Always
the least expensive pavement
- You're not alone when you choose Hot
Mix Asphalt (HMA) pavements for your citizens. HMA's popularity tells
its own story. Of the 2.27 million miles of paved road in the United
States, 94 percent is surfaced with HMA, including 65 percent of the
Interstate system.
Today's HMA pavements are smoother than ever
before, so HMA satisfies your customer -the road user -who, most of
all, wants smooth pavements, according to recent research sponsored by
the federal government.
A smooth asphalt pavement saves in vehicular wear and makes drivers
happy. HMA pavements go down quickly and are open to traffic faster,
saving labor costs and costs due to user delays. And use of reclaimed
asphalt pavement (RAP) in the road base, base course, or surface
course can make those dollars go even farther, while sustaining the
environment.
But one of the best reasons to choose HMA is
its intrinsic low cost. Compared to Portland Cement Concrete (PCC),
HMA always is the least expensive pavement medium in initial cost.
This means more miles in your jurisdiction can be paved or overlaid in
a season, faster, and with lower road user costs.
But to most road agencies, long term costs
are even more important. And given the right design, HMA is the also
lowest priced pavement in the long term. Here's why.
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HMA
for short term, for long term
- HMA is your best buy all of the time
in both the short term and the long term. Real-life experience bears
this out.
For example, in the short term, a three-year
analysis conducted by the Florida Department of Transportation showed
first-cost, initial construction of an HMA pavement to cost $544,981,
compared to a first-cost of the same pavement in Portland Cement
Concrete of $765,729. And in the long term, following usage and proper
maintenance, Florida DOT calculated the residual value of the HMA
pavement to be 203 percent higher than the PCC pavement.
Rigid pavements may not be as trouble-free in
terms of placement and longevity as alleged. PCC boosters say it has
lower maintenance costs than HMA, thus justifying its higher initial
cost, but the Florida Department of Transportation calculated its
routine annual maintenance costs on the above pavement as $132 per
lane mile for asphalt pavement and $261 per lane mile for concrete
pavement.
Initial costs of HMA pavements are
substantially lower than PCC. In a notable reconstruction of a
suburban intersection in Maryland, the Maryland State Highway
Administration evaluated the costs and performance of both pavement
types under the same conditions.
At the intersection of U.S. 40 and Maryland
213, contractors milled 8 inches of old pavement and placed 15,000
square yards of new HMA in 11 nights, with minimal lane closures.
There, PCC forces also installed 1,800 square yards of material,
working around-the-clock with long-time lane closures.
Not counting user delay costs now a prime
consideration in state DOT work ?on this project the PCC pavement cost
nearly three times as much per square yard ($104.25) as the HMA
pavement ($36.11). And when revisited in 1998, the HMA pavement looked
as smooth as new, while the PCC pavement was badly broken and in need
of repair.
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Side-by-side,
HMA shines
- It's the long term that interests most
road agencies. In new research presented at the January 1999
Transportation Research Board meeting by researchers at the Center for
Transportation Research, University of Texas-Austin, the paper
"Pavement Type Selection and its Current Practices in North
American Highway Agencies" (Beg, Zhang, Hudson), showed that HMA
is the highest-ranked pavement type when state and provincial Canadian
agencies consider new pavements.
Asphalt concrete pavement on granular stone
base is the most widely considered pavement alternative, with 94
percent "yes" responses in this new survey of U.S. and
Canadian road agencies. These same agencies state that "life
cycle costs" are the most significant criterion used in selecting
pavement type (66 percent), compared to "initial cost" (17
percent), and "both life cycle and initial costs" (17
percent).
Long-term pavement studies on HMA interstate
sections in Jasper and Poweshiek counties in Iowa show that HMA
pavements ? instead of needing extensive maintenance are
cost-effective in the long run.
Based on Iowa Department of Transportation
records, a life-cycle cost analysis rolled all costs back to 1957
dollars per one-way, two-lane mile; 1957 was the earliest year that
interstate sections in the study were constructed. A discount rate of
4 percent was selected for use to stay consistent with discount rates
used by the Iowa DOT.
Even though user delay costs and residual
values were not counted, the studies showed that the HMA pavements
provided more than 22 years of service without the need for
reconstruction or rehabilitation, and that they had a lesser rate of
increase in cost for maintenance than adjoining concrete pavements. If
user delay costs and residual values had been counted, they would have
made HMA look even better.
Similarly, an apples-to-apples comparison on
Ohio's Interstates showed HMA pavements provided 25 to 34 years of
continuous service before rehabilitation. They also were less costly
to construct and maintain than adjoining PCC pavements. As in Iowa,
they had a lower rate of increase in cost for maintenance than
adjoining concrete pavements. Clearly, PCC pavements are more
expensive to maintain, and this affects their long-term life-cycle
costs.
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Maintenance:
CPR for PCC
- That's because PCC
"maintenance" includes time?, money? and labor-intensive
operations like CPR, which almost always will be more expensive than
conventional HMA maintenance like crack sealing and pothole patching.
In road maintenance parlance, CPR means
Concrete Pavement Restoration. Far from being a maintenance activity,
CPR refers to a variety of intensive construction actions, such as
joint repair and sealing, slab jacking, and grinding.
For example, joint repair requires pavement
sawing, debris material removal, placement of load-transfer dowels and
baskets, mixing, transport and placement of PCC patch material,
subsequent curing (perhaps over days), re-sawing of the expansion
joint, and sealing of the joint. All these activities are accompanied
by lane closures which seem excruciating to the motorist.
Because they can conform to gradual shifts,
HMA pavements aren't as likely to be harmed by adverse soil conditions
like expansive clays as much as rigid PCC slabs, which may break up or
fault. When a PCC pavement's slabs have faulted, the ride becomes
unacceptably rough. Remedy requires lane closures as specialty
contractors with large, expensive diamond grinding equipment are
employed. Slowly moving down the lane, the grinding equipment
precisely "shaves off' the jarring surface to smooth it.
In the worst case, faulted slabs actually
will pump wet material to the surface as trucks pass over them. Often,
saturated subgrade materials will spurt from under the slab and onto
the shoulder or driving surface, quickly undermining the pavement.
Remedying such extensive faults requires "slab jacking," in
which holes are drilled in the slabs and cement grout is pumped into
the voids beneath the pavement. Slab jacking can be ineffective
because it can crack the slab. Again, lane closures can be
excruciating.
Even local PCC pavements which don't require
such drastic CPR measures still need maintenance. D-cracking needs to
be patched. Joints lose their sealants, and need to be resealed.
HMA maintenance techniques, on the other
hand, are relatively brief and uncomplicated. Periodic patching or
crack sealing can be conducted when necessary at minimal cost and
disruption to traffic. When needed, milling and thin overlay can be
accomplished quickly and economically, often overnight, without
disrupting traffic flow. And 100 percent of the reclaimed HMA can be
recycled.
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It
all adds up to HMA
- Initial
costs, maintenance costs, long-term costs, user delay costs, residual
costs. They all add up to one thing: HMA is the lower-cost pavement,
hands down.
Want more information? CONTACT
US to get the answers to your questions.
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- Sidenote:
- HMA's Low Cost
Keeps Fort Worth in "Black"
- Fort Worth is using Hot Mix Asphalt
(HMA) more and more on its city streets, reports the Texas Hot Mix
Asphalt Pavement Association.
Fort Worth finds that HMA's low initial cost permits them to put a
major dent in its road-maintenance backlog. The city has some 5,600
lane miles of roadway to manage and maintain, of which as much as 30
percent may be classified as being in poor condition, said George
Behmanesh, Assistant Director of Transportation.
Fort Worth is implementing a Pavement Management System (PMS) to give
it an inventory of every street and pavement condition within its
network. The city has two programs to address street needs: An HMA
overlay program, funded through the annual budget, and reconstruction
from a 1998 bond package.
The bond package is intended to help fund the major rehabilitation and
reconstruction of streets. Voters approved a $120 million dollar bond
package, of which $80 million is earmarked for streets and
appurtenances.
The majority of the street reconstruction work over the four-year
period will be done using Hot Mix Asphalt in order to "stretch
their dollars," Behmanesh said. HMA will be used
for total reconstruction projects as well as for in-place
reconstruction of existing HMA streets.
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