To main content

Port development, Sevilla

Seville is located 80 km land inwards and it is Spain’s only commercial river port. Access is along the Rio Guadalquivir. The current dimensions and depth of the port impose limitations on the breadth and draughts of the vessels that use it, putting the future of the port at risk. So the Port Authority developed a New Maritime Approach that provides for the deepening and widening of the approaches to the port.

The complete dredging project, amounting to approximately EUR 15 million, started with maintenance dredging in the entrance channel and the removal of the top layer of the construction pit for the future lock down to a depth of about 5.50 m. A trench with a depth of 15.5 m was then dredged for the foundations of the dike round the construction pit. After the completion of the lock, the new entrance channels will be dredged to a depth of 9.10 m downstream and 7.70 m upstream. The dredged material was pumped to fill areas (recintos) around the construction area, sometimes over distances of more than 2000 m. The work was done by Boskalis’ 3,400 kW dieselelectric CSD Para I, a dredger with a maximum working depth of 17.50 m. The ship is equipped with a special cooling system to cope with tropical temperatures, which is ideal for the hot summers in Seville, where temperatures can reach 45oC. Before this dredging work started, the ship was also adapted to comply with the client’s requirements relating to noise reduction.

Related projects

Selected filters
IMG_1101_header.jpg

Port expansion LNG terminal, Cuyutlán

The Mexican Ministry of Communications and Transport awarded Royal Boskalis Westminster N.V. two contracts for dredging an access channel and turning basin at the Cuyutlán liquefied natural gas import terminal on the west coast of Mexico.

Oranje___CDF_31Oct11__2__-_aangepast_header.jpg

Design and construction harbor channel, Sydney harbor

The 'Sydney Harbor Channel Dredging Project' in Nova Scotia, Canada, involved dredging and reclamation work as part of the construction of the new Sydney Port container terminal located on the northeast coast of Canada. Once operational, Sydney Port will be the most northerly deepwater container terminal on the North American east coast.

9CHP0243_header.jpg

Port construction,
Khalifa port

The Khalifa Port and Industrial Zone (KPIZ), one of the world’s largest greenfield development projects, is part of Abu Dhabi’s major diversification plan to develop various sectors such as property, tourism, infrastructure and others. Abu Dhabi’s main existing port, Mina Zayed, is hemmed in by Abu Dhabi city, limiting its accessibility and the possibility for expansion.

edax_aroima_copy_header.jpg

Maintenance dredging, Berbice River

One of Guyana’s major export products is bauxite, which originates from the Aroaima, Kwakwani and Ituni regions around the Demerara and Berbice rivers in north-eastern Guyana. Guyana annually exports approximately 2.2 million tons of bauxite from it’s mines along the Berbice River. Boskalis International has long been associated with the mining industry in Guyana. In 1990 a long-term overburden removal project for the Aroaima mine was begun in Guyana involving the dredging and disposal of a sand and clay layer of 30-45 meters thickness.

CHP10918_header.jpg

Port reconfiguration, Felixstowe

Capital dredging and filling works for new quay development (previously known as Landguard Redevelopment). Phase 1 of the reconfiguration programme consists of: 730 m new deep water quay and 200,000 m2 container handling area achieved by installing new quay in front of old Landguard port structures and redevelopment of the old Landguard terminal.

DSC04359_header.jpg

Port access channel dredging, Walvis Bay

The port of Walvis Bay is a naturally sheltered deepwater harbor on the west coast of Africa. The port is part of a transit route linking Southern Africa, Europe and the Americas and it is Namibia’s largest commercial port, handling around 5 million tons of cargo each year. The container terminal can accommodate a throughput of about 250,000 containers per year.