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Pavement Design

Requirements  |  Rehabilitation  |  Design Tools 

WSDOT makes use of state-of-the-art pavement design procedures.  These procedures are contained in the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) Guide for the Design of Pavement Structures.  The basic function of pavement design is to provide a structure, which meets or exceeds the design life and accommodates the anticipated traffic loading, environmental conditions, available materials, and construction variability.  Current trends provide new challenges and demands.  For example, the environment in which these pavements must serve continues to change.  More specifically, this includes:

Loads.  The numbers and weights of trucks and buses continue to increase at a rate that accelerates the damage to pavements.

Studded Tires.  The use of studded tires produces significant wear in pavement surface courses resulting in increased maintenance and rehabilitation costs along with safety concerns (largely the increased potential for hydroplaning).  Currently, certain types of paving mixes that reduce traffic-generated noise, splash, and spray cannot be used because of excessively high wear rates due to studded tires.   Further, the higher the traffic speeds, the higher the rate of studded tire wear—a secondary effect of the recent increase in state highway speeds.

Construction and Traffic Congestion.  Construction on WSDOT Interstate highways has become very expensive and difficult.  Traffic control and night time only work are significant costs in pavement rehabilitation projects.   New and improved approaches are required to minimize inconvenience to motorists and keep construction costs reasonable.

Materials.  There has been pressure in the past to use pavements to dispose of waste materials such as old tires.   For the most part, recycling such materials into new pavement layers does not add performance and generally increases construction costs.  Further, WSDOT, like other road owning agencies in Western Washington, is finding quality, economical aggregate sources more difficult to obtain.  Thus, the materials used in road building continue to present new challenges.

These kinds of issues require that pavement delivery systems undergo continuous improvement.  There is strong evidence that this has been the case for many years.


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