Skip to main content

The Italian Asphaltica event will relocate to Verona

Italian asphalt and road association fights economic downturn with plans to relocate the Italian asphalt industry’s leading show, Asphaltica, to Verona. The Asphaltica show is to relocate from Padua to Verona, in Italy for the next event in 2014. Italian asphalt and road association SITEB signed an agreement with exhibition company VeronaFiere in the week leading up to this year’s show, held between 21 and 23 November. Details of the deal have yet to be worked out. SITEB’s agreement with PadovaFiere to hol
November 23, 2012 Read time: 3 mins

Italian asphalt and road association fights economic downturn with plans to relocate the Italian asphalt industry’s leading show, Asphaltica, to Verona

The 160 Asphaltica show is to relocate from Padua to Verona, in Italy for the next event in 2014. Italian asphalt and road association 6921 SITEB signed an agreement with exhibition company VeronaFiere in the week leading up to this year’s show, held  between 21 and 23 November. Details of the deal have yet to be worked out.

SITEB’s agreement with 6327 PadovaFiere to hold the show in Padua comes to an end shortly, as the original deal signed in 2003 covered six exhibitions. The next Asphaltica will run in February 2014, it is though within in a pavilion, as part of the bigger earthmoving and construction plant show 323 Samoter.

Moving Asphaltica makes sense for SITEB and its 300 members, who cover all aspects of the asphalt industry, not least for commercial reasons. Since both Samoter and Asphaltica were due to be held in 2014, some exhibitors would have been forced to choose between the two had they continued to be in different locations.

SITEB director Stefano Ravaioli said that relocating to Verona would also help to attract more international exhibitors and visitors. The tough economic situation faced by asphalt-related companies in their home market in Italy was underlined by the size of the 2012 Asphaltica show – half that of previous events.

“When we created Asphaltica, Padua was a good venue because it was a small exhibition,” said Ravaioli. “Now we want to internationalise this exhibition, we need a different exhibition centre,”

Asphaltica must also provide a strong platform for the industry’s players to make the case to government and other clients for asphalt roads, said Ravaioli. Asphalt is under attack from concrete roads, with proponents of concrete claiming that it is a more sustainable solution, something with Ravaoili refutes.

“If you look at the life cycle assessments of the two materials, you will find that hot mix asphalt produces less pollution than concrete,” said Ravaoli. Life cycle assessments look at the environmental impact of a material over its whole life, and since bitumen is by-product of the oil refining  process, using it in roads is a positive use of a ‘waste’ product.

Rising bitumen prices, as more and more of Italy’s ageing refineries are closed, also adds weight to concrete’s argument. But Ravaoili said that specifiers should consider the logistical benefits of asphalt which is quicker and easier to lay than concrete and can take traffic much sooner.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Bauma exhibition is equipment launching ground
    April 3, 2013
    The huge bauma 2013 construction equipment exhibition due in April of this year will be the biggest ever at the site in Munich, Germany. This event will pack even more exhibitors onto the city’s former airport site, with a record number of visitors also expected. Some 3,256 exhibitors are booked for the show, which will be the 30th bauma construction machinery event and will cover a record 555,000m2. Major technical innovations will be highlighted and with the Stage IV/Tier 4 Final emissions regulations due
  • Hillhead welcomes back industry favourites
    September 13, 2023
    The UK biennial equipment exhibition Hillhead 2024 will take place at Tarmac’s Hillhead Quarry, near Buxton in England in June.
  • Advances in bitumen technology: new applications
    February 16, 2022
    This month, we look at four very different pavement technologies in four very different applications
  • Researchers trial 3D printing for both concrete and asphalt roads
    February 27, 2019
    Automated road repairs, using 3D printing, could save money and vastly reduce disruption, and researchers are already showing it’s possible - Kristina Smith reports It’s the middle of the night, and in the street below a team is busy carrying out repairs to the road surface. But there isn’t a human in sight. A road repair drone has landed at the site of a crack and a 3D asphalt printer is now busy filling in that crack. A group of traffic cone drones have positioned themselves around the repair location