Results 1 to 10 of 23
-
March 28th, 2006 03:39 AM #1
Manila Times (Mar. 28)
Only in the Philippines. Even before the airport’s opening, part of the ceiling of the Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 3 collapsed Monday morning. Because of the incident, General Manager Alfonso Cusi postponed the March 31 opening of the airport.
“To ensure the safety of the planned test run, we are calling off the scheduled opening on Friday until we are fully assured of the safety not only of the affected area but of the entire terminal,” Cusi said.
Earlier, the Manila International Airport Authority had scheduled the test run with Cebu Pacific. The airline was supposed make inaugural flights to South Korea and to Hong Kong.
“We have already asked the contractor Takenaka Corp. of Japan to explain the circumstances behind the collapse,” Cusi said.
The collapsed ceiling measures 80 to 100 square meters and is at the northwest portion of the arrival area.
======================================
He-he! Langya......di pa nago-open, bumigay na NAIA 3. Bumagsak yung portion ng ceiling. Ano ginamit dito, substandard materials?
-
-
-
-
March 28th, 2006 04:12 AM #5
I am imagining the contractor's reply:
Office of the President took 10% of contract price.
Secretary of Finance took 10%.
DBM took 10%.
Senators took for 10%.
Congressmen took for 10%.
City Mayor took for 10%.
NAIA officials took 10%.
Travel expenses amounted to 10%.
Labor was around 10%.
Imagine what materials we could buy with the remaining 10%.
-
-
Tsikot Member Rank 3
- Join Date
- Jan 2006
- Posts
- 732
March 28th, 2006 04:25 AM #7Originally Posted by the_wildthing
-
March 28th, 2006 04:29 AM #8
Take note:
NAIA 3.....World Class DAW.
Bakit bumigay yung ceiling? He-he!
-
-
March 28th, 2006 08:01 AM #10
Originally Posted by chua_riwap
well, even the newly built French International Airport had problems. Part of its roof caved in. (not just the ceiling)
For a 7-seater under 1 million, the Suzuki Ertiga is definitely one of the best options — it’s...
Best car worth 1million and below