Skip to main content

LafargeHolcim delivers Algeria concrete road solution

In Algeria, LafargeHolcim has introduced roller compacted concrete (RCC) for the first time in the country to renovate the RN45 road, with reduced costs, construction time and increased durability - *Nicolas Miravalls. Heavy traffic on a road stretch in northern Algeria has resulted in the need for rebuilding of the link, making it better able to cope with demand. In Algeria’s Msila region, the RN 45 road carries over 700 heavy load trucks/day, 365 days/year and required a major re-construction. In 2017, La
May 14, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
Conventional paving and compaction equipment was used for the application of the RCC road surface
In Algeria, LafargeHolcim has introduced roller compacted concrete (RCC) for the first time in the country to renovate the RN45 road, with reduced costs, construction time and increased durability - *Nicolas Miravalls


Heavy traffic on a road stretch in northern Algeria has resulted in the need for rebuilding of the link, making it better able to cope with demand. In Algeria’s Msila region, the RN 45 road carries over 700 heavy load trucks/day, 365 days/year and required a major re-construction. In 2017, LafargeHolcim partnered with 2747 RAZEL international contracting and the Algerian road authorities to tackle the problem by introducing roller compacted concrete (1074 RCC) to the country for the first time. The solution, based on local material capabilities as a primary economic parameter, has been designed by 2643 EGIS, a leading international design firm.

Applied on a 3.6km portion and designed to support heavy traffic with low maintenance, the selected structure is a 250mm RCC layer set in-between a 150mm natural gravel sub-base and a bituminous surface dressing using bituminous double chip sealing coating. This innovative approach for Algeria allowed the reduction in construction costs by about 25% compared to conventional methods. It has also reduced construction time by 40%, a key benefit given the heavy industrial traffic. Moreover, this new structure will increase the durability of the road stretch, which is calculated to last for 15-20 years. Following a global sustainable agenda from LafargeHolcim, this solution uses local materials and reduced the need for transporting materials by road and associated carbon emissions or road networks demolition. To develop this RCC solution, LafargeHolcim used its in-house specialists in road pavement from its R&D centre based in Lyon, France, as well as road experts from Algeria and continental Europe. The team asse
ssed the best solutions and products for the specific needs of the RN 45 project.

This project in Algeria is a great example of a growing interest towards a more rational and sustainable road construction sector. LafargeHolcim and its partners decided to use all the capabilities of a world leader to help build better roads.

This Algerian project is one aspect of how LafargeHolcim is developing solutions addressing key concerns of road construction: overcost, shortage of materials, quality issues and durability. Similar approaches to Algeria are driven in all regions from Azerbaijan and Argentina to Egypt, the Philippines and Zimbabwe.


Bringing this to life requires a wide range of integrated solutions and services available locally. This includes traditional products such as road binders, both natural and recycled aggregates, specialty concretes, and specific offers for soil stabilisation, land remediation, or hot mix asphalts solutions, to name a few.

LafargeHolcim is committed to help road players analyse and select road solutions. Materials engineering is not often considered at project design stage and certainly not enough by decision-makers. Typically, resource-efficient solutions for a road network would save 0.2-0.4% of a country’s GDP, each year.

Moreover, materials play an important role in the carbon emissions behaviour over a project’s lifetime. Carbon reduction impact can go up to 50%, according to local sourcing options, an encouraging feature when most international communities are focused on financing low carbon solutions.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Construction materials and road design in East Africa
    June 25, 2013
    An envisaged shortage in the supply of angular rock or crushed stone in Tanzania and a determination to conserve the environment by Kenyan authorities dictated the engineering design of a multi-national road linking the two largest economies in Eastern Africa. Shem Oirere reports The cost of buying crushed stone or hiring a site for mining the material and the expenses of moving it from the crushing site to the project area, saw designers opt for an intermediate alignment and discarding of the inner and out
  • Transforming Algeria's road network
    February 9, 2012
    Highway construction work is transforming Algeria, providing the country with a new network of highway quality road connections.
  • Transforming Algeria's road network
    April 4, 2012
    Highway construction work is transforming Algeria, providing the country with a new network of highway quality road connections. Several sections of the new trans-Algerian highway are already complete and carrying traffic, such as the stretch near the town of Setif. When complete the highway will run 1,200km across the north of the country from the border with Morocco in the west to the Tunisian border, passing through 24 provinces. This makes it the biggest highway project ever undertaken in Africa, as wel
  • Rigorous testing for high performance materials
    February 9, 2012
    Today’s highways require high performance materials, and this means rigorous testing as Patrick Smith reports Highways are under greater pressure than ever today and asphalts have to grant high performances in order to withstand traffic and meet the standards. Studying the plastic permanent deformations in hot mix asphalt (HMA) is very important to obtain useful information for mix designers as an appropriate mix design will reduce the formation of unevenness on road surface. To investigate the effect of mi