Cobra Swamp is reclaiming Bangkok’s showpiece airport
Cobra Swamp is reclaiming Bangkok’s showpiece airportBANGKOK: — Bangkok’s showpiece international airport, opened last year, appears to be sinking into the swamp on which it was built. The city’s old airport will have to be reopened and some flights diverted there.
The $4 billion (£205 million) Suvarnabhumi airport was opened with great fanfare by Thaksin Shinawatra, the former Prime Minister, shortly before he was ousted by a military coup last year. It boasts the world’s largest hangar and tallest control tower.
More than 100 cracks have appeared in runways, taxiways and the apron. Thailand’s temporary Government is conducting an investigation into its construction at a site formerly known as Cobra Swamp. Hurried repairs are being made after flights had to be diverted to a former US B52 bomber base at U-Tapao, near the holiday resort of Pattaya.
As alarm grew about the airport, designed to handle 45 million passengers a year, Thir Haocharoen, the Transport Minister, was seeking Cabinet approval to reopen the Don Muang airport for domestic flights. Eleven of the 51 piers for unloading aircraft are un-usable because of the cracks. Throughout the 40 years since the new airport was first planned, there have been allegations of corruption and shoddy work. When it opened there were unworkable lifts, a shortage of lavatories, a leaky roof and large areas of unfinished construction.
“There is so much bad news about this airport and so much that needs to be fixed,†said Yodiam Teptaranon, a board member of Airports of Thailand (AOT), which is responsible for the site. “Everything seems to be happening all at once. It makes everyone concerned.â€
The news comes at a time when Thailand is struggling to maintain its tourist industry, which was damaged by last year’s events and concern about the military coup.
There are 61 problems and design flaws that need to be corrected at an estimated cost of 1.5 billion baht (£22 million), according to a study for AOT, which estimated that the work would take six months.
A weekend poll in Thailand found that 48 per cent of people suspected that corruption was the main cause behind the airport’s problems. And 16.5 per cent said that they felt unsafe using it. Alongkorn Pollabutr, the Democrat Party deputy leader, called at the weekend for an investigation into subsidence under the main passenger and cargo terminal.
Sumet Jumsai, one of Thailand’s top architects, however, insists that the airport would have collapsed — corruption or not. Fifteen years ago he had fought against its location on a swamp. “Nature is now taking its toll in this swamp, and I feel everyone has got it wrong in the ongoing investigation,†he said. “The bottom line is that with or without corruption the runways and any structure not on piles will be subject to differential settlement and cracks.â€
The temporary Government put in place by the junta and led by General Surayud Chulanont says that it will report its findings on the runways in two weeks.
Sinking feeling
Building work on the Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City, begun in 1904, was delayed 30 years as the marble facade sank into soft soil. It still sinks a few centimetres a year.
Shanghai’s massive construction boom was slowed in 2003 when authorities discovered that parts of the city were sinking one-and-a-half centimetres a year because of the sheer weight of skyscrapers.
Source: Andrew Drummond, Times Online UK, Agencies
Sphere: Related ContentIf you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!
One Response to “Cobra Swamp is reclaiming Bangkok’s showpiece airport”
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
























Thailand’s airport chief resigns
Suvarnabhumi airport has been dogged by controversy
The head of Thailand’s airport authority has resigned from his job, amid mounting pressure over the failings of Bangkok’s new airport.
Chotisak Asapaviriya tendered his resignation late on Thursday, and has since admitted that the stress of the job was making him ill.
The new airport has been plagued with problems since it opened in September.
Cracks have been found in the runways, leading the government to ask for the old airport to be reopened.
Under huge pressure to act, Mr Chotisak told the Airports of Thailand (AOT) that he wanted to quit his post. They accepted his decision, and he has been replaced by former vice president Kullaya Phakakong.
In a separate move, the AOT board also sacked Somchai Sawasdeepon as general manager.
Mr Chotisak cited stress and poor health as his reason for quitting the job, saying, “I have been having nosebleeds during board meetings”.
“It has been very stressful since the new airport opened,” he told reporters. “I know how to improve earnings growth, but not to fix these kinds of technical glitches.”
But Mr Chotisak also told a local TV channel that he had urged the previous government, which was ousted in a coup last September, not to rush the airport opening.
“At that time, I thought Suvarnabhumi was not ready to open,” he is quoted as telling Channel 11 television. “I asked them to partially move operations to the new airport as I suspected the total opening at one time could cause many problems.”
Series of problems
Suvarnabhumi Airport, designed to showcase Thailand as a regional hub, opened in September to huge publicity.
The Thai authorities hoped that Suvaranabhumi, which means Golden Land, would rival the airports in Hong Kong and Singapore and cement Thailand’s reputation as a regional hub.
Suvarnabhumi boasts the largest passenger terminal in the world
But since development started more than 40 years ago, the project has been mired by a series of problems.
Politicians from Mr Thaksin’s administration were accused of buying up land in advance of construction, to sell on again at huge profits, and the purchase of the airport’s high-tech X-Ray scanners was also tainted by allegations of corruption.
The project also suffered many delays and accidents, including a fire that swept through a catering hall, killing a member of staff.
Even supernatural forces seem to have been against Suvarnabhumi, and dozens of people reported seeing ghosts during the construction process.
Earlier this month, officials admitted that there were cracks in the runways and taxiways, and said that while they were not a safety threat, they needed repairing.
After a meeting with airport officials on Tuesday, Transport Minister Thira Haocharoen said he would seek Cabinet approval to reopen the old international airport at Don Muang on a temporary basis.
The reopening is expected to take place within two months’ time, and airlines will move on a voluntary basis.
Correspondents say the move will complicate travel for many international visitors, who travel to Bangkok and then transfer to different airlines for flights to Thailand’s famed beach resorts.