Skip to main content

PlasticRoad goes commercial

Raw material used in the production of the CCL200 and CCL300 path and road modules consists of 100% recycled municipal plastic waste.
By David Arminas May 24, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Installation of a footpath at Efteling Amusement Park, a fantasy-themed amusement park in Kaatsheuvel, the Netherlands (image courtesy PlasticRoad)

Dutch company PlasticRoad officially went commercial with its products on May 20, according to the company.

The announcement noted that PlasticRoad has come a long way since its first product trials in 2018. “The world’s very first plastic road was installed in September 2018 in the Dutch city of Zwolle,” said the company.
 
“Today we officially launch our circular, climate-adaptive and lightweight - CCL - products onto the market. These industrially produced products made from plastic waste are now commercially available, we are ready,” said Eric Kievit, managing director of PlasticRoad.

Recycled raw material used in their production consists of 100% recycled municipal plastic waste. The company believes that their products - CCL200 and CCL300 - are the lightest paving structures in the world, from 48kg/m² to 40kg/m². The CCL300 product offers a filter system that completely removes the need for a dedicated storm sewer. Embedded sensors present new opportunities to scale up the modular infrastructure in terms of functionality and connect it to existing traffic management systems.

For commercialisation of the product, PlasticRoad has reinforced both the connectors between individual road elements and the structure as a whole.

The company manufactures its plastic road elements on an industrial scale with Wavin and VolkerWessels as shareholders.

The latest user of its products is the Efteling Amusement Park, a fantasy-themed amusement park in Kaatsheuvel, the Netherlands. The attractions reflect elements from ancient myths and legends, fairy tales, fables and folklore. Part of the footpath leading to the entrance of the park was made using PlasticRoad’s CCL300 product. “At Efteling, we ultimately hope to become climate neutral, and both waste reduction and recycling play an important part in this endeavour,” said Wyke Smit, head of administrative affairs at the park.

Last summer the company said the world’s first plastic surfaced bike paths, laid in the Netherlands in 2018, recorded a millionth crossing, according to PlasticRoad, the company that makes the surface. Each of the two 30m bike paths contain about 1,000kg of recycled plastics, the equivalent of 218,000 plastic cups. The pilot version of the PlasticRoad has cut CO₂ emissions by between 50% and 70% compared to conventional bike paths made from asphalt or concrete slabs, claims the company.

Related Content

  • Global road safety programme
    June 11, 2020
    A global road safety programme will help save lives.
  • Preserving transport Infrastructure, while adapting to climate change
    June 14, 2019
    Hundreds of lives lost. More than 8,000 people stuck overnight in a flooded airport in Japan in the wake of a typhoon in 2018. Nearly 800% of the gross domestic product (GDP) of the Dutch island of St. Maarten (and 600% of the GDP of the French half, St. Martin) wiped out during the 2017 hurricane season, which devastated many Caribbean island economies, with over $5.4 billion in losses reported in Anguilla, Bahamas, British Virgin Islands, St. Maarten, and Turks and Caicos Islands alone. Transportation in
  • US concrete demand set to grow
    October 14, 2016
    Demand for cement and concrete additives will grow to US$4 billion by 2020.
  • Water defence
    February 17, 2012
    A new system for reducing the risks of road water run-off contamination is now available from HYDRO International. The firm's new Downstream Defender is said to be an advanced hydrodynamic separator and is designed to meet tough new European regulations for treatment of suspended solids and pollutants in surface water run-off.