Skip to main content

Cat paves the way in Portugal

Caterpillar pavers were used recently to help improve drainage on a vital road into a popular tourist destination in Portugal. The Avenida Marginal is the main road access into Cascais, a village with historic hotels, winding roads and stunning views of the Atlantic Ocean attracting thousands of holidaymakers each year. However, the highway had been suffering from poor draining resulting in rivulets being formed in heavy rain, making travelling hazardous for cars and pedestrians alike.
June 22, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Caterpillar pavers were used during race-against-the-clock road drainage improvements to a key Portugal tourist village access route
178 Caterpillar pavers were used recently to help improve drainage on a vital road into a popular tourist destination in Portugal.

The Avenida Marginal is the main road access into Cascais, a village with historic hotels, winding roads and stunning views of the Atlantic Ocean attracting thousands of holidaymakers each year.

However, the highway had been suffering from poor draining resulting in rivulets being formed in heavy rain, making travelling hazardous for cars and pedestrians alike.

Paving contractor specialist Sanestradas were appointed by the local authority responsible for Cascais to deliver improvements.

Most of the 1km road section affected, only needed minor attention with the exception of a 65metre stretch that had incurred damage during a building construction project. The work would house the new drainage system within the 65metre stretch and would allow for the rainfall to be channelled via the gutter. However, 300 metres of the road were so flat that rain stagnated rather than flowed. Creating a gradient by resurfacing was ruled out as the pavement only had an average height of 100mm, which, if introduced, would have seen rain flow onto the pavement itself.

After local rulers decided the new drainage system had to be installed first, Sanestradas removed the 65metres of damaged curb and the ditch floor area was replaced with two 200mm layers of crushed, aggregate base of extensive granulometry that featured irrigation fluidised MC70 bitumen at an impregnation rate of 1 kg/m2. A binder layer of an 11cm thickness was applied on top, followed by the wear layer at an average thickness of 6cm. As the remainder of the road section did not need new base layers or any other improvements, the milling crew removed 6cm of material. The paving crew then placed an AC 14 Surf 35/50 (BB) wear layer over both the rebuild and milled portions of the project.

Crews were given two weeks to complete the project and work could only be carried out during the night.  In addition, no work could take place on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays when the weekend tourists visit the village.

A Cat PM102 Cold Planer removed the 6cm of asphalt where required. With a cutting width of 100cm, the Cat PM102 was deemed a good fit for the narrow road while delivering the productivity needed to mill a lane in two nights. The tight timeframe left no margin for error and for this reason, two service technicians from STET, the local Cat dealer remained on site just in case they might be needed.

Once a lane was milled, the tandem pavers went to work with delivery trucks unloading the material into the hoppers. Sanestradas selected the Cat AP555E with an AS4252C screed. The lighter weight design of the AP555E is said by Cat to allow contractors to haul the paver along with other necessary job site equipment, maximizing machine transport while minimising costs. Working just a few metres ahead was the Cat AP655D track-type paver, a versatile machine in the 18-19tonnes major class size.

Three Cat compactors, the CB434D, PS300B and CB34 were also used for the tight-deadline works which were said to be completed on time and to the satisfaction of the local authorities.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Durable surface solution
    February 22, 2012
    Innovative spray pavers from Vögele have been used in Germany to rehabilitate a section of the A99 autobahn near Munich. In all, four SUPER 1800-2 pavers fitted with SprayJet Module were used to pave a thin, noise-reducing asphalt. overlay on spray seal on the A99 to the west of the Allach Tunnel. For pavement rehabilitation, this stretch of the busy orbital motorway near Munich could only be closed to traffic at night. The traffic volume on the A99 orbital motorway near Munich is 100,000-120,000 vehicles/d
  • CRCP is first choice for Belgian highway
    November 28, 2012
    Dan Gilkes reports on a Belgian highway upgrade When the Ministry of Public Works in the Belgian State of Flanders decided to reconstruct and resurface 19km of the N49 Antwerp-Knokke Expressway, continuously reinforced concrete paving (CRCP) with an exposed aggregate surface was the natural material choice. Indeed exposed aggregate, with its high grip and low noise benefits, has been the first option for all motorway surfacing work in Belgium since the 1980s. However, the €15.65 million contract is not a li
  • Hot-to-hot paving upgrades Bremen City Airport runway
    September 30, 2013
    A new high quality runway surface has been laid at Bremen City Airport. This has provided a much-needed replacement at the airport as the old runway was laid over 20 years ago and was suffering from cracking and potholes. Laying the new surface required the airport to be closed, with the work having to be carried out in a tight time schedule. Contractor Heitkamp Erd- und Straßenbau was brought in to carry out the work as the firm had experience in runway rehabilitation projects having carried out pavemen
  • Circuit of the Americas Formula for F1 success
    April 4, 2013
    In November 2012, the new Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas, hosted the first ever Formula 1 US Grand Prix on a purpose-built track. But, as Jeff Winke and Guy Woodford report, the construction of COTA was just as demanding as competing in an F1 race itself For COTA construction contractor Austin Bridge & Road, L.P., nothing was more vital to the successful building of the 5.5km F1 track than meeting the strict criteria for its asphalt-paved surface. “The amount of stress this pavement will un