C+S May 2018

TRANSPORTATION

Channel Sponsor: Tensar International | www.tensarcorp.com

Geogrids, strong in tension, confine the soil, transfering forces to a larger area.

a construction platform so strong that the WYDOT eliminated the requirement for a spreader to be used on the concrete surface, which saved time and money. The resulting pavement surface was so smooth that the contractor, Interstate Highway Construction, Inc., qualified for an incentive bonus. A geogrid is a geosynthetic material used to stabilize soil. Soils pull apart under tension; compared with soil, geogrids are strong in tension and also confine the soil, allowing them to transfer forces to a larger area of soil than would otherwise be the case. One year earlier, WYDOT (using the same road contractor) completed the southbound lanes along the same segment of Interstate 25. At that time, however, they didn’t place geogrid under the road. Nearly 10 years after these projects were completed, the northbound, geogrid- reinforced segment is 30-percent smoother than the non-geogrid south- bound segment. As contractors and transportation departments ensure optimal pave- ment design, the focus needs to go beneath the surface to stabilize, strengthen, and support America’s infrastructure, resulting in sustain- ably smoother roads. Information provided by Tensar International (www.tensarcorp.com), a full-service provider of specialty products and engineering services based on advanced soil stabilization and reinforcement technologies. Patented, poly- meric Tensar Geogrids and Tensar’s Geopier foundation reinforcement piers are the primary components of the company’s systems. Contracted services include site evaluation, conceptual engineering, design, value engineering, and installation advice.

Aiming for A+ infrastructure

Geogrids support U.S. investment in road performance.

Every four years, the American Society of Civil Engineer’s Report Card for America’s Infrastructure depicts the condition and per- formance of American infrastructure. In 2013 and again in 2017, America’s roads fared no better than a D grade. This grade is based on the physical condition and needed investments for improvement. Short of a “magical genie” granting the wish of an unlimited transportation infrastructure budget, what can be done to lift our roads from D-grade to A+ infrastructure? The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) assesses America’s road quality primarily by measuring smoothness or, rather, its antonym — roughness. The FHWA especially relies on the International Rough- ness Index (IRI) as the scale used to evaluate pavement conditions. A driver’s experience of a road is largely determined by its smoothness. Smoothness is an important-enough measure of road quality that con- tractors are increasingly incentivized by bonus/penalty payments for new road construction based on the pavement’s IRI score. Using geosynthetics to improve road performance During summer 2008, the Wyoming Department of Transporta- tion (WYDOT) funded construction of a seven-mile segment of the northbound lanes of Interstate 25. The soft, aged soils beneath the road segment on this project were stabilized with geogrid, providing

52

csengineermag.com

may 2018

Made with FlippingBook Annual report