Skip to main content

Ammann’s US asphalt plant

By MJ Woof June 10, 2025 Read time: 1 min
The ACC Alpine continuous plant has been developed by Ammann to meet the needs of North American customers - image courtesy of Mike Woof


Ammann has been developing continuous asphalt plant technology for the North American market. The firm has been utilising technology developed for its European batching plants and compact continuous plants in the project to develop a large capacity asphalt plant for North America.

The product from this development programme is the firm’s ACC Alpine plant, with the first unit being supplied to a customer in Florida. The ACC Alpine plant is offered with a wide range of options, in stationary and portable format and with a choice of capacities of 300, 400, 500 and 600tonnes/hour. Customers can select different material feeds, reverse air or pulsed baghouses, electrically-heated tanks and silos of 100, 150, 200, 250 or 300tonne capacity. The plant can use up to 50% RAP with a single feed or up to 60% with a twin feed system, while it can also be used to produce warm mix or mixes containing crumb rubber (as used in Arizona and New Mexico in particular).

At the moment, the plant is being fitted with a bought-in burner system but Ammann is developing its own burner design for use with this high capacity continuous plant.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Asphalt plants reduce emissions, increase efficiency
    February 20, 2012
    Solutions for a reduction in emissions, recycling and more efficiency are being introduced by major asphalt plant manufacturers as Patrick Smith reports. The demand to reduce all types of emissions and increase the use of recycled material has put pressure on industry to come up with answers, and asphalt production is no exception.
  • Innovative asphalt production solutions from Marini
    May 24, 2019
    Marini has developed an innovative solution for asphalt production, able to use up to 100% RAP in the mix - Mike Woof writes Italian firm Marini has long been one of the leaders in the field of asphalt plant design and development, competing against other key companies in the segment based in the US, Switzerland and Germany. Marini is expanding its range, with what it claims will be a revolutionary system for using recycled asphalt pavement (RAP) in asphalt mixes, as well as further additions to its mobi
  • Easy operating
    July 31, 2012
    Modern asphalt plants are a far cry from the early models, and are capable of producing a wide variety of mixes at the touch of a button. Patrick Smith reports Cutting-edge software-based control technology makes today's asphalt mixing plants simple and efficient to operate. The tightening of clean air regulations is reducing the emissions from the plants, and the current focus is on the goal of raising the processed portion of reclaimed asphalt (RA) towards 100%, says Ammann Group, which has been involved
  • Increased asphalt demand - meeting the challenge
    February 8, 2012
    With demand for asphalt predicted to increase, manufacturers are ready to meet the challenge as Patrick Smith reports