 |
Cement Helps Save Taxpayer Money,
Stretch Highway Miles
TxDOT Hebbronville builds a stronger, less expensive road with
recycling
By Jeff Hawk
Doing
your homework pays off. TxDOT engineers in Hebbronville proved that
adage recently by saving taxpayers nearly a half million dollars
through research. The opportunity came when TxDOT Hebbronville area
office engineers explored non-conventional options for rehabilitating
Farm-to-Market Road 1017 in Jim Hogg County.
TxDOT
let two $6-million dollar contracts for the road, which sees increasingly
heavy traffic as an unofficial truck route from Laredo to the Rio
Grande Valley, according to Albert Quintanilla, TxDOT Hebbronville
area engineer. Quintanilla and his staff began considering ways
to build a road that could handle the load.
The
conventional practice of using lime to stabilize the subgrade "would
not provide long-term cohesive strength," says Albert Quintanilla.
So TxDOT looked to cement. Lab testing performed on sub-grade samples
determined that a two percent cement mixture provided the desired
compressive strength that is usually obtained in 3 percent lime.
"The simple change from lime to cement allowed us to decrease
the amount of stabilization additive needed on this project, which
provided a savings of $470,300," says Quintanilla.
With
a total project cost of $12.2 million, a cost savings of four percent
may not appear as much, says Quintanilla, but it's "a significant
amount of money." And the office was able to "obtain higher
subgrade and flex base strengths to hopefully extend the life of
the pavement," he added.
 Choosing
to recycle the existing roadbed materials also helped stretch highway
funds and added about 15 additional miles to the total project.
The decision to recycle the road allowed engineers to rehabilitate
38 miles of roadway with the available highway funds as opposed
to 23 miles using conventional remove/replace construction, figures
Quintanilla. "That process would have involved hauling out
tons of sandy soil subgrades and existing roadbed material, and
hauling in lime-stabilized clay materials," says Quintanilla.
"The use of cement lets us stabilize the materials we have
in there right now. We don't have to haul in asphalt stabilized
base and don't have to haul out existing materials," he says.
Additionally, cement binds the sandy soils and provides additional
strength.
 The
existing road, consisting of 2 inches of asphalt and 8 inches of
base, provided an ideal candidate for recycling. But engineers questioned
how much cement to specify. "The initial assumption was to
go with higher concentrations of cement around the 5 percent range,"
says Quintanilla. But laboratory tests found that lower factors
would work. In the field, engineers required 2-percent cement by
weight of dry material for subgrade and flexible base stabilization.
The new roadway calls for a 1.5-inch thick asphalt concrete surface
placed on an 8-inch cement stabilized flexible base and a 12-inch
cement stabilized subgrade. Quintanilla says he sees a growing trend
to use cement, adding that "every material has its use. It
comes down to what's the most effective material." In this
case, cement came out miles ahead.
Back to the top
|
|