Skip to main content

Wirtgen scores a first in road recycling

Ireland is now using road recycling techniques in County Cork, with a Wirtgen WR2400 playing an important role. The 3.5km trial is pointing the way for future road rehabilitation projects in the country and is being carried out on a stretch of the busy N71, which links Cork with the peninsula in the south west of Ireland. This three-lane carriageway provides an important link as it is popular with tourists and the trial is being carried out between the towns of Inishannon and Bandon. The 3.5km trial has bee
July 17, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Ireland is now using road recycling techniques in County Cork, with a 2395 Wirtgen WR2400 playing an important role. The 3.5km trial is pointing the way for future road rehabilitation projects in the country and is being carried out on a stretch of the busy N71, which links Cork with the peninsula in the south west of Ireland. This three-lane carriageway provides an important link as it is popular with tourists and the trial is being carried out between the towns of Inishannon and Bandon. The 3.5km trial has been commissioned by the 5525 National Roads Authority and is employing a Wirtgen WR2400 self-propelled soil stabiliser/recycler owned and operated by Staplestown Ground Stabilisation of Murrintown, County Wexford.

However, the N71 trial looks set to lead to increased use of road recycling techniques, cutting costs and reducing the quantities of new materials required. Staplestown reclaimed and recycled the material from the existing pavement and, in places, changed the camber of the new road at the same time. For this, the carriageway was prepared in advance of the WR2400 using a 1194 Vögele 1803-2 paver, operated by Arkil, of County Kildare and also supplied by Wirtgen Ireland. The paver was used to lay a granular material on top of the existing pavement to correct the road camber and aid drainage. The process involved reworking the existing bituminous surface and granular base to a depth of around 300mm. The WR2400 recycler machine pulverised the material to the required depth, mixed and re-laid the materials in a single pass.

On some sections of the road a patented polymer additive was also mixed with the cement to improve flexural strength, while water was added where necessary. When the additives were mixed, compaction of the layer was carried out conventionally using a 228 Hamm 3520 single drum machine. The recycled stabilised layer was then surfaced with a bituminous base and wearing course. In total, some 28,000m² of road surface was recycled on the N71 trial, representing some 8,400m³ of material.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Runway rebuild for Detroit airport
    January 25, 2017
    A US contractor has employed equipment from Guntert & Zimmerman to help carry out a runway rebuild at Detroit Metro Airport The busy airport handles around 30 million passengers/year and the project had to be carried out in a tight timeframe as a result, with the paving crew working 16 hours/day to meet the schedule. Ajax Construction has been using its G&Z S850 paver for the work, which was needed as the existing concrete surface on runway 4L/22R had suffered from an alkali silica reaction (ASR). The
  • Historic Oakland Bay Bridge receives a new asphalt road surface
    March 31, 2014
    Part of an iconic US bridge has been given a new lease of life, as Mike Woof reports The western section of the historic Oakland Bay Bridge in the US state of California has recently benefited from a series of improvements to strengthen its structural integrity and also upgrade the running surface. Contractor OC Jones & Sons of Berkeley CA, paved large portions of the bridge, taking on two different projects as part of the work. First was placement of the specialised epoxy on the self-anchored suspension (S
  • Skanska and Kraton boost RAP use with called SYLVAROAD™ RP1000
    November 23, 2017
    The city of Västerås in central Sweden is known as a centre for industrial automation and information technology. Innovation abounds here and with it comes strong environmental efforts – meeting carbon reduction goals and maximising the recycling process, for example. A road construction project just outside this picturesque city highlights such innovation.
  • New East Africa highway connecting Kenya, Tanzania, South Sudan
    June 8, 2016
    East African countries continue to implement a road Master Plan developed jointly under the East African Community initiative and which aims at integrating the region’s transport corridors to meet the growing demand for road transport by the increasing intra-regional trade and vehicular traffic. Kenya has for example unveiled a US$280 million road rehabilitation project to improve its links with Tanzania and South Sudan with the backing of the African Development Bank (AfDB). Rehabilitation of the 172