Skip to main content

Iowa expects longer lasting road surface

In the US state of Iowa, tough paving specifications are resulting in contractors delivering road surfaces that will last longer. The Iowa Department of Transportation (I-DOT) expects to see a highway road surface last 20 years and recently let the contract for a 25.7km road resurfacing project for Highway 92 between Winterset and Greenfield. The 40km link between the two towns sees an average 1,365 cars/day travel on the highway, which was last worked on in 1994 and its surface was due for replacement.
June 9, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
Norris Asphalt used its new Roadtec paver on a key contract in Iowa
In the US state of Iowa, tough paving specifications are resulting in contractors delivering road surfaces that will last longer. The 1229 Iowa Department of Transportation (I-DOT) expects to see a highway road surface last 20 years and recently let the contract for a 25.7km road resurfacing project for Highway 92 between Winterset and Greenfield.

The 40km link between the two towns sees an average 1,365 cars/day travel on the highway, which was last worked on in 1994 and its surface was due for replacement.

Norris Asphalt Paving was selected for the asphalt paving portion of the project. The stretch of Highway 92 is 8.5m wide with two 4.25m lanes, while the route was widened 610mm on each side. The milling and roadbed prep work was subcontracted by Norris to other contractors. A 7.4km stretch on the eastern end of the project posed a challenge because it had a concrete base. For their contractor to mill the on-average 114mm depth, Norris Asphalt had to close the stretch to traffic for 17 days. The rest of the highway project was milled cold-in-place with traffic flow maintained throughout construction. The milled asphalt was recycled as the contractor used 20% RAP in its HMA mix.

For the highway project, Norris Asphalt laid 11,031tonnes of HMA for the base lift and 22,405tonnes of asphalt was placed for the intermediate and surface layers. An additional 6.765tonnes of HMA was used for the widened roadway shoulders.

The firm used a new paver, a 1252 Roadtec RP-195e, which it had received just in time for the job. Roadtec helped train the crew, which was then able to start work immediately. The machine’s stability and good view from the operator station helped with the work according to the contractor. Another important benefit was the Guardian telematics system, which allowed the Roadtec engineers to address and repair a technical problem remotely within just 20 minutes.

The better stretch of Iowa Highway 92 is but one chunk of the 440km state highway that runs from east to west across the state. The work that Norris Asphalt Paving performed on the project was subject to the Iowa DOT’s Quality Management - Asphalt (QM-A) program, which holds the contractor responsible for mix design, sampling, testing, and making mix adjustments if necessary. Norris Asphalt’s finished road passed all of the I-DOT random density core tests, which check for voids. The finished asphalt paved surface achieved impressive profilograph-measured 12.61 to 12.9 International Roughness Index (IRI) scores.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • American Concrete Paving Association presents award to Gary Godbersen and others
    March 17, 2016
    The American Concrete Paving Association presents awards for excellence – Mike Woof writes.
  • FM Conway lays 92% RAP in UK road
    January 22, 2024
    The project in the City of Westminster – part of the London urban area - achieved a total embodied and operational carbon saving of 78% – equal to around 100 tonnes of CO₂ equivalent.
  • Boom in African road construction projects
    February 22, 2012
    Huge investments are being made in major road construction projects for North Africa. The biggest is the 'Autoroute Transmaghrébine' highway, which is also Africa's largest ever road construction project. Once complete, the highway will connect the Maghreb states of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya and will have a total length of 3,200km.
  • Innovations introduced to optimise milling
    September 28, 2015
    New developments for the milling machine sector should help optimise performance, as well as increase health and safety standards for site personnel Advances in the milling machine market generally focus on new models being available or developments to drums and cutters. However some rather different developments are taking place that could well deliver long-term improvements for health and safety as well as the quality of work carried out, optimising milling operations. Earlier this year, new guideli