Prepared for Airports and the Pacific
May 2026
Thank you for considering McConnell Dowell. This short capability statement explains a bit more about the benefits of working with us and showcases our capabilities and some of the interesting projects we deliver.
We've been working with the Auckland International Airport team since January 2019 to maintain and improve critical assets, including upgrading live jet fuel pipelines, renewing runway pavements, and much more.
We have also worked on vertical construction projects, including the new airport upgrade with subsidiary Built Environs.
We resurfaced the runway at Pago Pago Airport to improve its condition rating, and raise the shoulder edge by four inches to meet FAA requirements for international airports. Our work included a complete survey of the existing site; construction of Runway 5-23, the shoulder pavement, two taxiway and turning node pavements and paint-marking.
This was our eighth airport project in the Pacific Islands and followed our successful completion of the USD6.7 million rehabilitation and extension of Runway 8-26 in 2007 and the Taxiway Alpha Rehabilitation in 2011.
The Papa, Uniform, Golf Taxilane Slab Replacement project involved the replaced and restoration of ageing concrete pavement at Melbourne International Airport. The project was part of Melbourne Airport’s airfield pavement maintenance program, improving and maintaining the safety of the airport.
Our scope of work involved:
The Dryandra Road Works contract was a significant component of the New Parallel Runway (NPR) project for Brisbane Airport Corporation (BAC).
The Project involved construction of a 1.5 km long, four-lane reinforced concrete underpass structure, supported on approximately 700 precast concrete piles. The underpass allows vehicular access either side of the new linking taxiways, which were constructed as part of the NPR project.
We upgraded the Queen Sālote International Wharf in Nukau'alofa for the Tongan Ministry of Infrastructure between 2023 and 2025, on time and on budget, with zero LITs during the one million hours worked.
The wharf is Tonga’s only international port, a lifeline for the country, processing 95% of the country's imports and exports. This critical infrastructure upgrade modernised and climate-proofed the facility, increased capacity, and improved power, drainage and water services.
Our ability to solve technical challenges creatively, means we find ways of delivering complex civil structures with minimal disruption to the community and our customers' operations.
Our approach is clearly articulated in our Sustainability Policy.
We're about action not just aspiration. Our ambitious but achievable carbon reduction road-map will see us be operationally net zero by 2030, with 44 initiatives that are being progressively rolled out across the company. Last year we reduced our carbon emissions by 442 tonnes through the use of solar technologies alone, and diverted almost two million tonnes of waste from landfill.
McConnell Dowell has a long association delivering infrastructure projects in American Samoa and other Pacific Islands. Our project teams working in the islands become part of these close-knit communities and they often see opportunities for the team to give back to the locals they are working with.
In a reciprocal relationship the local people provide projects with talent for construction and we in turn look for substantial ways we can use machinery, materials or skills to benefit the local people in return.
Some of the community projects the team find most rewarding involve upgrading school facilities for local children. At Tafuna High School this meant responding to a request from the Parent Teachers Association to fix up the school’s drainage and create an access road to the carpark using McConnell Dowell-donated plant, labour and materials. Here you can see the drainage works well on their way and the access road starting to take shape.

We also supported the Pavaiai High School's aim to create an all weather assembly area by donating recycled millings and asphalt to the project. Before the resurfacing students had to sit on muddy grass when they gathered during bad weather. As you can see from the photos, they now have an area they can use to gather or play whatever the weather.

McConnell Dowell New Zealand (Aotearoa) offered two wāhine (women) Paige Leota and Leila Finau, the opportunity to attend Kia Tupu Kia Toa (To Grow to be Warriors), as part of our relationship with TupuToa.
We have been working with TupuToa since 2021 when our first Māori and Pacific graduates joined the programme and the inaugural Kia Tupu Kia Toa programme was launched in 2022.
The leadership programme Kia Tupu Kia Toa has been carefully co-designed with TupuToa Alumni and staff so the right voices are heard and contribute their insights to build robust learning outcomes. It was designed to extend Māori and Pasifika professionals in leadership roles or transitioning into a position with more responsibilities.
McConnell Dowell signed Paige and Leila up to the five wānanga (courses) over five months in late 2023.
To finalise and embed the learnings from the programme Paige and Leila with the other tauira (students) presented to their peers, tutors, invited quests, managers and whanau, about how the programme has helped them and its legacy in their lives.
Sullivan Halaifonua (shown on right) is the Co-Director of Vava’u Contracting, a Pasifika-owned earthmoving business, with his wife Sita. Most of their work is repeat business or via word-of-mouth recommendations and they learned about the opportunity at Corban Reserve through Sullivan’s younger brother Josiah Halaifonua, the Grade A Tunnel Supervisor on the project (shown on left).
When Sullivan and his team arrived at Corban Reserve, our Quantity Surveyor Kathrine Juab could see the potential for growth with the right help.
Kathrine introduced the husband-and-wife team to Amotai, an organisation that provides Māori and Pasifika businesses with connections to buyers committed to social procurement. As a member, Vava’u Contracting now has access to an extensive client directory, specialist resources to help gain new business, and networking opportunities online and in person.
As a founding member of Amotai, McConnell Dowell recognises the added social value of supplier diversity and the long-term benefits of social procurement to the project, community, and industry.
“‘Providing a better life’ has been at the heart of our operations, and we’re proud to be supporting businesses like Vava’u Contracting. By the end of the project, we are forecast to meet our broader social outcomes spend goal of $1,000,000,” says Kathrine.
Meet the Corbans team in the video below or find out more about the project scope here.
In partnership with Australian OEM, Black Stump Technologies, we have co-created the 'Solarator', a compact containerised power plant that combines solar panels, batteries and a small diesel generator.
Now being used on our project sites across Australia, the Solarators are scaleable in output and can reduce diesel consumption by up to 90% for our off-grid site facilities. Over a 10-year period the units will save over 8000 tonnes of carbon on our work sites.
The Solarators are available in a number of configurations, including ‘accordion style’ (where the panels unfold on frames) and solar-only (i.e. no diesel generator). The solar-only units can result in a carbon positive project site, with unused energy being exported to the grid.
In addition to their sustainability benefits, Solarators are quiet, low maintenance, compact, transportable and 'plug and play' in their set up.
You can't get many more wins than that!
Thank you for taking an interest in McConnell Dowell's skills, capabilities and approach. Additional information is available on our website, including additional project case studies.
Contact us through the link(s) below for advice or assistance with your project.