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Building better, longer lasting roads in the United States is becoming an ever more urgent requirement. As we consider not only heavier loads and increases in the shear numbers of miles driven, but also the budgetary constraints on all Departments of Transportation, it is crucial to invest in a reliable road system that will serve us well into the future and will cost much less to maintain in the long run. Our Interstate and urban highways are the lifeblood of our economy, and even at current funding levels, our highways are getting worse. To address this problem, many states are now testing temperatures behind the paver in an effort to increase pavement quality.
To improve the quality of pavements in the United States, including bridges, concrete and asphalt applications, the Transportation Research Board invested $150 million dollars in its Strategic Highway Research Program (SHRP), which was active from 1988 to 1993. The final product of the SHRP asphalt research program is Superpave, which stands for Superior Performing Asphalt Pavements.
Superpave represents an improved system for specifying the components of asphalt concrete, asphalt mixture design and analysis, and asphalt pavement performance prediction.
More than 94 percent of our roads are constructed using asphalt. Conservative estimates from the Transportation Research Board project that if Superpave procedures achieved only a 25 percent increase in highway service life, between $1.3 billion and $2.1 billion would be saved by reducing maintenance-related delays and vehicle wear and tear. Whats more, traffic accidents, injuries and fatalities carry a real dollar cost, and better overall road conditions also mean improved safety. However, even after adopting Superpave, premature failures continued to occur because while new material requirements dominated the research results, there had been no focus on field construction practices, or new construction technologies that are available. More research on construction practices and technologies were needed.
Engineers typically design highways to last 15 years or more, and perpetual asphalt pavements are designed to last 50 years. But some roads are failing earlier because of potholes, cracks, raveling and other problems. These premature failures unnecessarily waste millions of taxpayer dollars and threaten the strategically critical highway system.