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CONSTRUCTION FOR ANTARCTIC 'FIRST' RESEARCH STATION

PHOTO: BAM

Where is it? Antarctica

When will it be completed? Phase one started in 2018 and is due to be completed in 2025

Did you know? The Discovery Building is designed for a range of environmental conditions including high levels of snowfall, 38m/s wind speeds with gusts up to 45m/s and sharp drops in temperature to -35oC (-31oF)

PHOTO: BRITISH ANTARCTIC SURVEY

Construction has begun in Antarctica for the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) with specialists arriving at Rothera Research Station. In a first for the Antarctic Infrastructure Modernisation Programme (AIMP), some of the construction team along with BAS team members will be working through the Antarctic winter.

Known as ‘wintering’, eight construction team members will be stationed at Rothera for seven months during Antarctica’s winter season from May through to November, in which some periods are spent in 24-hour darkness, with harsh polar weather.

PHOTO: BAM

“For the first time during the modernisation programme, some members of our team will be wintering at Rothera; experiencing something that very few people in the world can say that they have done,” said Elen Jones, Antarctic Infrastructure Modernisation Programme

Director at the British Antarctic Survey. The season will see the team take further steps towards completion of Rothera’s science and operations facility – the Discovery Building – as much of the mechanical and electrical installation and internal fit-out is delivered. Across the next six months, teams will also be installing windows, completing flashings and finalising most of the cross-site utility works. During the upcoming season, teams will commence the critical work to resurface Rothera’s runway, which has been in operation for over 30 years. The runway resurfacing work will maintain safe flying operations in and out of Rothera to guarantee field science operations for UK and international scientists and is expected to be completed by Spring 2024. BAS has commissioned a team of its scientists to conduct a pre-construction environmental baselining survey for an infrastructure project. The findings from this survey will become an important part of informing future work in the region as the AIMP team and BAS scientists continue to work together to deliver solutions. The programme is delivered in partnership with BAM, Ramboll and Sweco

This article appears in November-December 2023

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PHOTO: BAM Where is it? Antarctica When will
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