Skip to main content

International Workshop on Asphalt Recycling Technologies returns to Aachen

Event will take place on September 8 and 9 this year
By Liam McLoughlin June 19, 2025 Read time: 3 mins
The event takes place at the Tivoli Business & Event Area in Aachen, Germany on September 8 and 9

Following the enormous success of the inaugural International Workshop on Asphalt Recycling Technologies event last year, the Institute of Highway Engineering (Institut für Straßenwesen – ISAC) at RWTH Aachen, is returning this year with the second in this series of events.

The event takes place at the Tivoli Business & Event Area in Aachen on September 8 and 9.

The Institute of Highway Engineering says the response to the first event clearly underscored the particular importance of the dialog between experts in this forward-looking field. Participants from across the industry, including highway construction engineers, institutional decision-makers, research scientists from technical universities, and other professionals from the road construction sector, showed enormous interest throughout the course of the event and subsequently responded to the practice-based workshop with positive feedback.

The Institute comments: "After all, they were in full agreement that sustainable road construction is one of the biggest challenges of our times. Innovative recycling technologies are crucial to the achievement of sustainability in this field and offer enormous potential for all parties involved in the road construction process. Today, a change in thinking throughout the road construction industry can already lead to the use of large volumes of reclaimed asphalt pavement material (RAP) and considerable reductions in terms of costs and CO2 emissions."

The 2nd International Workshop will once again set the focus on the topic of asphalt recycling and provide insights into existing and successfully implemented methods and processes. The workshop will also be presenting methods and technologies that already have a proven track record in practice. The potential applications of these will be discussed on the basis of facts and figures and the latest case studies.

Discussions will cover the environmentally friendly aspects of cold in-situ recycling, road rehabilitation with in-situ recycled asphalt, cold in-plant recycling, cost/benefit analyses and application technologies. In the case of hot in-plant recycling, the focus will be on the issues of energy-efficiency, the sustainable use of resources, and quality assurance in asphalt production.

Processes in the area of cold recycling must be standardized, and existing hot recycling processes must be improved. There is still undeveloped potential in these fields.

The practice-oriented program will include presentations of the latest scientific and application-specific developments by specialists from the various fields of interest. On the topic of cold recycling methods and processes, Brian K. Diefenderfer, PhD., P.E. will be giving a talk on the current status of asphalt recycling in the USA and future solutions. Diefenderfer is one of the world’s leading experts in this field. The civil engineer has been head of the research department at the Virginia Department of Transportation for the past 21 years. His take on the subject: “Cold recycling enables faster and more sustainable road pavement rehabilitation with considerably lower costs.”

Martin Hugener, PhD, will be giving a talk on the challenges and current technologies in the field of hot recycling in asphalt mixing plants. He is an active researcher in the Asphalt and Concrete laboratory at EMPA Materials Science Technology in Switzerland, specialized in bituminous binders and road materials since 1993.

The event will be moderated by the two experts, Kim Jenkins, Professor in Pavement Engineering at Stellenbosch University in South Africa, and Martin van der Ven from TU Delft, Netherlands.

If you wish to attend this international specialist workshop, visit the following website and register by August 1: www.art2025.net.

The website also provides further information about the event program. The event will be held in English.

Related Content

  • Onsite asphalt recycling
    December 15, 2020
    Equipment from Ammann has played a key role in renovating a section of the N2 highway in Switzerland
  • The DURABROADS project targets safer mobility
    April 2, 2014
    The innovative DURABROADS project will help deliver a sustained reduction of fatalities in the long term, writes the ERF’s José Diez In 2012, Europe recorded the lowest number of fatalities since the first data were collected. All in all, fatalities were down by 9% in 2012, which means that 3,000 lives were saved that year. Should the current pace continue, we can be confident that the ambitious objective of reducing fatalities by 50% by 2020, compared to 2010, will be reached. To achieve the goals of
  • ERF: LCE4ROADS for sustainability during road construction
    March 28, 2017
    LCE4ROADS is a new certificate assessing sustainability during road construction and rehabilitation Statistics have just been released showing that 2016 was the hottest year in history and reinforcing the concern that climate change is starting to have a real impact on our society. Adaptation to climate change is becoming an ever growing priority for the road infrastructure sector which is looking for new ways to conduct its construction and maintenance operations in a more environmentally friendly ma
  • Europe's roads need innovation and research
    February 28, 2012
    FEHRL's fifth SERRP is set to drive road transport into the 21st century