Capability Statement

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May 2026

Ports & Coastal Solutions

Ports & Coastal Solutions

With over 330 marine projects completed across six decades, McConnell Dowell is synonymous with marine infrastructure.

From wharves and jetties to ocean outfalls, breakwaters, and submarine pipelines — we bring coastal confidence to every project.

Our modular approach to construction has helped create productive ports for clients like Rio Tinto, FMG, Vale, and BHP, where over 1.2 billion tonnes of iron ore are shipped annually from wharves we built.

PT Saipem Indonesia Design and Construct Bintuni Bay, Indonesia

Tangguh Marine Works

We delivered the marine works for BP’s LNG expansion project in Tangguh, located in the remote area of Bintuni Bay in West Papua. Our customer, PT Saipem Indonesia, was part of an EPC joint venture involving Chiyoda-Saipem -Tritati -SAE.

The overall expansion project comprised a full additional natural gas liquefaction train, including an onshore receiving facility (ORF), an additional Boil of Gas (BOG) recovery, utilities, flares, and all infrastructure to support the facility.

Fast Facts

  • A 1056 m long access trestle, including decks for the control room, substation and sea water intake
  • 29 m x 42.5 m loading platform
  • 4 breasting dolphins
  • 6 mooring dolphins
Tangguh Marine Works
BCI Minerals Early Contractor Involvement Pilbara, Western Australia

Mardie Salt & Potash Marine Structures

Delivering new marine facilities to grow Australian exports

We designed and constructed the marine structures for BCI Minerals’ Mardie Salt & Potash Project in Western Australia, using our innovative canti-traveller system for speed and low impact delivery.

The 'Mardie' Project is a large-scale, solar evaporation operation on the Pilbara coast. Capacity of the completed facility is estimated to be 5.35 million tonnes per annum of high purity salt and 140,000 tonnes per annum of sulphate of potash, over an operating life of at least 60 years.

Fast Facts

  • 2.4 km long jetty with berthing and mooring dolphins
  • 200 steel piles, up to 30 metres long
  • 100 m of jetty completed every 10 days using innovative canti-traveller system
Mardie Salt & Potash Marine Structures
Petronas EPCC Tanjung Setapa, Malaysia

Petronas RAPID Project 12B – Solid Products Jetty

We designed, constructed and commissioned a new jetty and associated handling facilities for Petronas, as part of their RAPID (refinery and petrochemical integrated development) project in Malaysia.

The main element of our scope was a Solid Products Handling Jetty, comprising of a 1300 m long trestle, 710 m long jetty head, two container berths and a sulphur loading berth.

Fast Facts

  • 1300 m long trestle with 710 m long jetty head
  • Two container berths and a sulphur loading berth
  • Topside and landside materials handling system
  • Onshore civil and building works
Petronas RAPID Project 12B – Solid Products Jetty
Rio Tinto Design and Construct Weipa, Far North Queensland

Chith Export Facility

We revolutionised the design and construction of large-scale marine infrastructure when we delivered the Chith Export Facility - a large, complex and remotely located project for Rio Tinto at their Amrun bauxite mine, south of Weipa in Far North Queensland.

The facility comprises a 650 m access jetty, a 350 m loading wharf and an onshore conveyor system. Innovatively designed by Jacobs and constructed by us in just 10 months, modularisation was at the heart of the solution and our project team took it to new levels in scale and breadth.

Fast Facts

  • 650 m access jetty
  • 350 m long loading wharf
  • Fully modularised construction approach
  • 300,000 job-hours saved
  • Build time reduced by 12 months to just 10 months
  • Capital expenditure reduced by $40M
Chith Export Facility
BHP Mitsubishi Alliance Early Contractor Involvement Mackay, Queensland

Shiploader and Berth Replacement, Hay Point

Improving throughput and cyclonic wave immunity

We completed the main berth construction scope for BHP Mitsubishi Alliance's (BMA) SABR Project, using the Early Contractor Involvement process to develop a number of innovations.

SABR, short for 'Shiploader and Berth 2 Replacement', was a brownfields project located within the lease boundaries of BMA's existing Hay Point Coal Terminal near Mackay, Queensland. It included the disassembly and replacement of one of the existing shiploaders and berths to improve materials handling throughput and cyclonic wave immunity.

Fast Facts

  • Off-site fabrication of new berth topside modules
  • On-site preparatory works including modification of existing concrete caisson berth foundations
  • Disassembly and removal of existing berth and ship loader
  • Installation of new berth modules, tie-in and commissioning
  • Installation of new ship loader.
Shiploader and Berth Replacement, Hay Point
Samsung C&T Design & Construct Port Hedland, Western Australia

Roy Hill Iron Ore Project (Marine Works)

As part of the $10 billion Roy Hill Iron Ore project, we designed and constructed the Stanley Point Iron Ore Terminal at Port Hedland. We used substantial prefabrication and our innovative temporary works system for low impact, high productivity construction.

Our scope consisted of a two berth iron ore load out wharf, connected with a 3600 m long elevated road and overland conveyor to the ore stockyard. In addition to the wharf and the overland conveyor, we delivered an abutment, drive stations, three transfer stations and all SMPE&I works.

Fast Facts

  • Two berth load out wharf
  • 800 m long wharves
  • 30,000 T design and supply steelwork
  • 4.5 km of conveyor steelwork
  • 3,600 m elevated road and conveyor
  • Prefabrication to increase safety and savings to client
Roy Hill Iron Ore Project (Marine Works)
Vale SA Design and Construct Perak, Malaysia

Vale Malaysia Manufacturing Project (VMMP)

In joint venture with BAM Malaysia and SYS Sdn Bhd, we designed and constructed the marine facilities for Vale's Malaysia Manufacturing Project (VMMP).

The berthing facilities cater for the world’s largest bulk carriers, the 400,000 DWT VLOC (also known as ValeMax. Approx. Length 360 m x Width 65 m, Draft: 24 m).

Fast Facts

  • Precast Concrete: Quantity - 70,000 m3 / 9500 units / max weight/unit - 120 tonne
  • In-situ Concrete: Quantity - 50,000 m3
  • Steel Piles: Quantity - 902 piles / diameter up to 1950 mm / length up to 125 m
Vale Malaysia Manufacturing Project (VMMP)
First Gen EPC Batangas, Philippines

Batangas LNG Terminal

FGEN LNG Corporation (FGEN) engaged us to build and deliver the Interim Offshore Terminal Project ("IOT Project") at their LNG terminal in Batangas, in the Philippines.

We undertook the engineering, procurement and construction of both the Multi-Purpose Jetty and Onshore Gas Receiving Facility. The new Multiple Purpose Jetty is a permanent modification of the existing liquid fuel jetty which we constructed in 1998.

Fast Facts

  • New multi-purpose jetty with topside infrastructure
  • Onshore facilities, including control room
  • 24 inch, 1.3 km long high pressure gas pipeline
  • Extensive earthworks, including tsunami bund wall and access road
Batangas LNG Terminal
Fortescue Metals Group (FMG) Design and Construct Pilbara, Western Australia

FMG Berths 1-4

At the height of the Australian resources boom (2004-2014), we became the marine partner of choice for Fortescue Metals Group (FMG), as they developed the infrastructure to support their new iron ore export business.

Fast Facts

  • 4 major wharves completed over 5 years
  • Berth 1: 270 m wharf, 100 m approach jetty, load-out conveyor
  • Berth 2: 400 m wharf and extension to load-out conveyor
  • Berth 3: 375 m wharf, duplicate load-out system
  • Berth 4: 415 m wharf, elevated conveyor system
FMG Berths 1-4
Port of Melbourne Design and Construct Melbourne, Victoria

Port Capacity Project - Webb Dock

Enhancing and expanding Australia's busiest container port

We received the Australian construction industry's highest accolade for this major wharf redevelopment within Melbourne's main port precinct.

This was a large and complex marine project delivered within Australia's busiest operational container port, and within very tight environmental controls to protect the rich marine life within the surrounding bay.

Fast Facts

  • 900 tubular steel piles up to 1500 mm diameter and 45 m long driven as single length piles.
  • 40,000 m³ of structural concrete.
  • 10,000 tonnes of reinforcing steel.
  • 40,000 m of sheet pile installation.
  • 210,000 tonnes of imported quarry product.
  • 15,000 m³ of rehabilitated concrete deck.
Port Capacity Project - Webb Dock
PT. Petro Storindo Energy Engineer, Procure and Construct Sangatta, Kalimantan, Indonesia

Sangatta Offshore Works

We were engaged to design and construct an eight-dolphin berthing facility, a pipeline end manifold (PLEM), and a new diesel supply pipeline for PT Petro Storindo Energy - a joint-venture between Oiltanking, BP and Kaltim Prima Coal.

Our scope of work included the dolphin mooring system (4 berthing and 4 mooring dolphins); a 3 km long, 20 inch diameter subsea/onshore pipeline; a subsea control unit; a PLEM (Pipeline End Manifold); a PIG Launcher and onshore PIG receiver; and miscellaneous pumps and tanks for the fuel supply. The line terminates at a diesel storage terminal that supports the operations of the Kaltim Prima Coal mine.

Fast Facts

  • 4 berthing and 4 mooring dolphins
  • Pipeline End Manifold (PLEM)
  • 3 km long, 20 inch diameter subsea and onshore pipeline
Sangatta Offshore Works
BHP Design and Construct Pilbara, Western Australia

Rapid Growth Projects (RGP 5&6) - Marine Works

During the Australian resources boom (2004-2014), BHP challenged us to design and construct two new iron export wharves on a fast tracked program to support their rapid growth program (RGP) initiative.

To meet the challenge, while delivering safely and to a high quality, we broke new ground in large-scale marine modularisation, making it central to our construction approach.

Fast Facts

  • 1650 m of new wharfing constructed over 2 projects
  • Over 600 steel piles installed
  • 30 berthing dolphins constructed
  • 500 tonne wharf modules lifted into position by heavy lift ship
  • 350 person peak workforce
  • 7% indigenous employment
Rapid Growth Projects (RGP 5&6) - Marine Works
South32 Construct Only Groote Eylandt, Northern Territory

Groote Eylandt GEMCO Wharf

One of Australia’s most ambitious marine recovery efforts

Following a destructive tropical cyclone, we were engaged by South32 to urgently restore and rebuild the cyclone-damaged GEMCO Wharf on Groote Eylandt. In less than 12 months, our project team achieved a major milestone—restarting operations after an intense and fast-tracked program of works.

To meet the challenge, we mobilised a sophisticated marine fleet from across Australia, Singapore, and the UAE. This included two large jack-up barges (Santa Fe and Pauline), two smaller jack-ups (Sealift 2 and Sealift 6), a 250-tonne crane barge, three flattop storage barges, and a support fleet of tugs and work punts. The mobilisation alone was a feat of logistics, setting the stage for a highly coordinated recovery effort.

Fast Facts

  • Fast-track salvage and wharf rebuild
  • 1037 tonnes of concrete and 998 tonnes of steel recovered from the seabed
  • 28 new piles and 13 large prefabricated steel units installed
Groote Eylandt GEMCO Wharf
Creative Construction

Creative Construction


Creative Construction at McConnell Dowell is the inspired engineering behind the complex infrastructure we deliver.

It's the technical problems and challenges solved behind the scenes by people empowered to think creatively and work collaboratively. It’s the alternative idea or innovation that saves time, reduces cost, makes us safer, and delivers more value. 

It might not always be evident when you look at the end product, but it's there, inside every McConnell Dowell project.

World first wharf modularisation

World first wharf modularisation

We helped revolutionise the design and construction approach for large-scale marine infrastructure on Rio Tinto's Chith Export Facility project in remote Far North Queensland.

The 350m wharf structure was split into seven, first-of-a-kind ‘jacket’ modules (the substructure) and six topside modules. Weighing approximately 680 tonnes each and standing 30m high, the jacket modules, with integrated dolphins, reduced the number of permanent wharf piles required from 100 to just 28, minimising environmental impact to marine life – a core focus for the Chith Export Facility team.

The wharf topside modules, placed on the jackets, ranged from 600 to 1400 tonnes and were fabricated complete with all services, conveyors, concrete roadways and access walkways.

In true ‘plug and play’ fashion, the modules were delivered and installed by a heavy-lift ship in a safe, clean and efficient operation.

The project, completed in just 10 months, was awarded the Australian Construction Achievement Award by Engineers Australia and the Brunel Medal by the Institute of Civil Engineers (UK).

Bringing gaming technology to marine construction

Bringing gaming technology to marine construction

Our digital engineering team are experts at building applications using 'Unreal Engine' -  one of the world's most advanced 3D graphics game engines.

We've used Unreal to develop a traffic simulation tool to test temporary traffic management schemes before rollout, and simulated construction works in an operational airport with AI driven crowd behaviours. 

The team's most recent application is a powerful marine construction simulator - fully developed in-house. The simulator combines intelligent 3D plant models and reality capture data to accurately place marine plant in a virtual environment and replicate its real-world capabilities. 

The tool enables our teams to simulate methodologies and iterate the positioning of plant and equipment around the design models. This is all done in a realistic environment with features such as accurate bathymetric data, reality capture point-cloud models, and real-world tide levels.  

The permanent works build sequence can be tested to ensure we avoid clashes during construction. Plant and equipment is programmed with its real-world performance and dynamic constraints to enable equipment limitations to be established and enabling features such as crane hook capacity to be determined in real-time.

We are leading the industry in simulation -  identifying and mitigating constructability issues during the design phase, driving program and cost certainty for our customers.

Barge Sim cropped

Cantilever traveller - innovative temporary works

Cantilever traveller - innovative temporary works

Our 'Canti-Traveller' is a purpose-built temporary mobile platform that facilitates fast, safe, low-impact construction of piled marine jetties and piers.

The innovative system, designed and fabricated by our in-house team, provides a platform for progressively installing new piles, propelling itself along the new jetty alignment using hydraulics. 

A piling gate fixed to the front of the Traveller allows pitching and driving of piles in a vertical position. If required it can be used to install raking piles using the gate’s hydraulics.  The piling gate also provides a working platform for cutting piles and welding headstocks.  Bent spacing can extend to 27 m, and it has a system for changing direction. The traveller supports a 450 tonne crawler crane, if required.

One of the primary advantages of the Canti-Traveller is its minimal ecological impact, not touching the earth except for the permanent piles it both drives and sits atop. Removing the need for marine-borne plant, it also operates independently of marine conditions, offering significant program and cost certainty.  This makes the Canti-traveller particularly effective in design and construct projects where the program can be optimized for maximum efficiency. 

We have a proven track record of successful installations in environmentally sensitive areas and a reputation for delivering safe, efficient, marine solutions for our customers. The Canti-Traveller reinforces our leadership in marine innovation and construction. 

Click on the video to see the Canti-Traveller in action (Hint: It's yellow!). Click here for a more detailed specification.

Award-winning innovation for safer working over water

Award-winning innovation for safer working over water

In marine environments, where the margin for error is razor-thin, temporary works aren’t mere enablers—they’re foundational to safe, efficient delivery.

Take the Swanson Dock upgrade at the Port of Melbourne. Our temporary works team engineered an innovative fender access platform, earning the a WorkSafe Victoria award for “Best Solution to a Specific Workplace Health and Safety Issue” 

Here’s what set it apart:

  • Comprehensive access with one setup – The platform spanned 15 × 4 m and included removable mid‑level decks, enabling seamless access to all faces of the fender beams—front, soffit, and rear—for hydro-demolition, rebar replacement, and gunite spraying.
  • Spatial efficiency in live operations – Designed to work within a daily operation window on the busiest container terminal in Australia, the platform kept works tightly within a small footprint.
  • Reusability factors in long-term value – Not a one-off rig—it was engineered to be reusable for future fender rehabilitation works, reducing waste and delivering cost efficiencies over time.
  • Award-level impact – The solution directly addressed specific HSE risks of working over water, giving our crews a safer, more controlled environment to complete high-risk tasks without compromise.

Why Temporary Works Matter

  1. Prioritising safety at early design stages – Proactively engineering safe access platforms significantly diminishes risk in live marine settings.

  2. Driving productivity through better access – Easier, safer access means faster cycle times and fewer quay-side delays.

  3. Enabling precise engineering works – Demolition, rebar placement, and spraying all demand stable, safe working environments—temporary works deliver just that.

  4. Promoting sustainability and reuse – Modular, reusable temporary works not only save time but also cut embodied carbon across projects.

By spotlighting temporary works as a core part of project delivery—not an afterthought—we’re reshaping how marine construction tackles safety, efficiency, and sustainability.

 
Low impact marine construction

Low impact marine construction

On the Granite Island Causeway Project in South Australia our team used the 'hand over hand' construction method to minimise environmental impacts and ensure delivery on time.

The 'hand over hand' method employs three concurrent work fronts:

  • Front one installing the permanent piles
  • Front two installing the grouted HDPE sleeves and the precast headstocks
  • Front three installing the precast longitudinal girders and decks. 

As the structure advances out into the water it acts as a construction platform for the work crews to build the next stage. Each work front takes a similar duration, ensuring maximum certainty in productivity and schedule.  

Analysis was conducted on various construction approaches during the tender phase, including the use of jack-up barges or a temporary bridge structure to facilitate construction. However, the 'hand over hand' method was the only one capable of achieving completion by the target date. 

The other benefit of the method is its minimal footprint. Minimising the impact on the sensitive marine environment was a key consideration during the tender and design phases of the project. 

The adoption of the method, along with the use of precast prestressed deck units which pushed the span out as far as possible, minimised the number of pile driving operations further reducing the impact on the marine environment.  

The design and construction methodology was fit-for-purpose and extremely efficient. It resulted in on time and on budget completion and had a low impact on Victor Harbor's rich marine ecology.  

A 'whale of a time' with noise attenuation

A 'whale of a time' with noise attenuation

On the Granite Island Causeway project in South Australia, our team designed and implemented a "shroud and bubble curtain" to stop marine piling noise from disturbing the Southern Right Whale (SRW) and other marine fauna, such as the Australian sea lion and little penguins.

Prior to the solution being developed and approved, a local whale protection group strongly objected to piling occurring during whale season, which had the potential to impact the project's schedule and budget.

The bubble curtain was designed to reduce the noise levels by scattering, absorption, reflection, and refraction of the sound waves. The curtain design, along with some other piling modifications, gave sufficient confidence for federal approval under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act for piling during the whale season.

Linked barges to minimise environmental impact

Linked barges to minimise environmental impact

Our marine engineering specialists are always on the lookout for ways to minimise the impact of our works on sensitive environments, and a recent example comes from the New Bridgewater Bridge Project in Tasmania.

The project involves a new 1,300 m long bridge built across the River Derwent. The bridge is being erected from a temporary access platform, which crosses shallow tidal mudflats that have significant environmental, cultural and heritage importance. The temporary access platform allows continuous access for delivery and lifting of segments along the bridge alignment

The initial design for the temporary access platform included piles, but this approach was deemed to have significant environmental, cost and program impacts.

So an alternate and innovative construction methodology was developed by our marine specialists.

While the shallow tidal mudflats prevented the use of floating crane barges, interconnected barges placed on the seabed form the basis of the solution.

Standard (flat-top, 55 m long) barges have been floated into position at high tide, trimmed and ballasted down onto the mud flats. The barges are connected using specifically designed link bridges, allowing movement of equipment over a total length of about 800 m.

The innovative design caters for critical issues such as differential settlement of the very soft muds under cyclic loads; dynamic lifting loads; and load sharing between barges. Specific lift plans have been developed to address key risks during erection.

The linked barges design provides a safe and cost-effective solution while minimising the impact of construction activities on the environmentally sensitive mudflats. After the barges have been removed the mudflats are expected to recover completely. The barges and link bridges can also be re-used on other marine projects, unlike the original piled solution.

Specialist marine plant

Specialist marine plant

Elevate your marine construction potential

As a leading marine contractor, we bring deep expertise and a legacy of inventive construction to every project. Our fleet of specialist marine plant - including jack-up barges, support vessels, and our custom-designed ‘traveller’ piling system - reflects our commitment to smarter, safer, and more sustainable delivery.

Our equipment is also available for short, medium, or long-term hire. Explore the profiles below to see how our assets can support your next marine challenge.

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Summary

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.