Palm Island Dubai
The Palm Islands are artificial peninsulas constructed of sand dredged from the bottom of the Persian Gulf by the Belgian company Jan De Nul and the Dutch company Van Oord.
The
sand is sprayed by the dredging ships, which are guided by DGPS, onto
the required area in a process known as rain-bowing because of the arcs
in the air when the sand is sprayed. The outer edge of each Palm’s
encircling crescent is a large rock breakwater. The breakwater of the
Palm Jumeirah has over seven million tons of rock.
Each
rock was placed individually by a crane, signed off by a diver and
given a GPS coordinate. The Jan De Nul Group started working on the Palm
Jebel Ali in 2002 and had finished by the end of 2006. The reclamation
project for the Palm Jebel Ali includes the creation of a
four-kilometre-long peninsula, protected by a 200-metre-wide,
seventeen-kilometre long circular breakwater.
210,000,000
m3 of rock, sand and limestone were reclaimed (partly originating from
the Jebel Ali Entrance Channel dredging works). There are approximately
10,000,000 cubic metres of rocks in the slope protection works.
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