New
Container Terminal Damietta, Egypt
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Client:
KGL PI, Kuwait
Construction Costs:
ca. 650 Mio. USD
Services:
Master Plan, Preliminary Design, Tender Design and Tender
Documents, Tender Evaluation Support
Period:
2006 - 2007
Cooperation:
HPC Hamburg Port Consulting |
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At the Egyptian Mediterranean port Damietta (about
70 km west of the Suez-Canal) a large container terminal is being
developed. The port is designed for an annual handling capacity
of approximately 4 Million TEU (Twenty-Feet Equivalent Unit).
The consultancy association of Hamburg Port Consulting (HPC) and
Sellhorn Ingenieurgesellschaft executed the overall planning, which
included:
- preparation of a Master Plan
- design Planning and preparation of Tender Documents
- design and Tender of all infrastructure and equipment of the
some 80 ha comprising terminal area (inclusive Buildings).
- specification, Tender, Award of Contract and Construction Supervision
of the equipment (STS, RTG, TT)
- nautical simulation study for approach and berthing manoeuvre
- design and Tender of extensive dredging works for approach channel,
turning circle and the actual new harbour basin.
A notable challenge was the quay wall design because of soil conditions.
The upper stratum is made of 15 to 20 m silt or silty sand, followed
by a 15 to 17 m layer of very soft clay. Only than at about 30 m
below existing ground level, load bearing Sands are existent.
A diaphragm wall construction type proved to be value at comparable
soil conditions within the Egyptian region.
The quay wall construction was put out to tender as shown on the
sketch below, consisting of:
- two diaphragm walls at the water side, each 1.5 m wide, which
are connected through a rigid capping
- landside diaphragm wall, which acts partly as anchor wall and
bears the landside crane beam
- micro piles for horizontal load transfer into the ground
The micro piles need to be anchored into the lower, load bearing
sands to assure sufficient safety during potential earthquake conditions.
Design and tender preparation took place over a
period of less than one year; start of construction was in the middle
of April 2007 and first full size container vessels are due to be
handled in autumn 2008.
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