Skip to main content

PPRS: action needed now on US bridges

More than 9% of major highway bridges in the US are “rated structurally deficient” and in need of “urgent attention”, according to Bud Wright, chief executive of AASHTO, the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. Action is needed now. In a recent infrastructure report, AASHTO reported that the US has just over 614,000 road bridges, 25% of which are 50 or more years older. Also, around 56,000 - 9.1% - of them are now structurally deficient. This is a shocking and growing
March 27, 2018 Read time: 2 mins

More than 9% of major highway bridges in the US are “rated structurally deficient” and in need of “urgent attention”, according to Bud Wright, chief executive of AASHTO, the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. Action is needed now.

In a recent infrastructure report, AASHTO reported that the US has just over 614,000 road bridges, 25% of which are 50 or more years older. Also, around 56,000 - 9.1% -  of them are now structurally deficient.

This is a shocking and growing problem, Wright told PPRS 2018, the Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit 2018 in Nice, France. On average, there are 188 million trips across a structurally deficient bridge each day in the US.

According to AASHTO, “the average age of America’s bridges keeps going up. Many are approaching the end of their design life.”
 
The association says that its “most recent estimate puts the nation’s backlog of bridge rehabilitation needs at $123 billion”. And, if this was not bad enough, Wright also told this week’s congress that “more than 70% of the roads in the US are in a poor and dangerous condition and we have a growing maintenance backlog”.
 
Wright believes that new technologies are going to be the key to a brighter future. The highways sector needs to experiment with things like chip seals, new micro-surfacing techniques, new diamond-grinding approaches to concrete road surfaces and so on.

Just as importantly, the work needs to be done now; the clock is ticking. “We really must do this sort of maintenance work while the road surface is still sound… while the pavement is still in good order,” said Wright.

He also told the event’s 900-plus delegates that the industry needs to work much harder at communicating with the general public. People take the transport system for granted “but there is no consensus on how to pay” for what needs to be done on the roads. We need to “make our systems as transparent as possible”.

Related Content

  • Highways England: new agency with long-term investment strategies
    August 18, 2015
    Highways England, created out of the old Highways Agency, was set up on April 1 to oversee a closer relationship between government client and private contractors. World Highways went to a recent forum in London to hear both sides declare their hopes and challenges. Government reforms are often met with a certain amount of scepticism thanks to years of disillusionment over forgotten ministerial promises. Given that, highway contractors in the UK could have been forgiven if they had raised their eyes skyward
  • Automated testing is safer, cheaper and more thorough
    December 12, 2018
    Automated testing is improving safety during paving and saving on testing costs. But it could also help reduce long-term maintenance costs too - Kristina Smith writes Testing pavements as they are laid can be a hazardous activity. The technician may be on their hands and knees, far behind the main gang, or reaching inside the hopper to measure the temperature of the hot mix or dodging rollers to take density readings.
  • A vision of roads
    September 3, 2012
    By 2040 European roads could be built differently, and hopefully be safer, according to the EU research programme NR2C
  • Balanced Mix Design in the US could revolutionise pavement design and testing
    April 30, 2018
    Roads in the US keep failing so the Federal Highways Authority is proposing a new approach to mix design, but what does this mean for tests and testing? - Kristina Smith reports How do you test an asphalt mix for rutting? In the US, the answer could be any one of several tests, depending on which State you are in: Asphalt Pavement Analyser, Flow Number, Hamburg Wheel Tracking Test, Superpave Shear Test or Triaxial Stress Sweep Test. But that could all change. The Federal Highways Agency (FHWA), part of