Skip to main content

Aggregate Industries moves plant to Inverness city centre

Aggregate Industries said that its new plant in the centre of Inverness, Scotland, provides warm mix asphalt to allow surfacing contractors to extend their range of products. AI, which relocated its asphalt plant in Daviot to Inverness, said that the new location makes it faster for customers to access the plant by offering 24-hour service by request. Also, customers are less likely to be affected by adverse weather conditions as previously experienced in Daviot.
July 10, 2018 Read time: 1 min

2297 Aggregate Industries said that its new plant in the centre of Inverness, Scotland, provides warm mix asphalt to allow surfacing contractors to extend their range of products. AI, which relocated its asphalt plant in Daviot to Inverness, said that the new location makes it faster for customers to access the plant by offering 24-hour service by request. Also, customers are less likely to be affected by adverse weather conditions as previously experienced in Daviot.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Tailor made pavement preservation solutions
    March 16, 2012
    VSS Macropaver is well known worldwide for offering customers individualised solutions for their emulsion blending needs.
  • How bitumen technology is helping roads do more
    November 14, 2016
    From lightening tunnels to keeping racing cars on tracks to preventing ice from forming, bitumen technology is helping roads do more - Kristina Smith reports If you think bitumen is just bitumen, useful for sticking lumps of aggregate together, it’s time to think again. The ever-widening and ever-more-sophisticated range of technologies and additives available means that we can ask our road surfaces to do more than ever.
  • Self-service concrete plant
    September 2, 2020
    Liebherr is now offering a novel self-service concrete plant, a unit that allows firms to supply customers with a range of types of concrete.
  • Better road surfaces to last longer
    August 23, 2013
    Preservation can make roads perform better and last longer - and save money in the long run. Kristina Smith reports BAM Wegen has laid the first ever half-warm porous asphalt section on a major highway in the Netherlands. The asphalt for the 500m-long test section on the A18 near Varsseveld was produced at 105°C rather than 160°C, representing a saving on energy and CO2 emissions of around 30%.