Skip to main content

Pervious concrete improves storm water drainage

MINNESOTA CITIES including Minneapolis and Richfield have been testing pervious concrete on parking lots and other hard surfaces to improve storm water management. In Shoreview MN, the authorities went a stage further by opting to replace a storm drainage system with pervious concrete.
April 10, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
North County Concrete set up its Allen Triple Roller Tube Paver to pave the full width streets in one pass
MINNESOTA CITIES including Minneapolis and Richfield have been testing pervious concrete on parking lots and other hard surfaces to improve storm water management. In Shoreview MN, the authorities went a stage further by opting to replace a storm drainage system with pervious concrete. The project includes the reconstruction of five streets in the Woodbridge neighbourhood totalling around 1.6km of pervious concrete streets. Local firm 1230 Cemstone supplied the 1,412m3 of pervious concrete for this project. The pervious concrete was paved 178mm thick and 6.4m wide between two surmountable kerbs. The pervious concrete was placed over 457mm of crushed aggregate base which will allow the storm water to drain through the pervious concrete and filter through the aggregate before re-entering the soil beneath. The job was awarded to North Country Concrete, which decided to use an Allen Model 255CD Triple Roller Tube Paver from 156 Allen Engineering. The paver has a strike-off tube that continuously pushes the excess concrete in front of the machine and two full length drive roller tubes for compaction. The strike-off tube has a vertical adjustment which was set at 19mm above finish grade and the contractor explained that this allowed the machine to achieve high compaction, boosting the durability of the pavement.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Speedy airport upgrade
    February 15, 2012
    Increases in flight numbers from the Frankfurt Hahn airport have resulted in necessary improvements to the facility, including new runway surfaces. The former German military airbase has been used as a civilian airport since 1993 but is now Germany's fifth largest air cargo hub and handles some 40,000 flights/year.
  • Special tools for concrete construction from Curb Roller and Minnich
    August 10, 2020
    Minnich Manufacturing has introduced its latest A-4SCW on-slab self-propelled wireless dowel pin drill. The firm claims that this unit features the first I-QAN remote communication system for dowel drills, as well as benefiting from other upgrades.
  • Cost-saving compact twin layer asphalt paving
    February 28, 2012
    Twin-layer paving offers high quality, long lasting road surfaces to be constructed. Paver manufacturer Dynapac is one of the pioneers of the twin-layer paving technique, which it calls Compactasphalt. According to Dynapac this method offers major benefits to contractors and clients alike as roads surfaced using this technique last longer and are cheaper to maintain. To ensure contractors have maximum utilisation of their machines, Dynapac offers a modular paver system that can be operated using the convent
  • Mexico's new RCC concrete road
    November 9, 2017
    CEMEX is supplying a special grade of concrete for use on a busy logistics centre in Mexico. The order has been for 21,500m3 of roller compacted concrete (RCC) to pave all of the roads for the new terminal of ALA Transportes, a division of Grupo Transportes de Monterrey (GTM) - the largest trucking company in Mexico. The trucking firm needed a tough and durable concrete grade to be able to cope with the loads exerted by the movements of around 400 heavily laden trailers/day at the facility.