Skip to main content

US road smoothness report on best practice

The Louisiana Transportation Research Center (LTRC) has released a report summarising current US asphalt and concrete pavement smoothness requirements. The report, Best Practices for Achieving and Measuring Pavement Smoothness, A Synthesis of State-of-Practice, is important at a time when the US is undergoing a change in the way smoothness specifications are written. A growing number of states are moving away from profilograph-based smoothness specifications in favor of specifications based on a more widely
August 26, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
The Louisiana Transportation Research Center (LTRC) has released a report summarising current US asphalt and concrete pavement smoothness requirements. The report, Best Practices for Achieving and Measuring Pavement Smoothness, A Synthesis of State-of-Practice, is important at a time when the US is undergoing a change in the way smoothness specifications are written. A growing number of states are moving away from profilograph-based smoothness specifications in favor of specifications based on a more widely-accepted and precise measure of pavement smoothness: the International Roughness Index (IRI). LTRC’s report will help contractors, agencies, and engineers adjust to the change.

Smooth pavements provide significant benefits to the public and agencies. Smoother pavements can lead to increased public satisfaction with the road system, a reduction in fuel consumption, and longer-lasting pavements. US state departments of transportation (DOTs) prescribe certain levels of smoothness in pavement specifications and often penalise or provide bonuses to contractors depending on the smoothness they provide.

Agencies are switching to IRI in order to more accurately assess the smoothness of their roads. IRI is calculated using a mathematical model to provide a true profile of the pavement’s cross section. It provides a clearer picture of smoothness. IRI is reproducible and comparable across the world. However, limited knowledge of IRI can cause confusion during specification development or pavement construction.

LTRC’s report, written by pavement engineering firm The 5943 Transtec Group, summarizes the state-of-practice for US state DOT pavement smoothness specifications based on IRI. The authors are David K Merritt, George K Chang and Jennifer L Rutledge. The report provides a summary of best construction practices for achieving required pavement smoothness, current smoothness specifications, IRI collection and processing technology, construction acceptance, current research, and educational and training practices.

78% of US state asphalt pavement specifications and 46% of concrete pavement specifications are currently based on IRI. As more states move towards IRI-based specifications, these numbers are expected to continue growing.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Using technology so assess road surface quality
    April 4, 2014
    Advances in survey technology and the evolving face of road procurement are driving demand for highway condition data. Mark Thomas, infrastructure services manager at Fugro Aperio writes how surveys of new roads can improve long-term quality While a growing suite of non-intrusive testing, measurement and survey technologies are widely used to target highway repairs and to determine asset management strategies, the use of these powerful tools remains patchy in the early stages of the infrastructure life cycl
  • A rejuvenator derived from pine trees and natural asphalt
    November 20, 2015
    This month we look at two additives from natural sources: a rejuvenator derived from pine trees and naturally occurring asphalt - Kristina Smith writes One of the problems experienced with pavements containing RAP is that, although they exhibit good rutting resistance, they often fail early due to fatigue cracking. Biorefiner Arizona Chemical has just unveiled independent test results for its SYLVAROAD RP1000 Performance Additive that it says demonstrate that the rejuvenator can help create mixes that ar
  • The Path to Climate-Neutral Road Construction
    October 1, 2023
    Machine manufacturers and construction companies around the globe are currently searching for ways to achieve the goal of climate-neutral construction. The challenge here is to successively reduce emissions of CO2 and other harmful gases (summarized to CO2 equivalents: CO2e) around the world to zero over the coming decades. In the road construction sector, this transformation is inextricably linked to the improvement and further development of production and working processes. In the future, machines and construction materials will also be assessed based on the climate-harmful emissions arising from their production and use. However, the focus should not be on individual machines, but on the entire process leading up to the finished product – a road. Ultimately, the decisive factor is the emissions generated per kilometer of newly built or rehabilitated road – the “CO2e per work done”.
  • Concrete - a competitive option for road construction?
    February 10, 2012
    The use of advanced control technology help boost the percentage of roads built using concrete - Mike Woof reports New technologies mean that concrete offers a highly competitive option for road construction.