| New airport project under Vision 2030 starts in January |
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| Written by Administrator | |||
| Monday, 05 December 2011 11:55 | |||
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“We shall be opening the tenders on September 21 and we expect the works to start by January next year,” said Stephen Gichuki, the managing director of Kenya Airports Authority (KAA). The new airport will cost $500 million or Sh45 billion by current exchange rate and would take two years to complete. The winner of the tender is expected to design, build and finance the airport through a debt to the KAA. “We have calculated that with our current cash flow, and the one expected from the new facility, we can be able to service the loan,” said Mr Gichuki. The number of passengers using the JKIA has been increasing in the past years, from 4.7 million passengers in 2008 to six million passengers expected to use the facility this year, according to KAA. The number of aircraft using the facility increased from 76,273 to 96,071 in the same period. It is estimated that 38 million passengers will use JKIA annually by 2030, the year Kenya has set out to achieve middle income status. The new airport is part of Vision 2030 transport pillar that includes building of Lamu port and related facilities. Upgrading and building of major roads across the country also form part of the infrastructure projects under Vision 2030. The new airport will have the capacity to handle up to 20 million passengers, 50 international check-in points and 10 for domestic flights. It will also have a railway terminus to ease passenger transport to and from the airport. The project is expected to further improve Kenya’s status as a regional air flight connection hub and enable more airlines to use the Kenyan facilities for interconnection. The airports authority will, however, need to deal with the inconveniences like the frequent power outages that have affected JKIA for a while leading to diversion of aircraft to neighboring countries because of dark runway. KAA said it is increasing the number of stand-by generators from the current four and that is has acquired a mobile lighting system that will guide airplanes to land and take off even when there is a problem with electricity supply. Construction of parking, garage covering, the erection and completion of a parking silo consisting of one basement and three storey, to accommodate a total of 2,000 cars, The construction will be of reinforced concrete frame and slabs with a flat roof and waterproof membrane . The floor area of the building will be approximately 60,566 square meters. Grade parking comprising of approximately 19,000 sq m of asphalt concrete paving and associated storm water draining works.
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