Skip to main content

Breathing Ecological Roads – GRAA winner

The IRF office in Washington has presented an award to revolutionary ecological permeable pavement that helps avoid heat islands Climate specialists and town planners everywhere are increasingly aware of the thermal impacts of city pavements which trap heat on hot summer days, and are known as “urban heat islands”. These heat islands can adversely impact the sustainability of cities by increasing the dependence on mechanical cooling. Permeable pavements, such as porous asphalt, offer some relief but typi
May 10, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
The breathable road has won a GRAA award from IRF Global for its innovative engineering
The 8781 Washington-based IRF Global has presented an award to revolutionary ecological permeable pavement that helps avoid heat islands


Climate specialists and town planners everywhere are increasingly aware of the thermal impacts of city pavements which trap heat on hot summer days, and are known as “urban heat islands”. These heat islands can adversely impact the sustainability of cities by increasing the dependence on mechanical cooling. Permeable pavements, such as porous asphalt, offer some relief but typically provide weak load-bearing strength and require more frequent and costly maintenance due to clogging over time.

One of the most promising innovations to emerge in recent years is the JW Eco-Technology which overcomes drawbacks of traditional engineered pavements by combining load-bearing, high water permeability, high air permeability, high water storage, carbon and dust capture properties. In fact, an estimated 50% of vehicle exhaust pollutants in car emissions can be trapped through the use of pervious pavements.

JW Eco-Technology effectively converts roads into water sources with air circulation, such that pavements can form the basis for a natural underground ecosystem, whilst preserving higher compressive strength than traditional concrete with an expected life span of more than 30 years.

Tiny holes connect the surface of the pavement to water pipes made from recycled plastic and reinforced with concrete. A bed of gravel beneath acts to filter water, which flows into a storage tank for rainwater, and is drained through underground pipes much like a hidden river under the road.  

This system, currently used in hundreds of towns across Asia, also filters carbon dioxide and other pollutants from air and rain water using the same absorption properties.  All materials and labour can be taken and utilised locally, and the concrete construction process is widely used in the industry.

According to inventor Jui-Wen Chen, Chairman of Ding Tai Co. “Once JW pavements are deployed on a large scale, a city’s streets become a living sponge contributing to an active local ecosystem. We thus offer new weapons to confront the challenges of climate change.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Colas develops novel chip seal solutions
    August 23, 2013
    Colas has been working on new chip seal solutions for high traffic roads using bitumen emulsions. Technical director Christine Deneuvillers presented the company’s new range of Colas High Traffic chip seals to the 2013 FEHRL Infrastructure Research Meeting (FIRM13) in Brussels in June this year. Although chip seal is used on main roads in France, its most common application is on rural roads, said Deneuvillers. But today’s financial restraints mean that techniques such as chipseal, which can help exten
  • PPRS: smarter, more sophisticated asset management is needed
    March 27, 2018
    Highway organisations around the world will need ever-more sophisticated frameworks to ensure their asset management is up-to-date and fit-for-purpose. Jacques Tavernier, chairman of PPRS Nice 2018, and Claude van Rooten, president of PIARC, the World Road Association emphasised the point at at this week’s Pavement Preservations and Recycling Summit. A nation’s roads are its first and most important “main asset … essential for a country’s economic, social and environmental development”, said van Roote
  • Eberspaecher is now offering innovative air-conditioning technology
    January 6, 2017
    German heating and climate control equipment specialist Eberspaecher is offering new thermal management products for construction vehicles. The innovations include a new generation of operating elements as well as air outlets and the high performance Ebercool X-Treme roof top air conditioner. In addition, the company is showing an integrated heating and climate control module for the driver’s cab. Simple and robust, the new EasyStart Select features a straightforward design and this operating element for ai
  • Eberspaecher is now offering innovative air-conditioning technology
    March 27, 2013
    German heating and climate control equipment specialist Eberspaecher is offering new thermal management products for construction vehicles. The innovations include a new generation of operating elements as well as air outlets and the high performance Ebercool X-Treme roof top air conditioner. In addition, the company is showing an integrated heating and climate control module for the driver’s cab. Simple and robust, the new EasyStart Select features a straightforward design and this operating element for ai