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

  • 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
  • Economic and environmental asphalt recycling
    February 27, 2012
    Recycling materials offers the road ahead for highway construction - * Don Brock writes. Recycling has been used in the US for over 50 years in various industries. Today, steel is 100% recycled, and many other products that we have can be recycled.Environmental groups have aggressively pushed industries to recycle more, but it is either economically driven or legislatively driven.In the highway industry it has predominately been economically driven and discouraged by stakeholders such as aggregate producers
  • Rainforest road repair and rehabilitation with stabilisation
    May 23, 2014
    A limited amount of aggregate and resources, including fuel, in the Riau province of Indonesia can challenge roadbuilders, but Indonesian contractor PT Harap Panjang overcame the obstacles on a recent project. The province rests in a tropical rainforest. The 2600mm of annual rainfall take a toll on the area’s roads, particularly those developed by oil company Chevron Pacific Indonesia. The remote roads were built to service Chevron operations, crucial to the economies of the city, region and country. The r
  • IRF & XenomatiX present course on next generation road scanning systems
    August 15, 2022
    On May 20, the International Road Federation concluded a one-week global benchmarking course on preventive management of road assets with a field overview of next-generation road scanning and survey systems.