Skip to main content

Recycling materials for road construction

Recycled demolition material and vehicle tyres could be used for road construction.
By MJ Woof August 20, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Once tyres have reached the end of their working life, they could be ground down to produce crumb rubber for use in construction - image © courtesy of Mike Woof


New research carried out in Australia suggests that road base material could be produced from recycled demolition rubble and old vehicle tyres.

With the tyres converted into crumb rubber and the rubble sorted, washed and crushed to a suitable size, the combination offers major benefits for road base construction.

According to research from RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia, mixing these materials can provide a suitable base course granulate that meets road engineering safety standards.

Using these materials could help address issues with recycling. The research shows that the optimum combination contains around 99.5% of recycled demolitions materials mixed with 0.5% of crumb rubber.

While recycled demolition waste has been allowed for use in construction for some time, the research shows that adding crumb rubber from old vehicle tyres actually helps improve mechanical properties for use in road base construction.

The research team has shown that this combined material performs well in terms of strength, deformation and dynamic properties. It can carry heavy loads, is water and acid resistant and offers low shrinkage. Of key importance is that it also offers a degree of flexibility due to the presence of the crumb rubber, meaning that it reduces the risk of crack propagation through base layers. And as cracking is a major cause of failure in road base construction, this last factor highlights the material’s value.

‘An experimental study on the shear behaviour of recycled concrete aggregate incorporating recycled tyre waste’ is published in Construction and Building Materials (DOI: 10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2020.120266

Related Content

  • Innovative high performance asphalt technology
    February 14, 2012
    An authority replaces container wharf pavement damaged by forklift loads in world's first commercial use of high-performance asphalt base course. By Paul Fournier
  • Cost-effective cold mix asphalt recycling
    February 17, 2012
    In Lithuania, cold mix asphalt containing recycled asphalt pavement has been installed in a new base course overlay for a section of the A1, the country's most heavily trafficked motorway.
  • Lighting can affect road safety
    February 5, 2013
    New research carried out jointly by the Lighting Research Center and Penn State have identified links between visibility and safety from roadway lighting. The results are said to hold promise for predicting the safety benefits of new lighting configurations. Identifying when and where to install roadway illumination is a challenge for transportation agencies. Estimating nighttime crash reductions from roadway lighting is difficult in part because lighting tends to be installed along with other improvements
  • Cold milling popular for road materials recycling
    July 4, 2012
    Milling techniques remain one of the most widely used recycling methods Well-proven, cold milling techniques remain one of the most widely used methods for materials recycling in road construction. Milled road materials can be cleaned up and re-used in both asphalt and concrete highway construction. German firm Wirtgen has long dominated the market for road milling machines and has the largest share of the sector (as well as the broadest product range), although other firms based in Europe and the US are be