DurabRoads
This article was originally written by Divya Deepankar, Research Engineer, BSRIA Sustainable Construction Group. You can see the original article, published in July 2016, here.
In the European road sector, large quantities of materials and energy are consumed both in construction and maintenance, which is magnified by the negative effects of extreme weather conditions caused by climate change and the significant increase of traffic flow on some motorways due to the opening of freight corridors.
The technical limitations of current road materials and construction procedures have significant influence on the reduction of the asphalt surfaces lifetime and as a consequence, increases the costs of construction, maintenance and rehabilitation works, whilst also reducing the network availability.
Consequently, there is a need to develop new technologies and systems to provide a more affordable, durable, safer, greener and cost-effective road infrastructure. The objective of the DurabRoads project is to design, develop, and demonstrate cost-effective, eco-friendly and optimised long-life roads, which are more adapted to freight corridors and effects of climate-change by means of innovative designs, and the use of greener materials improved by nanotechnology.
A major aim of this project is the optimisation of current construction, maintenance, and rehabilitation procedures. The identification and quantification of the harmful effects of ever increasing traffic and environmental loads on the European highways is a major task identified in this project.
The participants involved in the project consortium include:
- Universidad De Cantabria.
- Acciona Infraestructuras.
- Fraunhofer.
- European Union Road Federation (ERF).
- Tecnalia.
- Norwegian Graphite.
- BSRIA.
- Institute for Transport Sciences (KTI).
- Sia Inenierbuve (IB).
BSRIA’s role in this project is to conduct the Life Cycle Assessment and Life Cycle Costing Analysis of the proposed road design by establishing a base case scenario similar to the existing roads to then compare it with the modified alternative designs.
This project targets two problems associated with the road industry:
Deterioration of asphalt surfaces
Addressing the technical limitation of current materials and procedures, negative effects of extreme weather conditions due to climate change and increase of traffic loads due to the opening of freight corridors.
Unsustainability of the road sector
Addressing the intensive use of natural resources, i.e. aggregates and fuel, greenhouse gas emissions and low recycling rate. The base case of the road is being established based on the environmental product declaration (EPD) of a cleavage of a Spanish road, N-340 in Sector E-40, Elche (Alicante) given by Acciona Infraestructura. The alternative designs will use warm mix asphalts (WMA) incorporating the nanomaterial-modified bituminous binders (NMB), including the addition of recycled asphalt pavement (RAP) and by-products. Asphalt concrete, porous asphalt and BBTM mixes types are also expected to be designed.
This project proposes two solutions to the problems identified above in the road industry by:
- Evaluation and optimisation of road related materials and procedures.
- Development and validation of advanced, more durable, and eco-friendly asphalt materials.
The first stage of evaluation and optimisation of road-related materials and procedures will be conducted by first quantifying the impacts of climate change and of the traffic loads in freight corridors on the EU road network. Then, an evaluation of the constraints on road materials and the road construction, maintenance, rehabilitation techniques to withstand challenges coming from climate change and freight corridors will be conducted.
By defining the optimisation criteria on durability, safety, cost-effectiveness, environmental-friendliness and socio-economic factors, using life-time engineering concepts and multi-criteria analysis, the best practices will be identified.
The second stage of development and validation of advanced; more durable and eco-friendly asphalt materials will involve selection, analysis and characterization of carbon nanomaterials with good compatibility towards organic matrices like polymers and bitumen.
The alternative materials suggested as additions into the road material mix include nanomaterial-modified polymers, nanomaterial-modified bituminous binders (NMB), small quantities of steel slag as a substitute to aggregates and warm mix asphalts (WMA) incorporating the NMB, including the addition of recycled asphalt pavement (RAP) and by-products. Asphalt concrete, porous asphalt and BBTM mixes types are expected to be designed.
By conducting a Life Cycle Assessment and Life Cycle Costing Analysis, the objective is to understand the environmental impact of constructing a road which will be compared with the alternate cases on development and addition of warm mix asphalts to the road mix to identify the most suitable material mix.
After implementation and validation of two DurabRoads pavements at a real scale, these materials are suggested to be incorporated into the road construction material mix.
--BSRIA
[edit] Find out more
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki
- BSRIA articles on Designing Buildings Wiki.
- DurabRoads - life cycle costing analysis.
- European hydronic controls market.
- Kerbs.
- Life Cycle Costing.
- Overview of the road development process.
- Pavement.
- Platooning.
- Road construction.
- Road improvement scheme consultation.
- Road joints.
- Smart technology.
- Types of road and street.
Featured articles and news
Microcosm of biodiversity in balconies and containers
How minor design adaptations for considerable biodiversity benefit.
CIOB student competitive construction challenge Ireland
Inspiring a new wave of Irish construction professionals.
Challenges of the net zero transition in Scotland
Skills shortage and ageing workforce hampering Scottish transition to net zero.
Private rental sector, living standards and fuel poverty
Report from the NRH in partnership with Impact on Urban Health.
.Cold chain condensing units market update
Tracking the evolution of commercial refrigeration unit markets.
Attending a conservation training course, personal account
The benefits of further learning for professsionals.
Restoring Alexander Pope's grotto
The only surviving part of his villa in Twickenham.
International Women's Day 8 March, 2025
Accelerating Action for For ALL Women and Girls: Rights. Equality. Empowerment.
Lack of construction careers advice threatens housing targets
CIOB warning on Government plans to accelerate housebuilding and development.
Shelter from the storm in Ukraine
Ukraine’s architects paving the path to recovery.
BSRIA market intelligence division key appointment
Lisa Wiltshire to lead rapidly growing Market Intelligence division.
A blueprint for construction’s sustainability efforts
Practical steps to achieve the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
Timber in Construction Roadmap
Ambitious plans from the Government to increase the use of timber in construction.
ECA digital series unveils road to net-zero.
Retrofit and Decarbonisation framework N9 launched
Aligned with LHCPG social value strategy and the Gold Standard.
Competence framework for sustainability
In the built environment launched by CIC and the Edge.
Institute of Roofing members welcomed into CIOB
IoR members transition to CIOB membership based on individual expertise and qualifications.
Join the Building Safety Linkedin group to stay up-to-date and join the debate.
Government responds to the final Grenfell Inquiry report
A with a brief summary with reactions to their response.
Comments
Thanks for sharing this information