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UAE Building Two
Large Wastewater Facilities
The United Arab Emirates has started construction on a $150-million
sewerage and wastewater treatment project serving some 80,000
people in and around Fujairah City, located on the Gulf of
Oman. The 30-year build-operate-transfer contract follows
a similarly structured $140-million wastewater deal serving
about 150,000 people on the other side of the Emirates in
Ajman, on the Persian Gulf.
On both projects, teams of investor-operators
have signed fixed-price contracts. At Ajman, design and construction
is handled by a division of Black & Veatch, Overland Park,
Kan., and locally based Six Construct Ltd. Work is due to
end in 2007.
Washington, D.C.-based Infrastructure
Capital Group ICG, leads the Fujairah project with the UAE
government and Fujairah as partners. That team recently signed
a $90-million turnkey contract with Germanys Bilfinger
Berger A.G. and its waste-treatment specialist unit, Passavant-Roediger
Anlagenbau GmbH. Following three years of construction, Passavant-Roediger
will operate the plant for 15 years.

Egyptian LNG Terminal Ready
for Business
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| Terminal
required 850-m-long breakwater. |
The big waves and soft ground of the Mediterranean Sea complicated
the engineering of what should have been a straightforward
design-build project for a $135-million liquefied natural
gas terminal in Egypt. Work is just wrapping up as the first
gas carrier is due this summer at the terminal, located near
Idku, about 50 km east of Alexandria.
The project is the exit point for
a $2- billion plant with two 3.5-million-ton-a- year LNG trains.
Bechtel Inc., San Francisco, started the engineer/procure/construct
contract in late 2002 for Egyptian LNG Co. S.A.E. A Greek-based
subcontractor, Archirodon Construction S.A., is handling the
terminal using COWI A/S, Copenhagen, as designer.
Work at the terminal includes building
a 2.4-km-long access trestle, with 60 spans of 40 m each,
sited on steel piles. The project also includes an 850-m-long
breakwater in 12 m of sea. Core-loc concrete armor units,
some weighing nearly 30 tons, protect the rubble mound wall.
"Theres very rough water down there, even though
it is at the bottom of the Mediterranean," says Thomas
Dahlgren, COWIs project manager. The design was complicated
by the need to address 11-m-high waves, seismic conditions
and poor soils, with up to 15 m of soft clay, he notes. COWI
used extensive computer soil analysis to define how much soft
soil needed replacing.
COWI began work in late 2002, allowing
construction to start in the middle of 2003. As COWI winds
down in Egypt similar work is continuing at a larger terminal
at Ras Laffan, in Qatar. "A lot of the stuff we are doing
in this part of the world is design-build," say Dahlgren.

Turkish Firm Pushes Design-Build
Projects
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| Designing
and building satellite towns has boosted Soyak sales to
about $450 million a year. |
Soyak Construction & Trading Co., is shopping for an
international architect to design its planned 32-floor headquarters
in Istanbul. But for its mainstay general contracting business,
the firm does design and construction with its own in-house
teams, which currently are developing new satellite towns
as a growing market.
Soyaks sales this year will
be boosted by about 50% to around $450 million by the satellite
town construction projects, says general director Taner Soyak.
Its biggest contract, with over 3,500 residential units, is
Olympiakent, located near Istanbul, which will generate an
estimated $330 million in revenue.
Containing a mixture of houses
and apartment buildings, Olympiakent was planned for Soyak
by an outside consultant. But after that, "the entire
[architectural] design is done by Soyak," says the general
director. He notes that "engineering designs are outsourced
to engineering subcontractors [because] we dont have
staff for mechanical and electrical design."
Soyak claims his firm is a Turkish
market leader in housing, doing most work through design-build.
But a large portion of its business also includes design-build
industrial facilities. Work on Olympiakents three phases
began in October 2003 and is due to end in early 2007. Soyak
will share sales revenue with the central government in exchange
for land use.
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