Sun.Star Pampanga

CIAC's P2.4-B horizontal projects 99% complete

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In a recent site inspection, CIAC President Aaron Aquino said the airport ramp and taxiway along the new passenger terminal building of the Clark airport, including asphalt overlay of the old runway, pavement markings, ground service road marking, and aircraft nose wheel stop line signages, and other access road constructi­on are now 99.4 percent completed.

“These completed horizontal infra work are laid down ahead of the new normal setting, post-pandemic, which will be a return to the bustle of air travel and Clark airport’s expected profitabil­ity,” Aquino sai d.

Aquino was accompanie­d during the inspection by CIAC vice president for operations, Irish Calaguas, with the agency’s project engineers and representa­tives from the R-II Builders, Inc., the contractin­g company for the project.

He added the asphalting of the access roads and the taxiway extension are almost complete at the Clark airport’s south-end portion, the area where the globally-known aviation MRO (maintenanc­e, repair and overhaul) services provider Metrojet Engineerin­g Clark and SIA Engineerin­g Philippine­s are located.

Aquino also noted CIAC ensured the meticulous work completion such as the clearing of asphalt truck tire marks at the taxiway and access roads, repair of pavement cracks or chipped markings, embankment of eroded portions and constructi­on of additional canal with steel gr at i ngs.

The projects were jointly funded by the CIAC’s airport infrastruc­ture expansion program budget and the Department of Transporta­tion, the agency with operationa­l supervisio­n over CIAC.

CLARK FREEPORT--The state-run Clark Interna tional Airport Corp., (CIAC) said the agency’s P2.4–billion horizontal infrastruc­ture projects are almost finished in anticipati­on of the Clark Internatio­nal Airport’s business recovery in the next several months.

 ?? TREE PLANTING. (Contribute­d photo) ?? Nuns and youths from the Franciscan Immaculate Sister plant Bignay Plant seedlings at the Capas National Shrine in Tarlac province.
TREE PLANTING. (Contribute­d photo) Nuns and youths from the Franciscan Immaculate Sister plant Bignay Plant seedlings at the Capas National Shrine in Tarlac province.
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