Skip to main content

Help is on the way: RoadResource.org

RoadResource.org as a go-to website for surfacing information is now live, explains Doug Hogue, of VSS Macropaver When RoadResouce.org went live – quietly - in July it was the end of two years of hard work by three US associations for pavement preservation. But there was no grand party or ceremonial pushing of the “go live” button, says Doug Hogue, vice president and general manager of VSS Macropaver. “For all of us in the industry July is a busy period that left little time to celebrate on the ope
November 29, 2018 Read time: 4 mins
VSS International, the largest US west coast contractor, has done some innovative thinking over the past decade
RoadResource.org as a go-to website for surfacing information is now live, explains Doug Hogue, of VSS Macropaver


When RoadResouce.org went live – quietly - in July it was the end of two years of hard work by three US associations for pavement preservation.

But there was no grand party or ceremonial pushing of the “go live” button, says Doug Hogue, vice president and general manager of 360 VSS Macropaver.

“For all of us in the industry July is a busy period that left little time to celebrate on the opening day,” says Hogue, who is also vice president of 250 ISSA - International Slurry Surfacing Association.

He along with members from the Asphalt Emulsion Manufacturers Association (AEMA) and the Asphalt Recycling and Reclaiming Association (ARRA), were heavily involved in the website’s development.

The project’s nascence was in 2016. AEMA was completing a marketing study to find ways to double the use of asphalt emulsions. But importantly,  the marketing study found that there really was no place to go for agencies to find out about emulsion-based treatments or – importantly – to compare them.

PPRA as a platform


But AEMA realised that creating such a website was too big for one association. They came to the table through the PPRA and asked ISSA and ARRA if they would join in a project. Budgets were put together, each association had committees of like-minded people and an outside website creator was approached.

Even so, says Hogue, there was concern among some people that opening up data and comparing methods would reduce the use of one method in favour of another one or several others. In other words, the advice had to impartial and empirically-based and not be a commercial activity that pushed one method of preservation over another.

There was a soft launch only for members of the three associations in February and then it went live in late July for anyone to use. “All the associations hope it will be used internationally and the units are English and metric. But right now, the website’s currency is only US and Canadian dollars. The majority of our membership is US and Canadian so that is from where we have sound cost data.”

Cost figures for repairs generated by adding the project’s parameters including road condition can be only guidelines. But the results can be shared with an agency for all to see where project costs can be adjusted and where the agency’s money is best spent to get the best or desired road improvements. “This is what the treatment toolbox on the site is all about,” he says. It’s an open book discussion about processes that can boost trust in the private sector.

“The cost calculator takes a much longer term view than saying to the agency let’s spend the money you have available on this process this year and worry about next year when it comes,” says Hogue. “We know some of this goes on…but the associations are saying we need to increase use of the processes but correctly for agency and contractor benefit.”


It is hoped that RoadResource.org will also promote innovation by contractor and agency, says Hogue, who has been with VSS Macropaver for nearly 26 years. “My main interest has always been machines but along the way I’ve had to learn a lot about the chemistry of asphalt. In our processes chemistry is very important to the function of the machines.”

Innovation


Typically a road that has large cracks and potholes would not be a candidate for slurry or micro-surfacing which is a wearing course. “But our sister company, VSS International, the largest US west coast contractor, has done some innovative thinking over the past decade. This included filling depressions, cracks and potholes with slurry and then using overlay with an asphalt rubber chip. This acts as a stress-absorbing interlayer because of the flexible asphalt rubber.

“Then they would come on top of that with microsurfacing. Those two would typically be called a cape seal [a chip seal covered with a slurry or micro-surface]. When microsurfacing is on top of a chip, you fill all the voids between the chips and it really looks like a newly paved road. So, you’ve levelled it by filling the voids, you’ve addressed the cracking issue through the flexible layer of chip seal. There has been years of extended life to a road that would have been at the end of its life.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Successful pavement maintenance
    April 12, 2012
    This is the final section of a three-part series about preventive maintenance for pavements. Written by Alan S. Kercher, P.E., Kercher Engineering, Inc We practice preventive maintenance in our everyday lives and possibly with agency equipment such as dump trucks and backhoes, but when it comes to maintaining our roadways, most agencies will always defer repairs until the pavements have failed, resulting in very expensive repairs. This article will provide some guidance to help an agency make the switch fr
  • Automated testing is safer, cheaper and more thorough
    May 10, 2019
    New tests for cracking and rutting are easy to perform, use existing equipment and work well on mixes with different binders and recycled content - Kristina Smith writes Researchers at the Texas A&M Transportation Institute (TTI) have developed new tests for cracking and rutting, designed to be quick and easy to carry out, using existing laboratory equipment. The most advanced of these is the IDEAL Cracking Test (IDEAL-CT), which could be appearing in specifications in some of the US states in around six
  • Ready for rubber: Tarmac’s UK asphalt solution
    August 1, 2019
    A huge surplus of waste tyres and a strengthening commitment towards sustainability from local authorities has prompted asphalt supplier Tarmac to invest in technology to add crumb rubber to its mixes. Around 40 million tyres are worn out every year in the UK. Some are burnt as fuel for cement kilns, others are turned to crumb rubber for use in sports fields and yet more are incorporated into items such as car mats. The surplus – sometimes as much as 120,000 tonnes annually - is often shipped abroad for
  • One Giant Leap for mankind…
    October 8, 2019
    This past month of July America and much of the world celebrated the 50th anniversary of man setting foot on the moon. There were speeches, replays of the Saturn V launch and lunar landing videos, interviews with astronauts, and much more as we relived the excitement, danger, and suspense of sending human beings 384,000km into space to land on an uninhabited moon and return. Most Americans over the age of five in 1969 can tell you where they were when the Eagle landed on July 20, 1969, and the world watch