Skip to main content

Simex upgrades ART 1000 cold in-situ recycling attachment to ride a wave of road repairs projects around the world

April 10, 2025 Read time: 3 mins
The next generation of ART 1000 will allow tighter control of cold in-situ recycling of asphalt roads

Simex has launched the next generation of its ART 1000 attachment for in-situ cold recycling of asphalt roads. ART 1000 – GEN II benefits from upgrades to its on-board electronics to provide more information to the operator, the addition of a Wi-Fi transmitter for remote monitoring, and some small design changes to make maintenance easier.

First launched in 2022, Simex developed the ART 1000 to rejuvenate deteriorated roads, without the need for additional material or heating. As well as milling and crushing the road surface, the system adds a rejuvenator to the milled material to restore some of the properties of the aged bitumen in the asphalt – and returns it to the road for compacting.

“With a small investment, the ART allows the life of a road to be extended without having to bring in new material for resurfacing, or the need to take any material away,” says Federico Tamburri, key account manager at Simex.  

With secondary and country roads in many European countries in poor repair, Simex is in discussions with a major excavator manufacturer who sees its potential.  

The ART 1000 works by first milling material from the road, up to a depth of 100mm. It is mixed in the milling drum with a calculated amount of rejuvenator. In a second drum the material is crushed to the correct size before being returned to the road. A final phase sees the attachment run over the material on the road to give it a final mixing before it can be compacted with a roller.

The latest generation includes a new video interface which displays real-time information such as linear metres completed, additive dosage and total additive consumption – which is also compiled into an end-of-day report. Simex software adjusts the dosage of the additive according to the speed of advancement, with a series of LED lights which indicate when the ideal speed of travel has been reached.

Simex has also made changes to the 100-litre additive tank so that it is easily removable and allows access to the crusher drum for cleaning. The grille in the crusher drum that determines particle size is also now easily removable for cleaning.

To work in tandem with the ART 1000, Simex has also created the ST-ART 200 mini dozer, to spread the rejuvenated material.  “We found that with the ART, several people were required to shovel the rejuvenated material into the right channel before it is compacted,” explained Tamburri. “This mini tracked dozer can be used to spread the material around.”

The ST-ART 200 also has two tanks: a 170-litre tank which holds back-up rejuvenator for the ART and a 200-litre tank for emulsion which can be sprayed onto the road to seal it at the end of the process. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Testing highway materials for best performance
    February 23, 2012
    Big increases in traffic mean that today highways are under greater pressure than ever, and materials have to perform to increasingly higher standards. Modern highways, particularly in and around major cities, are tested like never before, and it is essential that surfaces are built to withstand increasing traffic.
  • ‘Concrete multinational’ Simem grows in scope and expands in all directions
    July 10, 2023
    Concrete specialist Simem’s most recent launch is the Bison mobile batching plant. Designed with road construction in mind, the Bison range benefits from a sophisticated weighing mechanism, created over a three-year research and development programme with input from the Politecnico di Milano’s mechatronic department.
  • Novel dual layer paving work in Germany
    February 2, 2017
    A German contractor is now using two novel asphalt paving technologies from Vögele together for key projects The firm has acquired Vögele’s InLine Pave equipment with its innovative dual layer paving technology as well as one of the SUPER 1800-3i SprayJets for paving a surface course. This combination of technologies is allowing contractor Rask Brandenburg to carry out fast and efficient road rehabilitation work on some major routes, including a busy Autobahn stretch leading into capital Berlin. T
  • Increased use of recycled asphalt pavement
    February 29, 2012
    Increasing material costs mean that the US highway sector is looking to increase the use of recycled asphalt pavement (RAP). At the recent World of Asphalt conference and exhibition in Orlando, Florida, two presentations explained the latest developments.