Skip to main content

Rain storms destroy Beijing’s road surfaces

As heavy rain storms continue to batter the Chinese capital, Beijing, the number of collapsed road pavements has soared to record levels, according to the city's road and bridge maintenance authority. Since the start of the flooding on July 21 until mid-August, Beijing Municipal Bridge Maintenance Management Group, a State-owned business set up to repair the city’s bridges and roads, received nearly 300 emergency calls regarding collapsed road surfaces.
August 17, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
As heavy rain storms continue to batter the Chinese capital, Beijing, the number of collapsed road pavements has soared to record levels, according to the city's road and bridge maintenance authority.

Since the start of the flooding on July 21 until mid-August, Beijing Municipal Bridge Maintenance Management Group, a State-owned business set up to repair the city’s bridges and roads, received nearly 300 emergency calls regarding collapsed road surfaces.

"Our hotline operators are receiving about 25 calls a day as a result of the heavy downpours,” a spokesman for the emergency information department of the group told local reporters.

A road surface on the crossing between Huajiadi Street and Wanghua Road, in Chaoyang district, caved in earlier this month leaving a two metre deep hole covering at least 10 square metres of pavement. According to the maintenance group, the collapse was caused by loosened soils that were eroded by the persistent rains as well as leaks in underground water pipes.

The Beijing Maintenance Group says that is has now deployed at least 2,561 workers to deal with collapsed pavements or waterlogged roads. "Our workers can repair small holes, of about one to two 2 square meters, within 24 hours,” said the spokesman. “But for bigger ones we need to work up a plan and think about the underground pipes for natural gas and water.”

The company has patrol teams out watching the whole city, paying special attention to lower-ground sections under bridges or on roads, he said, adding “we've also used radar vans to estimate underground conditions and help maintenance workers.”

In addition, the Beijing government also posted a message on its micro blog providing the maintenance group's hotline and asking people to call the police if they spot dangerous areas.

This will not solve the problem though, says Jiang Zhongguang, a city planning professor at the Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Architecture. He believes that the key problem behind the collapsed pavements is lack of regular maintenance.

"Workers didn't fill holes thoroughly and they often leave gaps,” he says. “And this causes soil erosion. The weather is out of our control, but other problems can be solved with regular maintenance."

Related Content

  • Cheaper, greener and less smelly; it’s all about the additives
    August 20, 2015
    The demand for bitumen additives is set to increase. Kristina Smith reports on some of the companies who are preparing to meet that increased demand. The variation in quality and composition of bitumen around the world is something that has been well-documented in these pages. Processing technologies for crude oil are changing, the way bitumen is traded is changing, and the final result can be a product that may not be all it seems – or huge variations from one shipment to another. Help is at hand, however,
  • Machine control brings accuracy to US paving job
    November 2, 2012
    The historic city of Raleigh in North Carolina is one of the few cities in the US that was planned and built specifically to serve as a state capital and its population and traffic volume have grown enormously in recent years An indicator of Raleigh's growth has been the need for an expanded roadway system to serve Wake County. As early as the 1970s there were plans for a Western Wake Expressway. This developed into a 112km, interstate-grade beltway, known as the Raleigh Outer Loop, which will encompass Ral
  • Implementation of road building projects in Russia’s Moscow may be significantly delayed
    May 15, 2014
    Implementation of some large-scale investment projects for road building in Russia’s capital Moscow may be significantly delayed A series of major documentation issues are the cause of the problem. These have delayed projects for up to nine tenders on the total sum of US$2.6 billion (95 billion rubles), with anomalies having been found by the Russian Federal Anti-Monopoly Service.
  • ECT's sustainability in action
    February 7, 2012
    French company ECT (Enviro Conseil Travaux) has opted to take advantage of the Caterpillar Certified Power Train (CPT) rebuild service for two of its Cat 740 Ejector articulated trucks. These are the first rebuilds worldwide for articulated trucks, and both were carried out by the French Cat dealer Bergerat Monnoyeur. What you get with CPT: Restores power train to like-new performance, Covers radiator, engine, transmission, torque converter, final drive and axle, Approximately 200 tests and inspections of p