World’s largest pit thermal storage in Vojens
In Vojens, Denmark, a 200,000 m³ pit thermal storage basin stores surplus solar heat from a 70,000 m² collector field. Using Solmax geosynthetics, the system reduces CO₂ emissions by 6,000 tons annually.

The Incheon Grand Bridge is a major project that connects Incheon International Airport with Songdo City in the Incheon Free Economic Zone. Instead of using heavy marine equipment to build the bridge piers over open water, an alternative solution was proposed. It involved constructing an artificial island reclaimed from the sea as a temporary platform for the construction process. This option proved to be more cost-effective than alternatives like sheet piles or rock levees.
For constructing the edge levees that formed the temporary platform, GEOTUBE® GT1000 was chosen. The GEOTUBE containers used varied in diameter (3 m [9.8 ft], 4 m [13.1 ft], and 5 m [16.4 ft]) and length (15 m [49.2 ft] to 60 m [196.9 ft]). They were stacked in tiers, reaching a height of approximately 7 m [23 ft] above the soft estuarial deposits. The tubes were installed below sea level, about -1.0 m [-3.3 ft] at the shallow end and -2.8 m [-9.2 ft] at the deeper end. In total, over 14 km [8.7 miles] of GEOTUBE engineered tubes were used.
The tubes were filled with sand, which was delivered by barges to the construction sites. The sand was mixed with seawater to create a slurry and pumped into the GEOTUBE containers. The space within the tubes was then filled with residual soil to complete the platform.
GEOTUBE installation began in April 2006, and at the peak of construction, three installation equipment set-ups were used to fill three tubes simultaneously. By the end of 2006, the full 14 km [8.7 miles] of filled tubes was completed ahead of schedule and within budget.

Incheon Grand Bridge: Constructing Artificial Island

Incheon Grand Bridge: Constructing Artificial Island
Incheon Grand Bridge: Constructing Artificial Island

Incheon Grand Bridge: Constructing Artificial Island
Incheon Grand Bridge: Constructing Artificial Island
World’s largest pit thermal storage in Vojens
In Vojens, Denmark, a 200,000 m³ pit thermal storage basin stores surplus solar heat from a 70,000 m² collector field. Using Solmax geosynthetics, the system reduces CO₂ emissions by 6,000 tons annually.
Reinforced soil walls maximizing urban developable land
Geocomposite-reinforced soil walls totaling 1,385 m supported land formation at Eco Botanic City, providing stable retaining walls, efficient drainage, and the use of local backfill while maximizing developable land on a constrained urban site.
Pit thermal energy storage in Gram, Denmark
In Gram, Denmark, a 122,000 m³ pit thermal energy storage with a 44,800 m² solar collector field provides 18,000 MWh of heat annually. Solmax geosynthetics ensure safe high-temperature storage and reduce CO₂ emissions by 3,700 tons per year.