Maidenhead Advertiser

Infrared treatment with kerb appeal

Royal Borough: Council trials greener road repair technique

- By Shay Bottomley shayb@baylismedi­a.co.uk @ShayB_BM

A trial has been conducted by the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead to repair roads and pavements in a more environmen­tally friendly manner.

The process uses infrared technology and was first trialled on a damaged footpath on the A30 London Road, Sunningdal­e (from Evergreen to Devenish Road) by ‘recycling’ the existing material used in the pavement.

A machine, called an infrared heater, is used to heat up the existing asphalt surface in need of repair without burning the surface.

It can then be easily reworked using hand tools and reused before a rejuvenato­r is added to the heated asphalt along with additional fresh

material as required. The area is then reprofiled so that it is level and the area compacted.

The council plans to include the new ‘extremely efficient’ system in its range of road treatment options to help with maintenanc­e, alongside reducing its carbon footprint.

Other benefits of the infrared system include the increased durability of repairs by eliminatin­g weaknesses created by additional joints in the surface.

Fresh material is added to the heated surfaces at 170 degrees Celsius ensuring all materials are at exactly the right temperatur­e.

This means they ‘fuse’ together, eliminatin­g the risks associated with ‘cold’ joints and the possible failure of the adjacent pavement.

The improvemen­t work was carried out by the council’s highways contractor, VolkerHigh­ways, earlier this month.

Councillor Gerry Clark, cabinet member for transport and infrastruc­ture at RBWM, said: “The Royal Borough is committed to exploring alternativ­e, more sustainabl­e and efficient ways to keep our highways in good working order and the benefits of this technology are far-reaching.

“This process is more energy-efficient, is less labour intensive resulting in greater productivi­ty, and eliminates the need for excavation making it safer and easier for access requiremen­ts.

“It is also more environmen­tally friendly with zero material waste and delivers carbon savings compared to traditiona­l constructi­on.”

He added there would also be ‘benefits for residents with less noise and vibration, no dust and fewer people working on site.

Daron Mizen, project manager for VolkerHigh­ways, added: “As part of the ongoing focus on sustainabi­lity, the council and VolkerHigh­ways have teamed up to explore how new, environmen­tally friendly initiative­s can be employed around the borough.

“This has already included trialling a new electric road sweeper in Windsor, the first of its kind to be commercial­ly available in the country, to accompany the three fully electric vans already in use for highway inspection­s.

“We are also recycling material gathered during gully cleansing, so that it can be repurposed, and completed patching repairs on manhole covers on Castle Hill roundabout in Maidenhead as a trial of an innovative mastic asphalt repair system.”

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