Koppens Developments upgrades 22-kilometres of dirt road as part of 200 million dollar Peninsula Development Road project to benefit Indigenous and non-indigenous communities at the northernmost tip of Australia.
With Federal and State Government funding to the tune of $260.5 million, Queensland’s Cape York Regional Package aims to provide local communities greater employment and development opportunities, along with better infrastructure, freight and tourist access and reduced maintenance costs. The Package consists of a $200 million investment to seal the Peninsula Development Road (PDR), a further $10 million to seal the Endeavour Valley Road through to Hope Vale and $50.5 million for community infrastructure works.
Awarded the 22-kilometre Coen South stretch of the PDR project, Koppen Developments is a Cairns-based civil construction firm that has been in business for more than 80 years supplying land development, civil earthworks and infrastructure services throughout Northern Queensland.
Upon completion, Coen residents and other motorists travelling in the area will have access to a 53.5 kilometre stretch of uninterrupted sealed road. With employment and development central to the project’s success in the area, Koppen has also been actively involved in supporting the local community by offering training and job opportunities to local indigenous and non-indigenous residents.
To deliver the project, Koppen makes use of the latest in survey and machine control technology to save time, reduce material waste and increase safety and accuracy across all aspects of the construction process.
“We run Topcon machine control and survey equipment for all our earthmoving and as-built checks,” explained Koppens Director Scott Koppen. “Initially we started off the project last year using Topcon GPS systems on our excavators to shape the batters. Now that the wet season is over we’re back up and running, with four graders, a paver and a milling machine all working to design with Topcon technology,” he added.
The company also uses Topcon GNSS survey rovers as well as the new GT robotic total station. “I’ve been holding off buying a new robotic because for a long time I wasn’t happy with what Topcon had to offer,” Mr Koppen said. “But this new model is really good and I’m very happy with it.”
Koppens is currently running Topcon Millimetre GPS systems across the graders, paver and milling machine. This technology is designed to deliver extremely fine tolerance accuracy through a combination of GNSS and laser systems.
Unlike other solutions that rely on optical total station-based positioning technology, this unique platform delivers 300% greater accuracy than standalone GNSS and can enable multiple machines to operate simultaneously within what’s referred to as a ‘zone’ of connectivity. A specially designed laser transmitter that emits a high vertical and wide horizontal wall of light, connects to a pole-mounted laser receiver on the machine. Linking up to four laser transmitters can deliver a working range of 2.4 kilometres horizontally and 40 metres elevation and this, combined with high precision, multi-constellation GNSS positioning technology delivers millimetre-level accuracy anywhere within the working zone.
Installed on a Vögele 1800-3 paver, Topcon’s mmGPS technology is delivering high accuracy due to its ability to connect directly to the machine’s CAN system. “These days the CAN connectivity adds significant performance improvements and greatly improves the responsiveness of the machine in relation to the design it’s working to,” Mr Koppen said.
“We are eagerly anticipating the arrival of our new Smoothride paving system as it will enable us to spread thicker layers of material and change compaction densities, let alone the benefits it offers for milling applications and bitumen stabilising work,” he added.
Koppen Developments will be one of the first Australian companies to deploy Topcon’s new Smoothride solution, which includes newly developed paving and milling software along with real-time surface profiling via a vehicle mounted scanner. Aptella installed the first Smoothride system in the Asia Pacific region on four paving systems in Singapore as part of the Changi airport expansion project and will soon bring the technology to Australia shores.
As an early adopter of new technology, Mr Koppen accepts that things are not always easy from the beginning. “GPS isn’t like buying a car when you don’t need to see the dealer again until you want an upgrade, it’s a complex solution that requires expertise to support it.” Support from Aptella has always been a central reason behind Koppen’s choice of positioning and machine control technology and the company regularly uses Tokara, a remote support and telematics platform that Aptella specifically developed for the Australian market.
Tokara gives support technicians the ability to remotely login to a machine control system, total station or survey tablet to diagnose technical problems, upgrade software and train operators. “Tokara is a really handy tool especially as we’re a long way from Aptella’ Brisbane or Darwin branches,” Mr Koppen said. “We use it regularly when we have mobile coverage, but unfortunately for some of our jobs and the Coen South project is one of them, network coverage is hard to come by!”
Tokara also enables surveyors and project managers to send design file updates direct to machines and field survey parties without the need to transfer them in person via USB. “We don’t tend to use the file transfer ourselves as we simply transfer the design files from the client or the surveyor. To us the main value of Tokara is in the support it provides us when we need it,” he added.
“Our partnership with Topcon distributor Aptella dates back 20 odd years, to the early days of laser and machine control technology,” Mr Koppen added. “It is a mutually beneficial relationship and we rely on each other to push the boundaries with what these systems can do – Aptella is actively committed to the research and development of new solutions for the Australian market and I think that’s the most exciting part of working with them.”