The Civil Engineering Contractor May 2019 | Page 16

ON SITE: PROJECT 1 the poultry industry, but once the boilers have been commissioned, the husk will be used as biofuel for the boilers. The boilers they’ve ordered are configured to be able to burn husk and coal to fire the boilers. The soya facility is an upgrade of the business’s current capacity (located in Delmas) and re-establishing it on the Boksburg site. The soya production facility was designed from scratch using the client’s technical and practical knowledge and 40 years of exposure and experience in the industry. Trucks arrive directly from source of the raw material (sunflower seed or soya bean). Initial OH&S checks are undertaken at the main guardhouse, whereafter articulated vehicles proceed to a seed sampling station where samples are taken and immediately analysed, giving permission for trucks to proceed, or rejected. A fully automated weighbridge system will guide the vehicles through the offloading and/ or loading process, right through to obtaining the final waybill ticket. Sunflower husks, soya meal, and sunflower meal are transported on overhead gantries via conveyors to either the nine silos for meal storage and distribution, or to another seven silos for husk storage as fuel for the boilers. Sunflower and soya crude oil is pumped via the overhead gantries to ten 12m-high tanks, each with a capacity of 500 000ℓ. The oil, says Maitre, either gets piped to the adjacent business for manufacturing purposes or delivered to customers using oil tankers for the distribution. Overhead gantries housing crude oil pipelines and conveyors ensure transport of all product around the site. The meal silos are conical elevated structures — the only way meal can be preserved and shifted to conveyors to be loaded onto trucks. “They are quite a challenging construction Steel erection to the new soya plant against the soya silos in the background. 14 | CEC May 2019 build,” says Maitre. The base is a solid reinforced concrete (RC) raft supported onto the dynamically compacted in situ soils. This base in turn supports the RC columns, above which a 17.5-degree sloped RC slab accommodate the loading channels. This elevated slab also supports the steel silo and a state-of-the- art flooring system that has been sourced and imported from abroad to facilitate movement of the meal within the silos. A new office block will also be built adjacent to the soya plant to accommodate the employees required for the expanded soya plant. There is substantial open space in reserve for future expansion. Project challenges One major challenge is coordinating timelines: the seven 30m-high steel seed silos are being manufactured in Turkey (but branded a tongue- soothing MySilo). They are currently being erected; however, they required storage on site until completion of the civils work for each silo. The foundation, circular reinforced concrete retaining walls, and complex fluted reinforced concrete surface beds with extensive aeration channels, bore with them a construction complexity in itself. “The silo top structures are a very efficient steel corrugation assembly, and it is amazing to think how much concrete would have to be used to achieve the same purpose,” says Maitre. The boilers are being imported from the Philippines. “Everything’s on the water, so to coordinate delivery and construction has proven to be a challenge,” he adds. “The foundations were problematic, as a second challenge. Right from the onset, we knew we had difficult geotechnical conditions. The geology is loose-to-medium- dense sands, which cannot support conventional foundations. We had two options: piling the whole site, which would be quite costly (albeit www.civilsonline.co.za