Skip to main content

German Autobahn receives new concrete surface

Precision paving performance has been achieved on a major road project in Germany, using Wirtgen slipform pavers. The SP1500 and SP1500L models have been used to help upgrade a stretch of the BAB A9 Autobahn in Thuringia. The BAB A9 Autobahn is one of Germany’s most important roads, connecting the German cities of Berlin and Munich over a total distance of 529km. The route runs from Brandenburg through Saxony-Anhalt, Saxony, Thuringia and into Bavaria.
September 11, 2014 Read time: 3 mins
The contracting team has been using two Wirtgen pavers to lay the top and bottom layers, wet on wet

Precision paving performance has been achieved on a major road project in Germany, using 2395 Wirtgen slipform pavers. The SP1500 and SP1500L models have been used to help upgrade a stretch of the BAB A9 Autobahn in Thuringia.

The BAB A9 Autobahn is one of Germany’s most important roads, connecting the German cities of Berlin and Munich over a total distance of 529km. The route runs from Brandenburg through Saxony-Anhalt, Saxony, Thuringia and into Bavaria.

The 19km widening job for the A9 between Triptis and Schleiz was based for the first time in Germany using a new model of public-private partnership, with payment dependent on the quality of service provided. In practice, any defects in quality and any limitation on availability will result in a reduction of the payment to the operator during the 20-year concession.

To meet the lifetime requirements the consortium carrying out the work, 3281 Eurovia, opted to use concrete surfacing, with a finish designed to reduce surface noise. Concrete offers a high resistance to deformation as well as a high load-bearing capacity able to cope with a high percentage of large trucks, while requiring minimal maintenance.

The work required laying the surface for six motorway lanes extending 19km has required some 165,000m3 of concrete. On the A9 job site, the two Wirtgen pavers laid down the two-layer concrete pavement in just one pass at a rate of around 400-500m/day.

The SP1500L paver laid the subgrade. The 230mm-thick bottom-layer concrete was paved true to line and level and compacted by an internal vibrator, while the machine simultaneously embedded dowels and tie bars in it. This yields a homogeneous base for the 70mm-thick top-layer concrete.

The top-layer concrete is installed immediately after the bottom-layer concrete, so as to ensure optimal interlocking of both layers. The concrete for the top-layer is provided via the bottom-layer concrete paver from a receiving hopper with a charging conveyor and placed in front of the second slipform paver, the SP1500.

The machine then distributes this material across the entire paving width with its spreading plough, installs the top-layer concrete wet-in-wet when passing over it and simultaneously compacts it. The finishing beam and super smoother produce the desired optimum surface finish: during the paving process, a finishing beam is deployed across the roadway while an oscillating super smoother operates in the direction of travel of the paver.

The concrete pavement is additionally sprayed with a TCM 1800 curing unit across the entire working width immediately after paving. This prevents rapid evaporation and the formation of cracks.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Germany builds its first major PPI autobahn project
    July 7, 2015
    Rebuilding of one of the oldest motorways in Germany is testing out the possibilities for public-private project road construction reports Adrian Greeman A freshly renovated section of the A8 Autobahn in southern Germany will be watched with some interest this summer as traffic begins driving along its rebuilt carriageway and additional third lanes. That is not because of any special road features, other than a distinctive reddish colour to its concrete surface, but because it is a first fullscale public
  • Hot-to-hot paving upgrades Bremen City Airport runway
    September 30, 2013
    A new high quality runway surface has been laid at Bremen City Airport. This has provided a much-needed replacement at the airport as the old runway was laid over 20 years ago and was suffering from cracking and potholes. Laying the new surface required the airport to be closed, with the work having to be carried out in a tight time schedule. Contractor Heitkamp Erd- und Straßenbau was brought in to carry out the work as the firm had experience in runway rehabilitation projects having carried out pavemen
  • Wirtgen fleet helps build Romanian road
    December 17, 2013
    A fleet of Wirtgen machines is helping build a section of a major highway in Romania, the Transylvanian Autostrada A3. This 588km road connects Romanian capital Bucharest with the Hungarian border and links to the Hungarian M4 highway. Plans for the A3 got the go-ahead in 2004 and the route runs via Ploieti, Braov, Sighioara, Târgu Mure, Cluj-Napoca, Zalau and Oradea to the Hungarian border, with completion scheduled for 2017.
  • Concrete paving meets demanding airport conditions
    July 11, 2012
    High speed, high quality concrete paving can be achieved in the demanding airport environment using the latest equipment. Minnich Manufacturing has developed a novel dowel pin drilling machine and has successfully tested this equipment at Tyndall Air Force Base in Panama City, Florida. The A-5SCW is a self-propelled, cantilevered machine that features a wireless remote control and is designed to install five dowel pins simultaneously. The control system has been developed by Wisconsin Kar-Tech and uses prov