SOUTHEAST ASIA CONSTRUCTION22 Nov 2021
Construction of Panguil Bay Bridge in Philippines ‘moves ahead’

Construction of the 3.169-km Panguil Bay Bridge in Northern Mindanao is moving ahead, with bored piles for the piers and abutments halfway done, announced the Philippines’ Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) in its recent statement.

DPWH Undersecretary for Unified Management Office Operations (UPMO), Emil K. Sadain, revealed that a total of 29 bored piles have been completed offshore. The entire project will require 54 bored piles for the 32 piers, two abutments (in Tangub City, Misamis Occidental province and in Tubod, Lanao del Norte province), and two pylons for the main bridge.

The offshore construction works by Korean joint venture contractor Namkwang-Kukdong-Gumwang across Panguil Bay were inspected by DPWH in early November. According to Mr Sadain, each of the completed bored piles is subjected to cross hole sonic logging test after seven to 14 days of concrete pouring in order to ensure quality by assessing the integrity of materials used in the cast-in-site pile, as well as load test to determine the safety factor.

“A 3-m-diameter bored pile is made by producing bore holes with reverse circulation drilling machines on barges, followed by the launching of 23-mm-thick permanent steel casing using revolving crane barges and vibro pile hammers, and until final concrete pouring,” explained DPWH.

DPWH added that there are two land and sea-based batching plants available for the project, each with a supply capacity of 120 cu m of ready-mixed concrete per hour.

“To move the construction of bridge substructure as quickly as possible, one bored pile is completed within an average period of seven days with all the total requirements aimed for completion by the first quarter of 2021,” continued Mr Sadain.

The PHP 7.38 billion Panguil Bay Bridge is one of the flagship infrastructure projects implemented by the DPWH - UPMO Roads Management Cluster 2 (RMC 2), built to provide a convenient inter-island travel in Northern Mindanao. It is funded by a loan agreement between the Philippine Government and Korean Export Import Bank.

Upon completion, the bridge is expected to reduce travelling time between Tangub City and Tubod from two and a half hours to just seven minutes. It will also shorten travelling time from Cagayan De Oro and Iligan to Tangub and the northern Zamboanga Region.

According to DPWH, the project has employed about 200 people so far. The manpower requirement is anticipated to reach 500 when the bridge superstructure activities begin in 2022.

Image: DPWH