation.DJORDJE GRUJIC
RE: SAUDI BANSINEFFICIENT ELECTRICAL APPLIANCESThe move by SASO to allow only appliances and electrical mechanical equipment with an energy star rating is a good and necessary move towards a sustainable future. Other countries will also need to move in this direction if as a region, we are to help reduce the effects of global warming. THOM BOHLEN
RE: 1800 JOBS TO BECREATED AT BAHRAIN STEEL PLANTBahrain is a very small country and one of the worst 10 places in the world when it comes to pollution, so I hope that they have conducted an environmental assessment as well as having taken all the appropriate measures to cut air pollution specifi cally. Alba alone creates an awful lot of this, and a lack of consideration as to the amount being created could lead to real problems. HASSAN
RE: SHORTAGE OFQUALITY CONTRACTORS IN MEP SECTORI agree that the MEP sector requires more skilled labourers and technicians. Unfortunately the clients, particularly the PMCs, stop the MEP companies from outsourcing their work to specialists, who are in a good position to assist them on a project to project basis. Let the PMCs give the main contractors and MEP contractors more freedom when it comes to outsourcing and we’ll soon see the quality of work increase.NARENDRA SINGH VERMA
WRITE TO THE EDITOR Please address your letters to: Post, Construction Week, PO Box 500024, Dubai, UAE or email [email protected]. Please provide your full name and address, stating clearly if you do not wish us to print them. Alternatively log on to www.ConstructionWEEKonline.com and air your views on any one of a number of the latest Middle East business articles.
The opinions expressed in this section are of particular individuals and are in no way a refl ection of the publisher’s views.
PUBLISHED BY AND © 2010 ITP BUSINESS PUBLISHING, A DIVISION OF THE ITP PUBLISHING GROUP LTD, REGISTERED IN THE BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS COMPANY NUMBER 1402846
Singyes Facade LLC (Dubai)
Rm 110B, Al Ain Center Offi ce Building,Al Mankhool RD, DubaiT 04-3595948 F 04-3595947
Singyes Technologies Limited (Abu Dhabi)
Offi ce No 306 3rd Floor, Injazaat Building,Mohamed Bin Zayed City, Abu DhabiT 02-6431078
Leading the way in BuildingIntegrated Photovoltaic (BIPV)
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CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 20106
FOREWORD
I have an odd relationship with height. Flying in a light aircraft? No problem. Standing on the edge of a tall
building? No problem. But get me four steps up a ladder and the cold sweats start.
For me, it’s something to do with the insecurity. The hint of instability, narrow treads and the ever rising centre of gravity all conspire to make more nervous the higher I go. I simply do not feel safe.
Transfer this feeling to a construction site, already one of the more dangerous places you can work, and it is easy to imagine how falls from height are the industry’s biggest killer.
Working at height safely is, apparently, one of the hardest things to achieve in construction. Figures from BuildSafe UAE show that of the 10 workers who died on the job during 2009, four were due to a fall from height, the single biggest killer. Of the 530 lost time injuries recorded by BuildSafe members, 58 came from falls from height and 58 from falling objects or materials.
Eliminating the opportunity for error and accident is what safe working is all about. Whether it’s having toe boards on a scaffold, personal equipment on lanyards, or operating an effective exclusion zone, each and every precaution taken reduces risk.
Let’s not forget that risk costs money. Add up the lost time, the medical bills, health insurance and even the cost of subsequent reputation management and the number gets large quickly. Alternatively, you can choose to invest in safety and collect a good return, both in reputation and on the bottom line.
HIGH RISK
STUART MATTHEWS SENIOR GROUP [email protected]
“WORKING AT HEIGHT SAFELY IS, APPARENTLY, ONE OF THE HARDEST THINGS TO ACHIEVE IN CONSTRUCTION.”
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9MAY 8-14, 2010 CONSTRUCTION WEEK
The Ministry of Labour in the UAE has fi red a warning shot to construction companies in Ras Al Khaimah, to improve their attention to hospitalised workers, following complaints from the hospitals of negligence.
Following a general notice on the Min-istry of Labour’s website, a spokesperson for the department confi rmed to CW that some hospitals had contacted the minis-try to report that companies would leave employees, who suffered falls and other injuries, in care without follow-up enqui-ries as to their recuperation.
“These companies would admit workers and not then come and get feedback, and hospitals have been making complaints,” said the spokesperson. “There are so many cases, so many accidents, particularly in the summer. That’s why the Ministry of Labour is conducting investigations.”
The spokesperson added that although Ras Al Khaimah has been the chief source of complaints, all of the Emirates will be subject to further scrutiny coming up to the
FRONT
MOL CRACKS DOWN ON RAK FIRMS OVER INJURED WORKERSBy Ben Roberts
summer months. The inspection department in the Ministry will decide on the penal-ties to continued negligence on a case-by-case basis. The Ras Al Khamiah offi ce was unavailable for comment.
This action follows a recent demand by the ministry to a foreign construction company to pay workers’ wages that have been delayed from between three and seven months. The ministry has given the company a week to pay the salaries or will refer the offi cials in the company for investigation.
Employer accountability and documen-tation may be set for upheaval following a pledge by India’s new ambassador to UAE to target the plight of workers from his homeland working in the country. In his fi rst month after replacing Tamiz Ahmed, MK Lokesh identifi ed the transparency of contracts for immigrant workers and their aversion from petty crime as a ‘major issue’ for his tenure.
Indians make up the majority of the UAE construction workforce and the subcon-
THE UAE MINISTRY OF LABOUR IS CRACKING DOWN ON CONSTRUCTION COMPANIES WHO ARE ABANDONING INJURED WORKERS AT HOSPITALS.
>News 10
>Highlights 11
>Legal 12
>Working at height 14
tinent is frequently cited as the country’s most important trade partner and a vital source of labour for construction.
In an interview with The National, Mr Lokesh highlighted the importance of ensur-ing that working conditions in the Emirates correspond with the contract they signed at home, and announced a new database of labour contracts by the end of 2010.
Preliminary plans suggest employers would have to submit contracts when seeking work permits for immigrants to a centralised system, allowing transparency between what workers signed for and how they end up.
Ellan Goram, consulate in the India embassy, Abu Dhabi, confi rmed to CW that there would be an electronic database for all employers. “The contract [system] is being revised – there are a lot of schemes, a new set of measures,” he said.
The Ministry of Labour spokesperson said they had not been made aware of such a scheme as yet.
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CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 201010
FRONTTENDER DUE FOR CANCER CENTERBy Orlando Crowcroft
Preliminary work on the Middle East’s biggest cancer research centre in Amman, Jordan, is due to begin this month. Designed by HKS architects, the 440,000 ft2 King Hussein Cancer Centre is due to go out for construction tender shortly, with an eye on a 2012 completion date.
Emanuel Mikho, Middle East director of health care for HKS, said that the centre will not only cater to cancer sufferers in Jordan, but in the wider Middle East region.
“It will be a major facility, we think the biggest in the Middle East,” he said.
The KHCC will include 152 adult and child in-patient rooms and a signifi cant out-patient facility inside a modern glass and stone building in Amman.
The centre will be based around a 14-story glass tower, designed to mimic the hills that surround Jordan’s capital, while glass will also be used as facades for the complex’s communal areas. HKS have designed cancer centers in the US, Taiwan and most recently Dubai.
Sharjah’s controversial toll for heavy trucks has been causing complications after its fi rst full days of operations.
Inevitably, queues were long at certain times of the day, as drivers who reached the front discovered that the payment could only be made with the exact money as change would not be given.
On the fi rst day of operations, the Sharjah Directorate of Public Works reported that the operations had gone smoothly, and there was excess capacity in the system: “We have
EXACT CHANGE ONLY: CONTROVERSIAL SHARJAH TRUCK TOLL GOES LIVE By Greg Whitaker
estimated for the passage of 4,750 to 5,250 trucks per day and we have already distributed informative booklets to heavy truck drivers informing them about the toll gate operation,” said Omran Al Kumairi, director of the traffi c toll gate project.
However, some truck drivers found the process slow, and were frustrated by the system which charges AED100 per truck, with an additional AED10 levied for each ton that the vehicle is overweight by. Exact money has to be used, as toll operators cannot give change.
Sharjah Cement & Industrial Development is the latest company to experience the relative drought in cement demand by seeing more than AED100 million wiped off its sales fi g-ures in 12 months.
The company saw a sales turnover of AED173 million for the fi rst quarter of this year, a sharp decline from sales of AED297.5 million for the fi rst quarter in 2009.
The fall refl ects the three-fold pressures of a decrease in demand, a decrease in price, and an increase in the costs of production. Indeed, the cost of sales as a percentage of the sales fi gures themselves increased from 74% to 86%.
Overall the company halved its net profi ts over the last year, down to AED23.89 million from AED51.37 million, though sharehold-ers equity improved, up to AED1,393 million from a Q1 2009 level of AED1,337 million. Cash and cash equivalents holdings decreased
FIGURES SHOW MIXED BAG FOR CEMENT SALESBy Ben Roberts
by more than 75% to AED32.2 million from AED126.2 million.
Arkan Materials also saw sales slump by a similar fi gure. First quarter revenues stood at AED66.5 million down from AED166 million for the fi rst three months of 2009, with net profi ts declining from AED91 million down to AED19 million.
It is the latest set of meager results for cement producers that have to spend more to pro-duce less. Last week, Muscat-based Oman Cement Company and rival Raysut Cement also saw steep sales declines, the latter by almost a third.
Better news came from more specialized Ras Al Khaimah Co. for White Cement & Construc-tion Materials. The Abu Dhabi-listed company – whose products include white cement, used in precast facade fi nishes, and calcium silicate bricks – saw sales leap 20% to AED79.6 mil-lion compared to AED66.5 million.
CEMENT SALES HAVE DROPPED FOR UAE COMPANIES ACCORDING TO MANY FIRST QUARTER FIGURES.
THE CANCER CENTER WILL BE BUILT IN AMMAN.
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Other operators didn’t fi nd any signifi cant problems. Al Ghurair Foods, based in Dubai said that its driver experienced ‘neither delay nor problems encountered yesterday’ and that the gate would need to be in operation for some months before it would draw any ‘reli-able conclusions’.
For the time being at least there will be the option of turning around for drivers who do not have the correct sum. Later, a sys-tem of fi nes are to be introduced for those without money.
FRONT
HIGHLIGHTS
Project
HYUNDAI/HBK TO BUILD DOHALAND FIRST PHASEHyundai Engineering & Construction Co Ltd and HBK Contracting Co have won the QR1.56 billion contract for the fi rst phase of Dohaland. The joint venture is to build four government buildings in the upcoming Diwan Amiri Quarter, which includes the Diwan Annex, Amiri Guard and the National Archive. The award concludes the QR2.2 billion for Phase 1A, the fi rst of fi ve for the Musheireb that is scheduled for full completion in 2016. The win boosts the value of Hyundai’s portfolio in the region to US $4.4 billion, which includes a power plant. The enabling works was awarded to Bauer International Qatar LLC last year, and the infrastructure works awarded to CAT International, which includes a district cooling plant and 66KV substation. Time Qatar was recruited for project management consulting, Arup will serve as master development consultant and infrastructure consultant, Allies and Morrison and Burns McDonnell are the design architect and executive architect respectively for Phase 1A of the project.
Project
AL FUTTAIM CARILLION WINS ABU DHABI UNIVERSITY JOBMubadala Infrastructure, a business unit of Mubadala Development Company, has appointed Al Futtaim Carillion as the design and build contractor for New York University Abu Dhabi’s (NYUAD) main campus on Saadiyat Island. Mubadala is the developer of NYUAD’s main campus on a build, own, operate and transfer (BOOT) basis. NYUAD will consist of a ‘highly-selective’ liberal arts and sciences college (including engineering) and a centre for advanced research and scholarship, all fully integrated with and connected to NYU in New York. Site mobilisation work is scheduled to commence in Q3 2010. The expected completion date for the Saadiyat Island campus isQ1 2014.
Project
FIRST ECO-VILLA IN THE UAE HERALDS NEW GREEN ERAThe fi rst ever eco-villa to be built in the UAE was awarded to an Emirati this week, marking a new era
of green building in the region. The property, built by German-Emarati Company BENA, was made out of the
environmentally sustainable product
Precast Aerated Concrete (PAC), which has a
carbon footprint of only 138kg CO2e/m3 - 67% lower than conventional concrete. Complying with the Abu Dhabi 2030 Urban Structure Framework Plan, BENA has already attracted interest from the Abu Dhabi Government on its environmentally sustainable building system in a bid to minimise power supplies in the emirate.
Business
UAE DEVELOPER TO INVEST US $3.5BN IN MALLSDeveloper Majid Al Futtaim Properties has announced plans to invest US $3.5 billion (AED 12.85 billion) into four new shopping malls in the UAE, Egypt, Syria and Lebanon. With 10 shopping malls already in the MENA region attracting over 120 million visitors a year, the four extra malls will extend its Gross Leasable Area to 1.3 million m2. With completion
es
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set for 2014, the developer hopes the malls will add strong
economic value to the region by
boosting real estate prices, increasing employment and creating a healthy trading environment for small businesses.
FM
MYSTERY SURROUNDS GREEN COMMUNITY FM CONTRACTUnion Properties has taken over the facilities management services of the Green Community project because of apparent complaints made against the former FM provider, BCS Strata Management Services. The developer has said that it has been providing FM services for the project, located in Dubai Investment Park, for the last two months, since BCS left the project. “BCS left because the service was not very good and there were a lot of complaints,” said Union Properties facilities engineer Abdul Whahab.
A BCS spokesperson confi rmed the company had walked off the job on February 21st after 20 months of work but would not comment on whether BCS had been paid by the client.
23APRIL 10–16, 2010 CONSTRUCTION WEEK
CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 201012
LEGAL> For more legal advice log on to www.ConstructionWEEKonline.com/comment
The opinions expressed in this column are of the author and not of the publisher.
Despite the harsh lessons learnt over the latter part of 2009 and fi rst quarter of 2010 it is still patently obvious that parties to contracts are falling into a number of age old pitfalls, many of whom are convinced that they have no other viable choice but to accept top-down back-to-back arrangements and in some cases a scramble of documents that barely resemble a contract at all.
There is still an overwhelming market tendency to order mobilisation and com-mence work on the back of a very brief Letter of Intent (LOI), particularly if the commissioned works are minor works or low value. This is a particularly high risk practice.
LOIs do not provide suffi cient contract certainty or indeed any fi rm degree of secu-rity to the committed parties. Comparable to Memorandums of Understanding or Heads of Agreement in providing a record of inten-tion only, it is of no surprise that LOIs are commonly known as ‘discussion sheets’. By and large LOIs are not legally binding. In other words they carry no force of law. Given that LOIs are signed by one party only, questions of fact as to acceptance are left unanswered. Its weight in contract will therefore depend largely on the paper trail that follows. LOIs are not, therefore, inter-changeable with the formal contract.
Commercial reality however does not always follow best form. In situations where LOIs and Letters of Acceptance (LOAs) are the only de facto contractual documents issued between the contracting parties, the following terms should be mandatory by way of minimum: a clear scope of works, a defi ned and approved programme of works, provisions dealing with delay and exten-sion of time to the approved programme, comprehensive price and payment terms, retention provisions, insurance provisions, a record of the contracting parties’ contractual responsibilities, heads of liability, dispute resolution provisions, enforceability and jurisdiction provisions.
As per Article 874 of Federal Law 5 (1985) (the ‘Civil Code’), minimum requirements for a Muqawala contract include (i) a descrip-tion of the subject matter, (ii) particulars of the type and amount thereof, (iii) the manner of performance, (iv) the period for performance, and (v) the consideration. The concept of a void, voidable or defective contract is inherent in the Civil Code (see Articles 210-212) and hence form cannot be ignored.
In practice Federal laws such as the above provide the ideal motive to revisit non-compliant contractual documentation.
Signing of any and all agreementsIn a hungered market, where bargaining power is heavily weighed in favour of the employer, the obsession with getting ‘the account’ on the books rapidly dwarfs the exercise of care, caution or due diligence. This practice is particularly unsound in an immature market where more often than not the usual round-the-mill model contract is issued against any scope of work. Getting the right advice pre-signature cannot be understated: parties will rarely be in better position to agree a variation of the contract terms at a later juncture. Muqawala provisions entertain variation in a restricted sense in the case of a change to the basis of an agreed plan. The continued observance of the existing agreement in connection with any variation and/or addition is however mandatory (see Article 887). Hence an obvious diffi culty arises where the existing agreement proves defi cient in enumerating agreed procedure.
As per Article 262 of the Civil Code stat-ing: “an unconditional provision shall be so construed unless there is evidence… restrict-ing it” serves as a powerful reminder of the profound commercial implications a poorly drafted contract can result in. The commercial implication of this, in context of an open-ended liability or indemnity pro-vision for example, can be staggering. Yet
Front end adviceLEONORA RIESENBURG ON LEARNING FROM MISTAKES AND MAKING THE MOST OF THE FEDERAL LAWS
Leonora Riesenburg is senior legal consultant for the Projects & Construction Group of Galadari & Associates advocates and legal consultants in Abu Dhabi. Leonora is a dual qualified lawyer from the UK with more than three years of regional experience in the Gulf and operates in a number of highly technical niche sub sectors including construction, infrastructure projects, LNG, ONG, power, telecommunications, water and wastewater.
“GETTING THE RIGHT ADVICE PRE-SIGNATURE CANNOT BE UNDERSTATED: PARTIES WILL RARELY BE IN BETTER POSITION TO AGREE A VARIATION OF THE CONTRACT TERMS AT A LATER JUNCTURE.”
caveats containing total aggregate monetary caps are not been routinely negotiated into such provisions.
Comfort in the local lawsThe local federal laws provide limited respite. Like many western jurisdictions, federal laws place primary importance on parties’ consensus ad idemor mutual intention. Hence the integral importance to get the contract right ab initio, ie from the start.
Some limited comfort can be found in vari-ous federal provisions, such as Article 884 of the Civil Code requiring an employer to
Suffi ce to let Article 259 of the Civil Code speak for itself: “There shall be no scope for implica-tions in the face of clear words”.
Carefully consid-ered front-end legal advice has never been so key at a time when
entities are both heavily under-capitalised and over-exposed in a market couched with uncertainty, and at the mercy of a heavily over-subscribed dispute system.
accept delivery of work done when placed at his disposal, or Article 888 of the Civil Code entitling the contrac-tor to fair remunera-tion plus value of the materials provided in situations where price and payment provi-sions are defi cient. Relief is however short, and no doubt due to the fact that the laws were not drafted with the intention to substitute the con-tract agreement.
LEGAL ADVICE UP FRONT CAN PAY HUGE DIVIDENDS IN THE LONG-TERM, REDUCING RISK EXPOSURE AND THE DISPUTES WHICH MAY ARISE FROM CONFUSION.
“THE COMMERCIAL IMPLICATION OF THIS IN
CONTEXT OF AN OPEN-ENDED LIABILITY OR
INDEMNITY PROVISION CAN BE STAGGERING. ”
25APRIL 10–16, 2010 CONSTRUCTION WEEK
WORKING AT HEIGHT
14
WORKING AT HEIGHT SAFELY IS ONE OF THE TOUGHEST THINGS TO ACHIEVE
IN CONSTRUCTION
By Sarah Blackman, Stuart Matthews & Greg Whitaker
Making swift construction progress at height is a tough job. Managing to do it safely is even harder. This diffi culty is infl uenced by many factors, including the varied origins and experience of many labourers in the Gulf construction market.
Figures from BuildSafe UAE show that of the 10 workers who died on the job during 2009, four were due to a fall from height, the single biggest killer. Of the 530 lost time injuries recorded by BuildSafe members, 58 came from falls from height and 58 from falling objects or materials.
Eliminating the opportunity for error and accident is what safe working is all about. Whether it’s having toe boards on a scaffold, personal equipment on lanyards, or operating an effective exclusion zone, each and every precaution taken reduces risk.
CW spoke to a selection of experienced practitioners to get their views on how to stay safe.
STAY SAFE
14
AED100,000A LOST TIME INJURY COSTS AED50,000 TO 100,000 IN DUBAI AND A FATALITY
COST FROM AED250,000 TO AED500,000 DEPENDING ON WHERE YOU ARE
CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 2010
“FIGURES FROM BUILDSAFE UAE SHOW THAT FOUR
DEATHS ON THE JOB DURING 2009 WERE DUE TO A FALL
FROM HEIGHT, THE SINGLE BIGGEST KILLER.”
Week Building at Height seminar is that bad planning by contractors and developers could endanger an entire workforce.
“Planning needs to be in place for labour-ers working on the edge, whether they are doing block work or if they are implementing glazing because falls from height and fall of objects onto labourers are the main cause of accidents on site,” he explains.
“If you are going to send someone out to work on an open edge with the risk of losing a spanner, bolts and brackets and then multiply that by how many brackets and bolts are used and how many times the worker goes out to the edge, you can calculate how many near-misses you will have, how many LTIs [lost time injuries] you have and how many fatalities you have – it’s all predictable by numbers.”
An unsafe construction site can also be a costly construction site; an LTI will cost a developer from US $13,600 to $27,200 (AED50,000 to AED100,000) in Dubai and a fatality can come with a hefty price tag of up to $136,000.
“It is much cheaper for contractors to prevent accidents from happening by giv-
WORKING AT HEIGHT
Combisafe sales manager Niklas Gustafsson talks about the on site accidents that are waiting to happen due to negligence and the lack of trained labourers in the region
LIFE ON THE EDGE
O n the 38th fl oor of an Abu Dhabi superstruc-ture, a labourer steps out onto formwork, which hasn’t been propped up properly.
He is 175m up in the air and is not wearing a harness. In fact, he is using his friend’s hand as his life-line as he steps across onto the unsupported slab.
That was just one nerve-wrecking moment that Combisafe’s Niklas Gustafsson wit-nessed during a recent site visit.
“These are things you see every day on site,” he says. “Last week, I saw that a piece of defective personal protective equipment was cut, for some reason, and someone had mended it by tying it together in a knot.”
One might say that these ‘dare-devil’ labourers were asking for trouble by tak-ing such risks, but, according to Gustafs-son, these workers, and many others like them in the GCC, aren’t aware that they are doing anything wrong.
“People do these things because they don’t know better and they are afraid to speak up and voice their concerns. Work-ers must be trained to know what’s safe and what’s not.”
“It’s about making labourers sense fear, so they realise when they are in danger.”
So untrained staff can be a danger to them-selves, but the key message Gustafsson wants to put across to delegates at the Construction
FALL PROTECTION SAVES LIVES.
ing labourers the security and the safety that they need.”
But, with no federal regulations in place in the GCC, how can construction companies know which set of safety rules to follow?
“The climate is different here,” reports Gustafsson. “In Europe, the ladder has been abandoned because workers can easily fall from them. So, they have come with fi xed solutions with double hand rails, but they don’t work here because the metal gets hot.”
There is hope for future on site safety, however, as Gustafsson explains.
“Build Safe UAE is forming a work group with the aim of coming up with a proposal for a federal regulation and then it will be easier to train all the zoning authori-ties and governing bodies and inspectors using one set of regulations. Hopefully after that everyone will be playing by the same rules.” �
“I SAW THAT A PIECE OF DEFECTIVE PERSONAL
PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT WAS CUT AND SOMEONE
HAD MENDED IT BY TYING IT TOGETHER IN A KNOT”
27APRIL 10–16, 2010 CONSTRUCTION WEEK
MARTIN HOERLESBERGER OF DOKA.
SELF CLIMBING FORMWORK WITH
SCREENS HAS IMPROVED SAFETY.
“IN THE UAE TO SOME EXTENT, GUYS JUST WEAR A HARNESS, WITHOUT REALLY
KNOWING HOW TO HOOK IT ON TO SOMETHING, OR HOW TO WORK WITH THE
HARNESS.”
guys just wear a harness, without really knowing how to hook it on to something, or how to work with the harness.”
Awareness is clearly important and needs constant attention. Making construction teams aware of the fact that what they hook on to must be able to carry the load of a falling person is just the start. More information and constant reminders need to be a regular feature on sites.
“What is not happening at all sites is the tool box talk,” said Hoerlesberger. “Giv-ing every shift a 10 minute safety briefi ng, doing the tool box talk for every shift, every day, that would be a very good message to the guys working at height.”
“For supervisors of these people, it is very important to give training, so guys know where to hook on and how to do it safely.”
Combinations of protection screens at exposed edges, platforms and railings can all reduce risk, as can a sensible assess-ment of whether or not the work needs to be done at height at all. Improved working practices, which eliminate some of this need and the number of exposed edges, will also contribute to improved site safety. Doka’s increasing use of its self-climbing formwork is one example of how it is con-tributing to site safety.
“By using hydraulic systems, you get a completely enclosed formwork system, which is of course the safest way of work-ing [with formwork] at height. The use of those has grown dramatically in the last fi ve years, in the Gulf,” said Hoerlesberger. “We have to make people aware that it is not a waste of time to set up a safe work-ing environment.”
Improvements have come over time and as a company Doka has had to increase the amount of supervisors it has available for sites, as well as the amount of time they spend on them.
“Our trained supervisors have much more time to pass on knowledge on how to install and lift the form system in a safe manner,” said Hoerlesberger.
T he fi rst fatal fall Martin Hoerlesberger, man-ager of Doka’s high-rise engineering team, saw in the UAE occurred in 2005. A worker, wear-
ing an improperly secured lifeline, leant against an unsecured beam and fell six metres to his death.
The accident could have happened at any site and one easy way to prevent it would have been securely tying off the lifeline. This fi rst impression of the UAE contrasted with Hoerlesberger’s experi-ence elsewhere.
“Before I came to the Gulf, I was working in the US for seven years, mostly on high rise. Of course, when you work with the guys there you notice a big difference,” said Hoerlesberger.
“First of all if they wear a harness and the way they hook on means they have real fall protection. In the UAE to some extent,
Hoerlesberger also believes further improvement will come through a focus on responsibility and liability. This liabil-ity may need to be pushed down as far as individual construction managers in an effort to improve the levels of personal responsibility taken.
“If such a system is in place, a construc-tion manager has to prove that everything has been done to prevent any incident,” said Hoerlesberger.
“Then awareness from the top down is completely different.”�
Doka’s manager of high-rise engineering, Martin Hoerlesberger, talks about the factors improving the safety of working at height
AWARENESS AND RESPONSIBILITY
Plan your job – do a risk assessment
outlining what the work is going to
consist of, where the risks are and
how you would prevent accidents from
happening.
Have tool box talks with the workers and
make sure they are physically healthy
and are trained for working at height
Good management supervision is a must
TOP SAFETY TIPS
CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 201016
17APRIL 8–14, 2010 CONSTRUCTION WEEK
DAVID GRATTEAU A SENIOR ENGINEER WITH VSL.
and the importance of being tidy and not leaving objects to be knocked off, is impor-tant. It seems obvious – but apparently it isn’t always,” Gratteau emphasises.
It is neither hard, complicated, nor par-ticularly time consuming to take basic safety measures. As Gratteau explains: “It is very easy to put one cable wire through a site, so that we can clip ourselves to it.”
“However, it becomes hard when you are working under pressure, because somebody is saying ‘you must do this quick’. The dan-ger is then that the guys on site will rush around and forget to clip themselves on. I have done it myself in the past - but it is a bad example to others.”
The competency of staff, or indeed the suitability of people for what after all is a diffi cult and complex job needs to be called into question. Just because on guy is a wiz-ard engineer on the ground does not mean that he will be any use when he is sent 200m in the air, armed with nothing more than a torque wrench. Unfortunately, this is sur-prisingly common.
“At a site recently, we had two men who needed to be at the very top of a beam,” said Gratteau. “One guy was fi ne, but the other as it turned out, was absolutely terrifi ed of heights! So I said to him, ‘stop, don’t do it - apart from anything else, you are a danger to yourself’. Practice helps, of course, but if you can’t handle heights, then you really shouldn’t be up there in the fi rst place.”
Another thing, particularly when perform-
W orking safely at height comes down to a num-ber points for David Grat-teau, a senior
engineer for post tension and heavy lift specialist VSL – and they all boil down to training your staff to think about what they are doing, and to take the time to make sure they are working safely.
“It’s about education,” he clarifi es. “Some workers are OK with safety, but if you don’t teach them, they don’t think about it.”
“From 200m, a small nut or piece of con-crete can do serious damage. We had one worker who was struck on the head by a small screw, but because it had fallen off a scaffold on a skyscraper, it went straight through his hard hat – we had to take him to hospital. So, education about the risks,
ing heavy lift, is the weather, especially if wind that the operator can’t perceive is turning the load on a crane into a giant pendulum.
“When working on a very tall structure, the air might be calm at the top, but it is typical to get a lot of turbulence near the ground, particularly in the wind channel between two buildings below 30-40m,” said Gratteau. “For example, when working on some of the Metro bridges, we found the wind to be very strong up to 20m, but on the top it was calm. For the Burj Khalifa, it might have been 40 degrees and calm on the ground, but for the guy 700m up it could have been completely different, so you had to think of that as you tied your load up.” �
David Gratteau, a senior engineer with VSL, tackles the issues of pressure and competence on the job site
TIME AND EDUCATION
WEATHER IS AN ISSUE FOR HEAVY LIFTS AT HEIGHT.
29APRIL 10–16, 2010 CONSTRUCTION WEEK
MANAGING HSE PROGRAMS FROM PAPUA NEW GUINEA TO LIBYA Bashar Abu Saleem, Lead HSE Engineer, CCC
GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE ON SAFETYThis session will cover what is really happening in the industry. Are we ready for the next step in the evolution of construction safety, or are we just repeating what’s been done over the last 5-10 years? What are the global challenges facing the HSE profession? How will approaches to safety impact the future of construction? Wayne Harris, HSE Director, Qatar Project Management & Board Director, World Safety Organization (UN-NGO)
PANEL DISCUSSIONAmong the topics to be included will be how dealing with the consequences negligent safety procedures can be improved by developing communication and collaboration between workers, contractors and governments of sending countries. How can educational programs be further developed? How can incentives for safety vigilance among construction workers be further improved? This discussion will be open to the whole audience to voice their opinions and experiences. Moderated by: Wayne Harris
FOCUS: LEGISLATION & SAFETY CULTURE Panelists: Saeed Semaihi, Head of HSE, Abu Dhabi Motorsport Management (ADMM) Ziad Qweitin, Head of HSE, EC HarrisStephen Storey, Head of Health & Safety, MASDARMark Warrington, Project Manager for Drafting Safety Legislation of Al Ain Municipality Barney Green, Expert working with Combisafe
FOCUS: PRACTICAL MEASURES AND BEST PRACTICE FOCUSPanelists: Philip Smith, Regional Head of HSE Bovis Lend LeaseDavid Gratteau, Project Manager, VSLJohn Mills, Project Director, Project Director (Health & Safety -Burj Khalifa), Hyder Consulting
WELCOME ADDRESS BY CONFERENCE CHAIRMAN: Andrew Broderick, Head of Safety, ALDAR
OPENING KEYNOTE ADDRESS BY ABU DHABI MUNICIPALITY
Abdulaziz Hussni Zurub, HSE Manager, Abu Dhabi Municipality
PRESENTATIONS:
ADOPTING A SAFETY CULTURERolling out programmes for developing a culture of safety with a joint understanding and mindset of awareness, values and procedures. How can common grounds for motivating staff from diverse ethnic backgrounds be established, in both theory and in practice? Andrew Bottomley, Health & Safety Manager, ACC
POST TENSIONING LIFTING SOLUTIONSWhat are the best practices for safe and effi cient vertical lifting? This session will feature insights on access and
safety when working in limited spaces to carry out large-scale civil works when under time pressure. Learn how jobs can best be planned and executed without compromising safety. David Gratteau, Project Manager, VSL
FALL PROTECTION AND PREVENTION What are the systems available on the market and what are the most effective and cost-effi cient approaches for
fall protection at height? This session will compare solutions and clarify how safety requirements and systems should not only meet minimum legal requirements but also offer the least risk of fatalities. Barney Green, expert working with Combisafe
FORMWORK AT HEIGHTThis session will show examples of self-climbing formwork systems overcoming challenges for bespoke
structures. It will cover methods using both crane-lifted and crane-independent solutions. Martin Hoerlesberger, Manager, High-Rise Engineering Team, Doka (Middle East)
THE BUSINESS CASE FOR INVESTING IN HEALTH AND SAFETY A look at setting realistic benchmarks for health and
safety in a multi-cultural and multi-contractor development without compromising on productivity. Garry Crighton, VP, Emirates Safety Group
BUILDING AT HEIGHT...SAFELY12 MAY THE WESTIN HOTEL, DUBAI
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CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 201018
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21MARCH 20-26, 2010 CONSTRUCTION WEEK
THE LATEST MILESTONE FOR THE AL WAHDA STREET SECTION OF THE KING ABDUL AZIZ ROAD RENOVATION HAD LITTLE MARGIN FOR ERROR SURROUNDED BY BUILDINGS AND VITAL CABLES
By Ben Roberts; Photos by Efraim Evidor
C entral Sharjah is moving closer to a trans-formed road system to meet today’s traffi c volume, following the latest milestone in Package 5 of the redevelopment of King Abdul Aziz Road. The main artery through the city heading east and curving south has been the subject of the most signifi -
cant upheaval in the emirate for a generation or two – splaying vehicles through the centre into a spaghetti dish of alternative routes and makeshift lanes.
In truth, the whole project has not seen the completion of the previous four packages. The fi rst is completed, the second is still teeming with workers and materials, and the third and fourth have only just left the drawing board.
The latest completion of note, offi cially announced on 30th April, is the opening of the much needed viaduct on the west side of Al Wahda Street, a road last analysed by CW last September (issue 288). The viaduct crosses King Abdul Aziz Road at a 90 degree angle, itself a major project and a vital link between the port in the north and the south of the city.
For 30 years this route has been tracked by oil-cooled 132kV power cables fl owing south and gas coming the other way. The three sets of cables will remain but have been marginalised at the foundation stage to the sides of the new road, a transfer that has required the upmost delicacy – one of the many challenges when
keeping running as close to normal as possible. The underpass was secured at excavation by reaction piles to stop the underpass essentially fl oating, using cables to anchor them to the sides, and the entire road is set for completion in August.
The viaduct will be the longest bridge in Sharjah, at 1,505m, and Halcrow, the project developer, had the nimble task of building it within a matter of metres from the shops and business offi ces at each side. To avoid having to buy the buildings to have enough room, the developer doubled the length of the bridge, taking it far past the buildings in question so that cranes and all other machinery would not collide with the inhabited structures.
“The bridge was only supposed to be 750 m initially,” explains Johnston. “We extended the bridge to where the land-take was not so important.”
The last of the pre-cast beams for the viaduct were laid on 19th March, explains Mike Johnston, senior resident engineer at the company. “The road corridor was very narrow, fi tting a viaduct has not been easy, and getting the beams erected was a problem in itself, though by the time we fi nished we were laying girders in about 20 minutes.
“The big problem was transporting them from the yard to the site, as the police would give a short window of time and we could move three beams at once.”
The extensive detours snaking either side of Al Wahda Street are almost their own project. Travelling past the Flying Saucer
SITE VISIT
A NIMBLE OPERATION
CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 201022
building at one of four junctions between Cultural Square and King Faisal Square, Johnston explains that it is only occasion-ally that the creation of detours and the main work of the viaduct and underpass can be simultaneous.
“Halcrow had staff of 30 at peak for the bridges,” he adds, nearing the viaduct. “The contractor’s workforce peaked at 700, includ-ing those of various sub-contractors. In the last two weeks we’ve had 230 painters for the viaduct. Overall we’re very proud that there have been no major accidents.”
The viaduct gains fl exibility through 14 elastomeric joints, placed strategically
THE PROJECT HAD JUST TWO DRAWINGS AT TENDER STAGE, SO PLANS HAVE BEEN FLEXIBLE.
to move with the twin pressures of heat changes and vehicle weight. Doubling the bridge’s length was perhaps surprisingly not too straining on the budget, explains Hodgkins. The impetus for the developer and contractor to think on their feet and tweaking plans is perhaps inevitable for a project that only had two drawings by the tender stage. “The designers were then trying to catch up,” he adds.
Such changes have occasionally improved the project’s time and cost effi ciency. “We introduced micro-piling,” explains Hodg-kins. “This was partly on account of space restrictions, but it did present savings.”
The road will eventually lead towards the port and run over a layer bridge, over the creek, to Port Khalid. “The tender for the layer bridge occurred last year but was never awarded,” says Hodgkins. “The sec-tion between that and this [King Abdul Aziz Road] is a hole, but maybe when this [the viaduct] is fi nished the pressure will increase for the work to progress.”
Over the last few years the prices and procurement have been a concern,
WORK IS STILL ONGOING FOR SOME PHASES.
though the company has seen an upturn in recent months. “Two years ago there were major problems with suppliers. Demand outstripped supply and it was a suppliers’ market. Now, they might be offering discounts, it’s been a complete turnaround.”
This was particularly the case with piling contractors, he says, adding that Dubai-based contractors have put in more calls to Halcrow seeking work in Sharjah where perhaps before they may have restricted themselves to their home emirate.
Underneath the viaduct, Johnston points out the eight pre-cast girders on one side,
which has edges that are slightly curved. These could not be produced longer than 60 metres, he explains, meaning that the girders on the other side the girders are cast in-situ.
Though numerous milestones for the other packages in the overall project are
CONTRACT DETAILSTender date: July 2006
Constructions start date: 25 November
2006
Contract period: 1401 days
Completion date: September 2010
(likely completion: August)
Construction cost: AED 841,461,142
“TWO YEARS AGO DEMAND OUTSTRIPPED SUPPLY
AND IT WAS A SUPPLIERS’ MARKET. NOW, THEY MIGHT BE OFFERING
DISCOUNTS”
THE VIADUCT IS THE LONGEST AND HIGHEST BRIDGE IN THE CITY OF SHARJAH.
230NUMBER OF PAINTERS
WORKING ON THE VIADUCT
still ahead, the opening of the viaduct can be seen as a particular stage. As the longest and highest bridge in the city – running over the underpass that is closing in on completion – its immediate success for reducing traffi c fl ows, and the care with which it has had to closely nestle up to buildings without disturbance, is a feat of ingenuity.
“When the viaduct is open we can take away the temporary traffi c lights under-
VITAL STATISTICSProject: King Abdul Aziz Road: Package 5 –
Al Wahda Road Improvements
Client: Government of Sharjah,
Department of Public Works
Consultant: Halcrow International
Partnership
Project manager/management
contractor: NA
Main contractor: Sharjah General
Contracting Co. LLC
Sub contractors: China Harbour
Engineering Co (structural works), NAFFCO
(fi re fi ghting works)
Materials Supplier: Various
M&E consulting engineer: Halcrow
International Partnership
Electrical contractor: Metito LLC
Lighting designer: Sharjah Electricity and
Water Department
neath,” adds chief resident engineer Steve Hodgkins. “Then the traffi c can be fl owing easily in both directions.” �
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CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 201024
SEEKING CONCRETE CURES
Of all construction materials used for large scale projects, ready mix concrete is a volatile market indicator of just how healthy the indus-
try is. Construction relies on the steady fl ow of its lifeblood: a constant stream of laden cement trucks plying the highways to job sites. When the industry is quiet, so are the roads. And right now, in the UAE at least, there’s a need for a transfusion.
Nigel Bush, General Manager of Sharjah-based company Conmix Ltd, one of the UAE’s largest suppliers of ready mix cement, said the past year had been exceptionally testing for the company.
TESTING TIMES SEEM SET TO CONTINUE FOR A SECTOR
AT THE SHARP END OF CONSTRUCTION TRENDS
“There are no words really, well, no print-able ones anyway. The best way to describe the past 12 months is horrendous. Where we were delivering about 150,000m3 a month, we’re currently doing about half that.”
And Conmix is not alone. Smaller opera-tors like Essam Mansour, plant and branch manager of National Ready Mix in Abu Dhabi, said that demand for product had been ‘unstable’ for the past three months. Where the company was supplying around 30,000m3 of ready mix cement per month up until late 2009 for several villa develop-ment projects, production was now down by around 35%. With 30 cement trucks and 100 staff to keep busy, Mansour said decisions on tenders he’d placed with projects in the capital couldn’t come soon enough.
“We are awaiting decisions on tenders we have placed for the Capital 2030 project in Abu Dhabi. I hope the market picks up soon,” he said.
Conmix has about 500 people throughout its bases in Dubai, Sharjah, and Ajman, with two thirds of them working for the ready mix side of the business.
Bush said that, “We’re not, as some of our competitors are doing, adjusting our costs to
PRODUCT FOCUSREADY MIX CONCRETE
secure contracts. That’s a recipe for disaster, and I’m looking forward to seeing how it pans out for some of them. I refuse to do so: it doesn’t make good business sense to reduce your bottom line.”
But the drop in demand within the UAE for ready mix concrete had prompted the company to explore its options. “It’s meant a lot of adjustments. We’re currently setting up operations in three different countries (Oman, Saudi and India), and have been through a period of restructuring where we’ve let a lot of people go. The workforce is demoralised – and now we’re faced with having to let some of our more valued staff go now too.”
He said the company’s expansion in to Saudi Arabia had been fuelled by the fact that the country’s reliance on foreign investment isn’t
EXPECTED INCREASE IN PRICE OF CEMENT THIS MONTH
“WE’RE NOT, AS SOME OF OUR COMPETITORS
ARE DOING, ADJUSTING OUR COSTS TO SECURE CONTRACTS. THAT’S A
RECIPE FOR DISASTER, AND I’M LOOKING FORWARD TO SEEING HOW IT PANS OUT
FOR SOME OF THEM.”
10%
TESTING TIMES SEEM SET TO CONTINUE FOR A S
AT THE SHARP END OF CONSTRUCTION TRENDS
as pronounced as in some of the company’s current markets, meaning it was easier to establish and maintain business there.
“This new toll road in Sharjah, for example, doesn’t do much to enhance confi dence in the current economy. At AED 100 per truck, and not AED 4 per vehicle, it’s a huge cost that we simply can’t cover. It means we’re not delivering to the other side of Dhaid.”
Earlier this week, Sharjah Cement and Industrial Development – the only producer of cement in the Emirate – announced that its net profi ts for 2009 had more than halved from AED 51.37 million to AED 23.87million, while fi rst quarter year-on-year salesturnover had taken a sharp dive this year, plummeting from almost AED 300million in 2009 to AED 173million in 2010.
That should have been good news for the ready mix industry but a 10% jump in the price of cement, expected on May 10, meant suppliers were bracing themselves for more bad news.
“All we can do is keep the silos fully stocked prior to the increase,” said Bush.
Ready mix concrete suppliers claimadvantages over onsite mixing because their product is generally cheaper, cleaner and more
environmentally friendly to produce. Site dust and noise is cut, while offsite batching plants are able to store more raw material than can be held on building sites.
However, batching and transporting ready mix also creates issues. Transporting it to project sites places pressure on road net-works, not only by adding traffi c to the roads but by the sheer weight of the product. At 2.5 tons per cubic metre, concrete places a great deal of stress on roads. Ready mix also needs to be prepared precisely, batched no more than 90 minutes before pouring, while curing temperature, controlled by chemical additives and fl aked ice in the summer months, is critical. �
CURRENT TENDERSCountry: Saudi Arabia
Project: Construction of Ras Az Zawr Power
and Desalination Plant, Phase 1, Power and Water
Issuer: Saline Water Conversion Corporation
Tender no: RZP-D
Description: The scope of work covers Phase
1 construction of the power and desalination
plant. The contract covers two packages, P for
power plant and D for desalination plant.
Tender fee: 200,000.00 SAR
Closes: May 9, 2010
Contact: http://www.swcc.gov.sa
Country: UAE
Construction of Hospital in Masfout
Issuer: Ministry of Public Works
Tender no: B/7046-341104-10/47/2010
Description: The scope of work includes
construction of hospital in Masfout Area, Ajman.
Tender fee: 6000 AED
Closes: June 2, 2010
Contact: www.mopw.gov.ae
For more tenders, visit constructionweekonline.com/tenders
BUSY PLANTS MEAN A HEALTHY BUILDING INDUSTRY.
CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 201026
RETURNING TO HEALTH
Hospitals and medi-cal facilities have seen strong devel-opment in the last two years, espe-cially in areas of the GCC that
are playing catch-up to provide for their communities. Many projects are coming to completion this month or in twelve months’ time – timely, some might say, to welcome in a more stable economic environment and higher population growth.
For some developers and contractors they are proving a long-term source of returns, compared to the relative quick bucks of property.
A key challenge is being able to under-stand the changing dynamics of healthcare that will inevitably fi lter through into the specifi cations of new medical facilities, or upgrades to existing structures.
Both globally and locally there has been an increasing shift from general care to a more customer-tailored service.
At the ‘InnovHealth – Middle East Inno-vations Summit’ in Abu Dhabi earlier this month, Dr Salem Al Darmaki, acting direc-
INVESTMENT AND BUILDING OF HOSPITALS ACROSS THE GULFLARGELY SURVIVED THE DOWNTURN
tor general in the UAE Ministry of Health, said the summit allowed “close interaction between healthcare decision makers, plan-ners and professional providers to plan new models and approaches for care delivery and fi nancial systems” to overcome today’s challenges, the biggest of which is to “pro-vide health services based on customers’ focused care”.
This echoed a detailed study by Pricewa-terhouseCoopers, the fi nancial services and research fi rm. According to the latest of its HealthCast series of reports issued by the company’s Health Research Institute, the move to tailored service is similar to that in other service sectors. At the same time, study respondents agreed that individuals
SECTOR FOCUSHOSPITALS
need to take a greater responsibility for their own health – prompting the need for prior research from the medical providers.
“To engage consumers and compete for them in the global healthcare marketplace, health systems are trying to understand consumers’ needs and individual preferences and tailor care to fi t them, not unlike other industries that have been transformed by consumerism,” the report notes.
This lean towards the individual, con-sumerism and franchise has been partially refl ected in the expansion of the Saudi Ger-man Hospitals Group. The company has fi ve hospitals – four in Saudi Arabia and one in Yemen – that attempt to offer ‘one-stop shop’ for all healthcare needs: medical and surgical specialties and subspecialties including cardiac surgery, neurosurgery, and oncology, and state-of-the-art diagnosis and treatment facilities. It constructs its own hospitals – employing 1,000 construction workers – and fi nances its developments with the support of local government and development banks
Though it may seem contradictory to be both specialist and tailored by service and wide in the total number of services, the
PROJECT VALUE OF A 100-BED HOSPITAL IN AL-MOKOWAH,
SAUDI ARABIA
$24 MILLION
company seems to have hit a profi table formula. It now has identical hospitals in different stages of construction in Hail in Saudi Arabia, Dubai, Cairo and Addis-Ababa in Ethiopia.
But specialist institutions are nevertheless moving from the drawing board to the con-struction site. Last year in KSA, Al Mashrik Company began work on the Arar Hospital for Women & Delivery, a US $50 million project due for completion in a year’s time. It is just one of a fl urry of projects launched by the Ministry of Health to allow the King-dom to lead the region for health–related infrastructure spending. These projects include a $24 million 100-Bed Hospital in Al-Mokowah and Saud Bin Jalwaei Hospital, and 100-Bed Hospital in Bisha.
Two projects, a $23 million 100-bed hospi-tal in Al-Laith, and a $55 million Al Khobar Hospital are both expected to be completed this month.
The development of specialist institutions has also been bolstered by investment com-panies. In the last few years, Abu Dhabi-based Mudabala Development Company, the state-owned investment fi rm, has bolstered its portfolio in the healthcare sector – most recently in a joint venture with Aldar Prop-erties for the $1.9 billion Cleveland Clinic Hospital. The Tawam Molecular Imag-ing Centre, operating in partnership with Johns Hopkins Medicine International, was launched last month and features the latest innovative molecular imaging diagnostic technology provided by Siemens, includ-ing advanced systems essential to the early detection and tracking of cancer, cardiovas-cular and neurological diseases.
Other specialist facilities – which have in turn encouraged international partnerships - include the Imperial College London Diabetes Centre in Abu Dhabi and, as part of the 2030 plan for the Emirate, is the Wooridul Spine Centre, the region’s fi rst facility dedicated to minimally invasive spinal care. �
DRIVERS OF CHANGE IN HEALTHCARE EXPENDITURE
RESPIRATORY
2002/3 to 2032/33
Volume per case: 84%
Price: 9%
Ageing: 3%
Disease rate: 4%
Population: -0.2%
NEUROLOGICAL
Volume per case: 25%
Price: 5%
Ageing: 48%
Disease rate: 4%
Population: 18%
(source: PwC, fi gures are global)
“HEALTH SYSTEMS ARE TRYING TO UNDERSTAND CONSUMERS’ NEEDS AND
INDIVIDUAL PREFERENCES AND TAILOR CARE TO FIT
THEM, NOT UNLIKE OTHER INDUSTRIES THAT HAVE BEEN TRANSFORMED BY
CONSUMERISM.”
CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 201028
ON THE RIGHT TRACK
The list of foreign companies enter-ing Amman to take advantage of the broad spectrum of projects in devel-opment grows ever
longer, intensifying competition in the capital. Two pieces of news gave the ongo-ing and prospective construction projects in Amman a shot in the arm last month.
Firstly, the Jordan Investment Board revealed that investments that benefi ted from incentives offered by fi nancial laws in the country had leaped from JOD 250 million to JOD 686 million from the fi rst quarter of last year to the fi rst quarter of 2010. This represented an increase of 174.4% and was welcome news for a capital looking to stabilise funding for projects.
Foreign investments benefi ting from the Investment Promotion Law totalled JOD 160 million over the quarter, double that of last year, according to offi cial fi gures. JIB CEO Nasser Sunnaa told The Jordan Times in a statement last week that local developments reached JOD 525 million.
JORDAN’S CAPITAL HAS BEEN BOOSTED BY A CLEVER APPROACH TO INVESTMENT LAW, AND PROJECTS ARE NEARING REALITY
By Ben Roberts
“It’s a much more investor friendly market,” said one investment analyst in Amman to CW, comparing the city to other capitals. “You’ll fi nd that there’s a lot of money fl ow-ing here, and I believe most of the money will go to privatisation.”
Chief recipients of these investments are the amusement parks sector, which gained JOD 249.4 million, followed by the industrial sector (JOD 222 million), hotels (JOD 161 mil-lion), hospitals (JOD 28 million), followed by marine and land transport (JOD 16 million). The fi gures will be a fi llip for the capital compared with other cities that have seen a shortfall in outside investments.
The country is growing again following a steep correction amid the fi nancial crisis. “The infl ux of foreign investments to the Kingdom is going through a stage of fl uctua-tions affected by the consequences of the global fi nancial crisis,” Sunnaa said.
CITY FOCUSAMMAN
He added, however, that Jordan attracted a variety of ‘added value’ investments since the beginning of this year.
Secondly, passenger fl ow and aircraft move-ments both increased in the fi rst quarter of this year to underline the need for speedy development of Amman’s Queen Alia Inter-national Terminal.
Customers increased to 1,097,400 between January and the end of March compared to the same period in 2009, a 20.9% growth, according to the Airport International Group (AIG).
Aircraft movement increased by 13.9% to reach 13,989 over the three months. “QAIA is continuing its trend of impressive year-on-year growth and is steadily emerging as the airport of choice in the Levant region,” said Curtis Grad, chief executive offi cer of AIG. AIG is both owner and contractor in the expansion of the airport that will happen in two phases. A new 85,000m² terminal, based on a Foster & Partners design, will make up the fi rst phase and will boost capacity to nine million passengers. The second phase will increase the airport’s passenger-handling capacity again to around 12 million.
“YOU’LL FIND THAT THERE’S A LOT OF MONEY FLOWING HERE, AND I BELIEVE MOST OF THE MONEY WILL GO TO
PRIVATISATION.”
The airport gained several new routes last year, while continued construction work will see the opening of new piers, according to the fi rst annual report issued by AIG.
Pteris Global Limited, a Singapore-based specialist in airport features, was awarded a contract worth $12.3 million last July 2009 to design and build the baggage-handling
system, which is due next year – another foreign company seeking the benefi ts of tendering in Amman.
Construction of the Amman Metro has also, fi ttingly, sped ahead. The central pur-pose of the Metro is to reduce congestion in the centre, where the combination of non-stop highways through the city and narrow streets create a dire need for a Metro, along with a commuter rail line. The fi rst phase is two lines, red and green, connecting East, Central, and West Amman with one transit station at Amman Plaza.
The second phase consists of a yellow line connecting North and South Amman with transit to the red and green lines at Abdali and City Hall. The project would cost between JOD 500-600 million. These projects are slated for 2016 with the entire capital trans-portation system completed by 2025.
Accommodating more visitors is a pleas-ant headache to have compared with the ongoing challenge of addressing a chronic water supply. The country has one of the most signifi cant imbalances of supply and demand for fresh water in the world, and aid to address the shortfall has come from The World Bank, the US and Japan among
others. It is now more than six years since it signed a €2 million support agreement with the European Union.
Government statistics show that this year’s total water demand will reach 1,518 million m3, although only 880 million m3 supplied – a shortfall of 637.4 million m3.
The Water Authority in the Ministry of Water and Irrigation launched two projects last year. The most eye-catching for those making utilities tender bids is the Disi water conveyance project, which seeks to signifi cantly increase the amount delivered to the capital. Currently, Amman residents drink from two aquifers south of the city. The Disi project aims to alleviate the over-use of these existing sources and improve water quality.
Smaller projects, too, give an indication of the growing openness of the country. Last year Indian construction fi rm Nava-yuga Engineering Company won the US $3.5 million contract for a 5-star hotel in Amman. Executives at the infrastructure and construction contractor – which has an offi ce in Abu Dhabi – have revealed that the deal will take the company’s annual turnover to more than $200 million in the region alone by 2011. �
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CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 201030
SPECIALIST SERVICESCONSTRUCTION PRODUCTS AND SERVICES MADE EASY IN CONSTRUCTION WEEK’S DIRECTORYTO ADVERTISE PLEASE CALL +971 4 210 8351, OR EMAIL [email protected]
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Formally established in 1996, Thomas Bell–Wright International Consultants (TBWIC), based in Dubai, is both a specialist curtain wall and cladding consultancy and a mock-up testing laboratory for full scale testing of curtain walling, cladding and fenestration.
The company was the fi rst inde-pendently-owned company to have permanent curtain wall testing apparatus in the UAE. With lim-ited options for curtain wall test-ing previously, and on-site testing relatively unheard of, the company developed its own range of testing chambers and support structures to meet the needs of a growing construction industry in the region.
TBWIC is still the only organisation in the region spe-
Supplier focus
THOMAS BELL-WRIGHT INTERNATIONAL CONSULTANTSINDEPENDENT QUALITY ASSURANCE SERVICES
cialising exclusively in the fi eld of independent quality assurance for building façades. It comprises curtain walls and cladding for high rise buildings, including metal or composite panels, pre-cast, and all other cladding materials, plus doors and windows.
The company’s cladding sys-tem aims to save time, energy and money spent on removing and replacing systems that break down. In addition, the fi rm pro-vides fi re testing for fi re-rated doors, walls, glass, and hopes to stimulate local manufac-ture of these kinds of systems
in the future. Since 1993 TBWIC has been associ-ated with over 100 landmarks around the Gulf and surrounding countries. �
TOM BELL-WRIGHT AT THE COMPANY’S TESTING FACILITY.
31MAY 8–14, 2010 CONSTRUCTION WEEK
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CONSTRUCTION WEEK MAY 8–14, 201032
DIALOGUENIGEL HAWLEY
What does your current role encompass?I have overall responsibility for Trane’s operations in the Middle East, India and Africa. This includes strategy, sales and operational performance and key customer relations. Our growth initiatives are focused on market expansion (Abu Dhabi, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and India) and new product introductions. With regard to the latter, we are especially excited by our new AquaStream range of air-cooled chiller systems, which are equipped with high-effi ciency scroll compressors.
What strategy are you adopting?Despite the current market we remain fi xed on a strategy of profi table growth, based on aggressive new product introductions, market expansion and, of course, providing even better levels of customer service. Growing our services, controls and comprehensive solutions business is a key part of this strategy.
Will business stabilise this year?Yes, in terms of our core business, excluding district cooling and unitary, which are two segments badly affected by the market downturn, especially in Dubai. I do not expect to see this changing dramatically in 2010.
Are customers struggling in terms of payment?We are generally involved at the early stages of projects, so where the credit crisis has affected us most is that projects have been delayed or cancelled. However, it is clear that some customers, especially contractors, are suffering with delayed payments from their customers (developers). Overall we have not suffered particularly from payment delays, and have no signifi cant exposure.
What are your biggest growth areas at the moment?Services – maintenance, repairs, parts – and then traditional applied equipment. With such a vast portfolio, it can be diffi cult selecting just one or two specifi c products. However, I would say that we are expecting good growth prospects from our airside range as a result of new product introductions and refi nements. In addition, we detect greater emphasis on indoor air quality (IAQ) from owners and developers, which is also driving demand to more sophisticated and effi cient selections. We are also enhancing our manufacturing footprint, which will
give clients the opportunity to source quality Trane products from locations closer to their markets, thus saving on freight costs.
Are you expanding regionally?We have our own offi ces here in Dubai, plus Abu Dhabi, Kuwait, Egypt, Lebanon and across India. All other countries are covered by distributors, which are also serviced from an experienced team in Dubai. This year we are expanding in the Gulf, and expect to have our own direct offi ce opened in Qatar in the next few months.
How important is MENA to Trane?Very important. We are the global leader in direct-drive, low-pressure, high-effi ciency centrifugal chillers, which is the industry’s preferred choice for large district cooling projects, and therefore the Middle East is a key market for us. Trane has a defi ned strategy to maximise growth across all emerging markets, and MENA is clearly a key part of this strategy.
Were last year’s economic diffi culties compounded by the refrigerant phase-out?That is not exactly how I would put it. Trane’s philosophy is to produce and sell the most energy-effi cient and environmentally-responsible HVAC systems and solutions possible. Refrigerant change is a constant in our industry. Last year was particularly exciting and challenging due to the US decision to stop producing equipment with R22 from 31 December 2009. This was the catalyst for a massive redesign project that resulted in Trane introducing more new models in 2009 than we had in the previous 20 years. But I want to be clear that this redesign process went much further than simply regulatory compliance. We used this opportunity to further raise the performance of our range in areas where we already lead the fi eld – that is, energy effi ciency, reliability, durability and serviceability.
What is your outlook for the future?I believe 2010 will be just as diffi cult as 2009 – and, in some respects, more diffi cult this time around, as we all know what to expect now. I believe we will continue to see growth in Qatar and Abu Dhabi, but at levels lower than experienced previously. Last but not least, even in this tough economic climate, Dubai seems to have more new projects than anywhere else in the world.
Trane manCW speaks to Nigel Hawley from Trane, its new GM for the Middle East, Africa and India region, on the outlook for growth
By Gerhard Hope
Nigel Hawley joined Trane as fi nance
leader for the Middle East in October
2006. He was promoted to GM of the
Middle East, Africa and India region in
March 2009. Prior to this he spent four
years in a corporate fi nance role with
Trane in its European HQ in Brussels
and 13 years with KPMG.
BIO
P.O. Box 5936, Sharjah, United Arab EmiratesTel: +971 6 5314155 • Fax: +971 6 5314332
e-mail: [email protected] • website: www.conmix.com
Ready MixConcrete
Pre MixPlasters
ConstructionChemicals
Piling
CONMIX LTD. was established in the year 1975. With Head Quarter in Sharjah, it has eight production facilities at various locations across U.A.E. and other countries. The company follows a quality management system certified to ISO 9001, maintaining quality assurance in design, development, production, installation and service. The company’s products meet the relevant international standards and are currently being exported to more than 30 countries.
Ready Mix ConcreteCONMIX designs and supplies Ready Mix Concrete meeting the exact requirements of specifiers. Through its team of experienced engineers and concrete technologists, the company can supply high performance durable concrete.
Pre Mix PlastersWith state-of-the-art dry mortar plants located at Sharjah, Jebel Ali and Ras Al Khaimah, CONMIX is one of the leading manufacturers of Pre Mix Plaster in the Middle East.
Construction ChemicalsCONMIX manufactures a wide range of Construction Chemicals enabling the organization to fulfill most requirements from the construction Industry.
PilingWith a team of experienced and technically sound personnel, modern and state-of-art equipments, CONMIX aims to provide their clients with quality solution for their foundation works.