The 2009 California Pavement Preservation Conference
The Fourth Annual California Pavement Preservation Conference was
held in Oakland, California on April 8—9, 2009. For the first time
this year, optional pre-conference training sessions on pavement
preservation and maintenance were offered. The workshops covered
- asphalt fundamentals
- asphalt pavement maintenance
- concrete construction, materials and quality
- pavement management fundamentals, and
- pavement preservation concepts.
Major topics at the conference included strategy selection, new
technologies, and funding pavement preservation programs. Many speakers
stressed the importance of partnered efforts between industry, academia,
and user agencies in convincing elected officials to fund pavement
preservation practices. Several presentations also discussed the use of
environmentally friendly technologies such as hot and cold recycling,
the incorporation of waste rubber tires into asphalt pavements, warm mix
technology for energy and emission reductions, and porous pavements to
regenerate ground water tables.
In the opening session, Randy Iwasaki, Chief Deputy Director for
Caltrans, noted that $206 million is now spent on pavement preservation
by Caltrans, up from $90 million. He mentioned the I-710 perpetual
pavement project in southern California, the importance of developing a
pavement management system, and the role of the California Pavement
Preservation Center at California State University, Chico in getting the
word out about pavement preservation.
Mr. Iwasaki also discussed the need to push pavement preservation as
a major part of the next transportation bill, the university involvement
in research at the University of California, Davis, and the need to
attract students into the field of pavement preservation. He also noted
that $2.7 billion in stimulus money will be available for highways and
streets in California with about 67% of it headed to cities, counties,
and local agencies and 33% going to Caltrans.
In a session on economic stimulus and funding issues, Walter
"Butch" Waidelich, California Division Administrator of the
Federal Highway Administration, discussed the future direction of the
nation's transportation program and the emphasis on pavement
preservation.
Larry Patterson from the City of San Mateo described his agency's
experience with pavement management. Mr. Patterson noted that San Mateo
has 189 centerline miles of streets (126 miles of local streets) with an
estimated investment of $196 million. San Mateo initiated a pavement
management program using The Metropolitan Transportation Commission's
StreetSaver software in 1995 and had it fully implemented in 2001. They
went from rehabilitating five-to-10 miles of street per year to more
than 50 miles per year. The pavement management program provided San
Mateo with an accurate and complete condition assessment, offered
information for education of the public and elected officials, and led
to more pavement preservation treatments such as slurry seals and chip
seals.
Sessions describing more environmentally beneficial pavement
preservation treatments included a presentation by Francois Chaignon of
COLAS on the energy and emission issues associated with road
construction. The discussion covered new and existing technologies such
as Warm Mix Asphalt and the use of emulsified asphalts as ways to reduce
energy consumption and emissions in an increasingly environmentally
sensitive world. Sohila Bemanian, a consultant formerly with the Nevada
Department of Transportation described various hot and cold in-place
recycling strategies.
John Harvey of the University of California Pavement Research Center
discussed quiet pavement research. Dr. Harvey described the equipment
that researchers use to monitor pavement noise from passing vehicles on
various types of pavement surfaces including modified open graded
friction courses. Selection of certain pavement surfaces to reduce
pavement noise may be a viable option to the construction of expensive
sound wall barriers.
In a session on innovations, new technologies, and strategies in the
pavement preservation arena, Mary Stroup-Gardiner of the California
Pavement Preservation Center identified some new materials and pavement
systems that are not yet fully integrated with California's pavement
preservation program. Examples include RAC-O-HB field projects that
appear to be performing well, various interlayer systems, fog and
rejuvenating seals, European quiet pavement systems, and cold and hot
in-place recycling.
Conference sponsors included
- the American Concrete Pavement Association—Southwest
- California Chip Seal Association
- Caltrans
- California Pavement Preservation Center and
- the Technology Transfer Program.
By Larry Santucci,
Pavement Specialist,
University of California Pavement Research Center
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