Skip to main content

Tensar’s Glasstex makes the grade in UK’s Smart Motorway upgrade

A Stress Absorbing Membrane Interlayer is delivering stronger, safer and more reliable surfaces for the UK’s M3 Smart Motorways project in the southern England.
February 27, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
Smart move: Foster Contracting is laying 300,000m2 of Tensar’s Glasstex P100 composite on the M3

A Stress Absorbing Membrane Interlayer is delivering stronger, safer and more reliable surfaces for the UK’s M3 Smart Motorways project in the southern England.

More than 130,000 vehicles use the M3 between Junctions 2 (Thorpe and the M25 motorway) and 4a (Farnborough) every day.

As part of 8100 Highways England’s Smart Motorways programme, the capacity of this congested three-lane section is being increased, with hard shoulders converted to ‘smart’ running lanes.

Construction began on site in January 2015. Asphalt surfacing contractor 2399 Tarmac, working for the principal contractor 1146 Balfour Beatty, is carrying out structural resurfacing of the carriageway as part of the project.

“The road is in poor condition, the result of reflective cracking of the asphalt, due to movement of the underlying layers that are made up of both lean mix concrete and bituminous road base,” says Tarmac project manager Barrie Farquhar. “Repairs were needed to strengthen the road and to prevent further cracking, which could have led to water ingress and further deterioration of the concrete.”

Highways England needed a pavement solution that would reduce initial costs, increase service life, as well as minimise maintenance and future disruption.

Consultant 1397 Aecom had specified asphalt reinforcement in the pavement design. Tarmac, subcontractor Foster Contracting and 340 Tensar International proposed Tensar’s Stress Absorbing Membrane Interlayer (SAMI) Glasstex solution, while supporting the required departure from the standard process.

“The SAMI adds tensile stiffness, increasing pavement strength at low strain and mitigating reflective cracking from both traffic-induced stress and from defects in the underlying pavement structure. It also acts as a moisture barrier,” explains Tensar Highways manager Craig Andrews. “This low-maintenance solution will extend the operating life of the pavement, reducing whole-life costs.”

A total of 300,000m2 of Tensar’s Glasstex P100 composite is being laid by Foster Contracting, on both the northbound and southbound carriageways, along the 26km stretch of road – a total of 52km. This composite of glass yarn grid and paving fabric forms an interlayer between the fractured substrate and the asphalt overlay.

“Glasstex adheres to the underlying pavement structure using a straight run bitumen (160/220 pen) bond coat, with a calibrated spray rate of 1.1kg/m², to activate both stress relief and interlayer barrier functions [as given by BS EN 15381: 2008], with reinforcement provided by the grid,” Andrews says.

“Combined with Tarmac’s Ultilayer polymer-modified binder course, this delivers maximum possible crack resistance and durability.”

An added benefit of installing a SAMI Glasstex solution on motorway projects is speed, Andrews adds. “Work typically has to be carried out at night, which obviously limits the amount of time available. Using Glasstex means the reconstruction depth is far shallower. On the M3 it is just 120-150mm, rather than a minimum 360mm with a standard approach, which obviously saves time and, as a result, construction costs.”

With surfacing work progressing well and half the new gantries installed by the summer, the M3 Smart Motorway project looks to be on target to finish as planned in June 2017.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Benefits of bitumen technology research
    March 15, 2012
    Bitumen technology is benefiting from years of research and development - Kristina Smith. On a 2.7km loop of road in Auburn in Alabama, US, a lorry driver drives his triple-truck round and round. During his eight-hour shift, he will have covered 544km, with another driver waiting to take over from him for the next shift. Their mission is to seriously damage the road. This is the National Center for Asphalt Technology (NCAT), where sponsors from states and private companies pay to test out new materials and
  • Brisbane’s Airport: Innovative Management of One of the World’s Busiest Runways
    June 26, 2014
    When it comes to runways, there are few busier then Brisbane’s main runway. Servicing both domestic and international travel, with over 200,000 movements per year, operating without a curfew Brisbane’s main runway is the busiest in Australia. For maintenance, crews only have a limited period of time to determine the pavement condition, normally during the night, making the detection of pavement faults difficult. To resolve this issue, a new high speed pavement scanner was used to rapidly survey the pavem
  • Tunnel breakthrough for new Auckland link in New Zealand
    October 8, 2014
    Auckland’s Western Ring Route project update - Mary Bell writes. A number of integrated projects in Auckland, New Zealand, will improve the lot of road users and cyclists, and significantly alter the topography of the city’s motorway. On September 29th the tunnel boring machine digging the first of twin road tunnels beneath the city broke into daylight after 10 months underground. The new 2.4km-long Waterview tunnels will connect the city’s Northwestern and Southwestern motorways, each carrying three lane
  • Managing urban motorway complexity in Sydney
    October 4, 2012
    Sydney’s Hills M2 motorway is being widened while still carrying traffic and meeting tough environmental criteria More than 100,000 vehicles and over 27,000 bus commuters use the Hills M2 motorway on a typical workday, making it one of Sydney’s busiest motorway corridors. Owned and managed by Hills Motorway Ltd (HML) and a key part of the city’s orbital motorway network, the road stretches over 21km, providing a seamless link between the Lane Cove Tunnel and Westlink M7. The Hills M2 Upgrade is one of many