Skip to main content

Tougher roads

Designing structures and pavements to accommodate warmer weather and more extreme temperatures On October 22nd, IRF held a notable workshop on environmental protection and the impacts of climate change in Cordoba, Argentina, in conjunction with the XVI Argentine Congress of Road Administration and Traffic. The workshop addressed a topic of key concern to transportation planning and design professionals around the world. The discussion was animated by guest panellists Professor Ram M Pendyala and Gordon Rex
January 22, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
Professor Ram M Pendyala spoke at the IRF’s recent workshop on environmental protection and the impacts of climate change in Cordoba, Argentina

Designing structures and pavements to accommodate warmer weather and more extreme temperatures

On October 22nd, 3918 IRF Washington held a notable workshop on environmental protection and the impacts of climate change in Cordoba, Argentina, in conjunction with the XVI Argentine Congress of Road Administration and Traffic. The workshop addressed a topic of key concern to transportation planning and design professionals around the world. The discussion was animated by guest panellists Professor Ram M Pendyala and Gordon Rex Keller, PE.

With transport infrastructure increasingly tested by extreme weather events, highway engineers are increasingly been asked to correct vulnerabilities in the existing road network and factor changing weather patterns in the design of new roads.

Major transportation facilities fail, break down, and get disrupted in significant ways during extreme weather events – requiring that transportation engineers plan and design systems such that the infrastructure is both resilient and redundant. Resilience calls for the transportation system to recover rapidly from a disruption, while redundancy calls for the inclusion of back-up systems that can continue to provide service when some facilities break down. In particular, the transportation system should continue to serve the needs of people by facilitating evacuation, emergency services, relief supplies, and flow of goods even in the event of extreme conditions.

Many measures can be taken to lessen the impacts or reduce the risk of damage from severe storms occurring as a consequence of climate change. These include updating building codes to account for stronger events and larger floods and moving roads in vulnerable areas near coastlines, around lakes and along rivers. Other measures include ensuring that bridges and culverts have adequate capacity to accommodate major storm flows as well as debris or having redundant transportation routes and a good inventory of available roads. A final point is in designing structures and pavements to accommodate warmer weather and more extreme temperatures.

 For local and low-volume roads found all across Americana and dominantly throughout the world, many stormproofing measures can be taken to minimise the problem or reduce the risk of damage, particularly from drought induced fires with increased debris flows and sediment in drainages, and from intense storms and their related high stream flows. Fundamental risk reduction measures include good engineering design, considering the current local environment and the application of roads engineering best management practices, and effective road maintenance to ensure that roadway drainage measures are functioning properly.

 Implementation of storm damage risk reduction measures requires good planning, assessment of the risks involved, and prioritisation of the necessary work. Funds will always be limited, so the highest risk sites must be identified.

It is important to collect data about the performance of the transportation system under different conditions, and then use that data to inform plans, policies, and designs. This helps ensure that the transportation infrastructure can be made to withstand global climate change impacts. In addition, engineers and policy makers need to address the contributors to global climate change. This can be aided by adopting strategies and deploying tools that would reduce greenhouse gas emissions, fossil fuel consumption, and other transportation-induced activity that has adverse environmental and energy impacts on the sustainability of cities and communities.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Concern over decline in Europe’s road safety
    March 31, 2016
    An increase in road fatalities and serious injuries has been recorded for 2015. This has become clear following the publication of the European Commission’s 2015 provisional road safety figures. The data reveals an increase in fatalities compared to the previous year. And even in 2014, there was only a 0.6% reduction, and it had been the first year for some time without a significant drop in deaths and injuries. This stagnation means that the EU is further away from its goal of halving road deaths by 2020.
  • Pavement preservation techniques
    February 16, 2012
    In this second article of a three-part series on pavement preservation, Alan S. Kercher, of Kercher Engineering, discusses the different techniques that can be utilised as part of the preservation toolbox
  • Pavement preservation techniques
    April 12, 2012
    In this second article of a three-part series on pavement preservation, Alan S. Kercher, of Kercher Engineering, discusses the different techniques that can be utilised as part of the preservation toolbox An agency should utilise a comprehensive preservation toolbox that includes various techniques, which can be applied to specific needs. There is no one technique that will cost-effectively address all pavement problems. However, there are many preservation techniques that can provide an agency with the ab
  • EAPA’s 10th Symposium: sustainability and communication issues
    July 19, 2017
    Sustainability and the highways sector’s image issue were two major themes at the 10th symposium of the European Asphalt Paving Association in Paris. Margo Cole reports. Sustainability was explicit or implicit in many presentations during EAPA’s biennial symposium for the paving supply chain. The industry feels that sustainability is its home territory, thanks to an already good – and getting even better - record of recycling of materials. But do buyers and users of roads realise that the design and contrac