Skip to main content

Old and new wearing well

Kirkstall Abbey is hundreds of years old, while Stonegrip, manufactured by Prismo Road Markings, is by comparison extremely new, but both are wearing extremely well. The abbey in the northern English city of Leeds dates back to 1125, and is one of the most complete examples of a medieval Cistercian Abbey in Britain. Over the past few years it has benefited from a £5.5 million (E7 million) National Lottery-funded investment, granted for the general upkeep of the structure and its surrounds. As a result, more
July 19, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Kirkstall Abbey is hundreds of years old, while Stonegrip, manufactured by 6245 Prismo Road Markings, is by comparison extremely new, but both are wearing extremely well.

The abbey in the northern English city of Leeds dates back to 1125, and is one of the most complete examples of a medieval Cistercian Abbey in Britain.

Over the past few years it has benefited from a £5.5 million (E7 million) National Lottery-funded investment, granted for the general upkeep of the structure and its surrounds. As a result, more than 1,000m² of Prismo Stonegrip was installed to enhance the Abbey's pathways.

Special pink flint was added to Stonegrip's normal buff bauxite aggregate for the project, in order to match with the Abbey and its backdrop.

Stonegrip is a blend of coloured epoxy resin binder and natural pigmented decorative aggregates of stone, spar, granite, marble, bauxite and gravel, which are employed as a dressing.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Polyfunctional Polymeric Systems (PPS) help stressed roads
    May 12, 2016
    Increases in mobility and loads to which roadways are subjected has led, over the past decade, to new technologies for increasing the life of highly stressed pavements. Alongside traditional layers in asphalt concrete with normal or modified binders, there are new technologies which make it possible to produce high performance bituminous layers through the use of polyfunctional polymeric systems (PPSs).
  • Transstroy’s ambitions for Sochi 2014 Olympics and beyond
    September 30, 2013
    Igor Pankin is CEO of Transstroy, one of Russia’s largest transport infrastructure construction companies, a part of Oleg Deripaska’s Basic Element group. Created in 1992, the company has completed major construction projects with a combined worth of more than €4 billion (RUB 121 billion) The Olympic motto, ‘Swifter, Higher, Stronger’, is very appropriate for the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics – and not just in reference to the action in its stadiums and on its slopes. The city has been transformed from a small
  • We can be Heroes
    January 11, 2023
    Paraguay’s Puente Héroes del Chaco will provide a vital transport link for the country once it is complete, Mauro Nogarin and Mike Woof report
  • Key projects free up Auckland's congested motorway network
    June 14, 2012
    A number of key projects in Auckland, New Zealand will free-up the city’s congested motorway network - Mary Searle reports.Auckland is a sprawling city, home to 1.4 million people, one third of New Zealand’s total population. Until recently, greater Auckland comprised Auckland city, North Shore city over the harbour bridge to the north, Waitakere city to the west and Manukau city to the south. An amalgamation of these various cities’ councils, plus the regional council and three district councils into one,