The Civil Engineering Contractor June 2019 | Page 14

WORLD NEWS The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is to spend USD23-billion on four projects for its capital city Riyadh, in an effort to make it ‘one of the world’s most liveable cities’. The projects include: •  King Salman Park: located in the heart of Riyadh, the project will contain the Royal Art Complex, a national theatre, an opera house, art academies, museums and galleries •  S ports Boulevard: designed to encourage exercise, the development will include 48 green and open spaces, outdoor museums, movie theatres and cycling, jogging and horseback riding tracks • Green Riyadh: this project plans to increase air quality and reduce temperatures in the city by increasing the green space from 1.7m 2 to 28m 2 per capita and by planting 7.5 million trees •  Riyadh Art: described by the Saudi Arabian government as the ‘world’s largest government investment in public art’, the project will create 1 000 installation artworks and landmarks, including institutions such as museums and theatres and created by local and international artists across public spaces in Riyadh. The four projects will meet the UN’s sustainable development goals and will create 70 000 jobs and generate investment opportunities worth USD14-billion to local and foreign investors. Work is due to begin in the second half of 2019. nn UK’s Heathrow airport has revealed 18 sites around the UK shortlisted in its search for four ‘logistics hubs’ intended to facilitate offsite manufacturing and just-in-time delivery of materials and components for an expected GBP14-billion expansion of the world’s seventh busiest airport. Heathrow conceived the hubs idea to push construction offsite and keep the movement of freight and workers to a minimum in congested southern England. It also wants to spread the economic benefit of what it calls ‘Britain’s largest infrastructure project’ around the country. It said the approach will ‘revolutionise’ the way Britain builds major infrastructure. On the shortlist are a diverse range of businesses and sites, including the UK’s biggest contractor Balfour Beatty at an industrial estate at Tamworth in the West Midlands, Tata Steel UK at its works in Deeside, North Wales and engineer Babcock at its Rosyth Dockyard in Scotland. Northern Ireland construction firm Graham is proposing former Michelin tyre factory in Ballymena, while Tarmac is pitching its Thrislington quarry in Country Durham. Associated British Ports has thrown the Port of Cardiff, South Wales, into the ring as well. Heathrow’s controversial expansion plans, approved by the UK Parliament in June 2018 but still the subject of multifaceted opposition, include a new 3.5km runway, which will be the first new runway in the southeast of England since the Second World War. nn Heathrow’s controversial expansion plans are still the subject of multifaceted opposition and include a new 3.5km runway – the first in 70 years. 12 | CEC June 2019 Saudi Arabia has announced projects worth USD23-billion to upgrade capital city Riyadh. www.civilsonline.co.za