Skip to main content

Improve highway barriers to cope with higher speed

The UK association Britpave, the British In-situ Concrete Paving Association group, is keen to ensure that the country’s major highways will be able to cope with proposed speed limit increases. According to Britpave much of the UK motorway central reservation barriers may not be fit-for-purpose if the speed limit is increased from112-128km/h (70-80mph) as proposed recently.
February 24, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
Many existing motorway barriers in the UK are no longer fit for purpose and may not be able to cope with proposed speed limit increases

The UK association Britpave, the British In-situ Concrete Paving Association group, is keen to ensure that the country’s major highways will be able to cope with proposed speed limit increases. According to Britpave much of the UK motorway central reservation barriers may not be fit-for-purpose if the speed limit is increased from112-128km/h (70-80mph) as proposed recently.

The UK Government has suggested raising the limit on the motorway network in 2013, a move that would bring the UK in line with many of its European partners. The change has been suggested as vehicle braking and safety systems have increased vastly since the original 112km/h speed limit was introduced in 1965. While there may be an increased risk of accidents resulting from driving at higher speed, the UK Government has said that this will be minimal compared to the economic benefits of faster journey times. The UK’s motorway network has the best safety record of all of the country’s roads and police in many areas already turn a blind eye to vehicles exceeding the 112km/h limit as long as they do not travel above 128km/h.

However 3170 Britpave has pointed out that before the new limit is introduced the UK Government should ensure that existing motorway barriers are able to accommodate the safety issues related to increased speeds. This point was highlighted by Professor Stephen Glaister, director of the RAC Foundation in a recent interview concerning the new speed limit proposals. Professor Glaister said, “All barriers need to be brought up to the standard of the best, because they are not at the moment. You can improve the performance of motorways by improving the crash barrier.”

Many existing barrier sections have been allowed to deteriorate or are still being employed beyond their original design life. Some sections also may not comply with the latest EU regulations. In such instances, replacement with new technology is required to bring the motorways back into safety compliance.
Professor Glaister’s concerns were echoed by David Jones, director of Britpave, “There is a clear need to upgrade the existing barriers on our motorways, most of which are only designed to contain a medium sized car. Many barriers are now rusted, and no longer fit for purpose."

Jones said that concrete barriers however could be installed comparatively quickly and would address the risk of crossover accidents with heavy vehicles as they have been designed to contain all vehicles
up to and including coaches weighing 13tonnes.
Britpave points out that concrete safety barriers offer a long lasting safety solution as they are designed to last 50 years. But at present, new concrete barriers protect just 10% of the UK’s motorway network and Britpave believes that increasing this percentage would help bring the UK’s motorways back into safety compliance as well as offering a good return on investment in the long term.

EU compliance
In January 2011 it became a legal requirement for all crash cushions sold in the EU to carry the CE Mark, the symbol of conformity to European Directives. This can only be applied to a road restraint system once the manufacturer has undergone a rigorous process of checks and inspections from a relevant Notified Body. A manufacturer cannot simply add a sticker with a CE logo to its product.
As part of the CE certification process, the manufacturer must produce a comprehensive technical file for the product, including the initial testing details and test reports. The Notified Body ensures that the product is correctly qualified and meets the requirements of EN 1317.
Also as part of this process, the Notified Body will make a factory production control inspection when the manufacturing facility, quality control procedures and monitoring processes are all examined.
The manufacturer and its products must meet the exacting standards set out in EN 1317-5 to ensure that the products are compliant and those coming out of the factory are consistent and manufactured to the same standards and specifications as the original product that successfully performed the initial EN 1317 testing.
Once the Notified Body is satisfied that all necessary requirements have been met it will issue a Certificate of Conformity, and only then can a manufacturer apply the CE Mark to its products. The CE label will show the product’s Certificate Number, the Notified Body’s ID number and a summary of what the product has qualified to and its performance levels.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Alcohol interlocks for vehicles could cut crashes in Europe?
    February 26, 2018
    There have been calls for mandatory alcohol interlocks in vans, lorries and buses across the EU. This follows the publishing of a new report which shows that more than 5000 deaths/year in the EU are still caused by drink-driving. As a result, member States have been asked to increase enforcement and introduce rehabilitation programmes for drink-driving offenders. The devices should be fitted in all new professional vehicles and also retrofitted to cars used by repeat drink-driving offenders, according to
  • RB22 separators ''offer maximum safety''
    July 5, 2012
    Road traffic accidents are expensive and often frightening, and now most drivers will have encountered an average 80km/hr speed limit on a fast moving road. Keeping both lanes of traffic separate is the key to traffic safety, but when a driver loses control of a vehicle, and heads for the other lane of oncoming traffic, there is the potential for a serious accident. Having a barrier system in place that can keep the traffic safely separated reduces the risks for everyone concerned.
  • Road safety concern for Europe
    May 19, 2015
    A quick look at corporate results for some of the major construction equipment manufacturers paints a somewhat confusing picture of current demand. Caterpillar, the world’s largest manufacturer of off-highway machines and for so long a bell-wether for the construction sector, recently released results showing a drop in profits. CNH and Volvo CE too have been similarly afflicted with a lower than expected financial performance, perhaps a major factor in Volvo CE's decision to pull out of a joint venture part
  • VIDEO: Rhinophalt from ASI boosts pavement waterproofing
    August 5, 2016
    UK-based ASI Solutions has produced a four-minute video that explains the workings of RHiNOPHALT, the company’s BBA Hapas approved and CE marked asphalt preservation solution. BBA is the British Board of Agrément, one of the UK’s leading notified bodies offering approval, certification and test services to manufacturers of products and systems supplying the construction industry. Hapas is the Highway Authorities Product Approval Scheme.