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FCC finishes up work on the Castellón Harbour breakwater

03/08/2010

FCC finishes up work on the Castellón Harbour breakwater

The job has a budget of 23 million euro, and the breakwater is 448 metres long

FCC finishes up work on the Castellón Harbour breakwater

Castellón Harbour is immersed in the construction of an innovative breakwater situated at the incoming channel, near the southern basin. The breakwater, which is being built by FCC in a joint venture, consists of 13 reinforced-concrete caissons, ten of which lie along the main alignment, for a total length of 448.40 metres.

The breakwater will perform a double function: It will provide protection against the heavy storms of the Levante and it will perform a commercial function, since the Port Authority plans to use this new infrastructure for cruise traffic (PortCastelló's latest great thing) and vehicular traffic (Plans are to build two ro-ro slips in a 16-metre-deep zone for that purpose).

The new breakwater has a hundred internal conduits (cells) that enable it to buffer the impact of the waves in emergency situations by expelling water in a system called a "blowhole".

Thus, it has been unnecessary to build a sloping wall with riprap or concrete blocks, "which would have been much less environmentally friendly", explained the Castellón Port Authority General Manager Roberto Arzo during a tour of the site. He stressed, "This project makes Castellón Harbour unique, because no other Spanish harbour has got a system like this. At Algeciras Bay there's something similar, but not at the entrance area".

Port Authority President Juan José Monzonís agreed. "You've got to remember, this is a sustainable project environmentally speaking, and in addition it has received numerous distinctions for its commitment to innovation in the harbour system as a whole".

 

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