Skip to main content

Bitumen provides more durable road surface

When the main commuter route into Cardiff, the Welsh capital, began to suffer from acute deformation, the Vale of Glamorgan Council required a durable and faster alternative to hot rolled asphalt to ensure minimum disruption for local road users.
April 5, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The Masterlayer surface is trafficable within an hour
RSSWhen the main commuter route into Cardiff, the Welsh capital, began to suffer from acute deformation, the Vale of Glamorgan Council required a durable and faster alternative to hot rolled asphalt to ensure minimum disruption for local road users.

Ken Evans, the council's senior highway maintenance officer, said: "The initial plan to resurface the 1km stretch of road with traditional HRA would have required full closure. This would have caused significant disruption for residents and businesses resulting in a 12.8km diversion for workers requiring access to a nearby chemical plant.

"Water running under the surface to the sub-base of the road was washing away fine pieces of aggregate, compromising the integrity of the existing hot rolled asphalt where it had begun to crumble under heavy use and crack when frozen."

The council, which has an annual resurfacing contract with 2399 Tarmac National Contracting, worked in partnership with Tarmac to find a solution.

Tarmac recommended its Masterlayer as an alternative to HRA, which would allow the road to remain fully open at peak times, and would also address the problem of water erosion as its composition is said to be much harder and more durable than HRA, increasing the structural stability of the road.

Designed by Tarmac's technical team, Masterlayer is an innovative binder and surfacing material that uses a high performance, heavy duty, polymer modified bitumen (PMB) supplied by Nynas Bitumen that has been used extensively on very heavily trafficked sites with high loads. It is formulated using a combination of specialist additive technology together with high quality rheologically-enhanced bitumen that is designed to increase the asphalt's elastic and cohesive performance.

The new 45mm thick Masterlayer was laid on a planed surface using a 10mm hardwearing polymer modified surface course to provide a closed finish. The design incorporated variations in the depth of the construction of the road, particularly to address minor reflective cracking near the chemical plant.

The new Masterlayer surface, trafficable within an hour, was laid in one application and reduced the project construction time by half and costs by around 30%.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Beijing airport runway features novel asphalt solution
    December 7, 2017
    Beijing ranks amongst the five busiest airports across the globe and its runway surfaces face tough stresses as a result. Over 94 million passengers flew through Beijing Capital Airport (BCA) in 2016 and as many as 70 flights/hour can take off and land during peak times. The 60m-wide middle runway of Beijing Capital International Airport is the busiest of the three runways, with a landing and take-off flight ratio of up to 40%. This runway was first rehabilitated in 1996 and then repaired in 2013 and 2015
  • ENH bitumen in-line plants destined for the Congo
    May 19, 2015
    ENH Engineering has broken into the market in the Democratic Republic of the Congo by selling two in-line bitumen emulsion plants. The plants, of which each can be built into a 12m container, were sold to the Congolese oil exploration and refining company Socir in the capital city of Kinshasha, said ENH's managing director Erik Haugaard. The in-line plants can produce all known bitumen emulsion types, from the simplest tack-coat to high-grade slurry emulsions. "The emulsion market in West Africa is gr
  • Ciber discusses optimizing asphalt mixes
    December 19, 2017
    A good quality mix plays an important role in road construction and the asphalt manufacturing process starts with the mix design in the laboratory, which takes place under controlled conditions and depends on the materials available locally. A mix design that matches the plant's limitations has a higher probability of success. The properties of the aggregates, such as water absorption, abrasiveness, and the equivalent sand index, may influence the quality of the mix produced in the plant. In the laboratory
  • Improving Rutting with Sripath’s PGXpand® PMB-Mixes
    March 1, 2023
    Indinfravit Trust, a major infrastructure investment and road projects management company in India, recently conducted a demonstration trial to laydown PGXpand-Modified-Bitumen Mixes on a highway in Rajasthan, India.