Introducing TenCate Mirafi® H2Ri
A patented geosynthetic woven with a special blue
water-wicking material, oering the ultimate roadway
subgrade stability solution.
Mirafi® H2Ri woven geosynthetic is i specially designed
to be integrated in extreme subsoil environments where
water control is critical to road strength and durability.
Mirafi® H2Ri’s unique
blue material wicks water
away from subsoil areas,
improving road durability.
Why Choose Blue?
Because H2Ri > H20
Engineered to wick water from soil, providing
a more eective method for water management
Stabilizes subgrade soils with less excavation
and less material
Unparalleled product support and research
from the leader in geosynthetic development
Discover more TenCate Geosynthetics
at mirafi.com or call 1-800-685-9990
Patent # 7,874,767
www.corix.com 306-955-7007
Saskatoon
difficult construction problems,” said Mary
Panteluk, human resources specialist for
KPCL. “A significant portion of our business
is focused on the completion of large, tech-nical
projects that involve challenging soil
conditions and intricate earth structures.”
Full slate of projects
As KPCL proved throughout 2016, busi-ness
is not slowing down. The company
expects to wrap up several major projects
this year.
The first is the CP Rail Belle Plaine
Railway Spur. The Canadian Pacific Railway
Company is constructing 30.5 kilometres
of new rail spur from K+S Potash Canada’s
Legacy Project mine near Findlater to the
existing Kalium Spur near Belle Plaine.
KPCL was chosen as the general contrac-tor
to manage and construct the new rail
grade, which includes the movement of
about 12 million cubic meters of earthfill
and the erection of two major structures –
a 108-metre-long steel girder and precast
span bridge to cross the Qu’Appelle River,
and a multiplate steel tunnel structure to
carry traffic over the railway spur.
Another project involves work at
SaskPower’s Generating Station, locat-ed
near of the town of Coronach in south-ern
Saskatchewan. KPCL is constructing a
27-hectare greenfield ash storage lagoon,
which also includes the erection of a se-ries
of bin walls for a pump structure and
a number of control structures to control
MEMBER PROFILE
A long reach excavator digging the slurry wall at Potash Corporation
of Saskatchewan’s Lanigan mine expansion. The project will
feature a 4.5-km long slurry wall when completed.
34 Think BIG | Quarter 4 2016 | saskheavy.ca
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