Winning with Hot Recycling and Preventive
Maintenance
How the Village of Tinley Park saves millions by keeping its streets in pristine condition.
by the Better Roads staff |
Everyone talks about preventive road management, but the village of Tinley Park, Illinois has been living it for many years ?and has great results to show for the effort.
Located in the south suburbs of Chicago, Tinley Park is more than 100 years old and has a population of over 60,000. The current asset &#118alue of its roads is just over $88 million, or nearly $1,600 per resident.
But perhaps the most impressive data regarding Tinley Park抯 roads is the system抯 Overall Condition Index: it is a scintillating 89. In the Chicago area, with its high traffic loads and freeze-thaw temperature extremes, municipal OCI numbers typically run in the 50s and 60s.
How they do it
For more than a quarter century, Tinley Park has retained the services of Robinson Engineering to handle its engineering needs for transportation and other infrastructure categories, and to assist in managing projects. Robinson Engineering sold the village on the concept of rehabilitating pavement long before it deteriorates into the critical zone.
As a result of this strategy, Robinson and Tinley Park became one of the pioneer users of hot-in-place recycling back in the 1980s. Always on the lookout for &#118alue-added ideas and processes, Robinson began specifying HIR for Tinley Park and its other clients more than 30 years ago.
The initial projects were successful and hot-in-place recycling has been one of the mainstays of Tinley Park抯 prevention program ever since.
Christopher King, P.E., president of Robinson Engineering, says hot-in-place recycling typically saves the agency more than 30% compared to a standard mill-and-fill operation (milling off the top 2 inches of old asphalt and replacing it with new hot mix). And equally important, the HIR process can be done in about half the time, says King.
The process
For the past 20 years, most of Tinley Park抯 HIR work has been performed by Gallagher Asphalt, an 80-year-old, family-owned asphalt producer/contractor with multiple plant locations in the Chicago area.
The hot-in-place recycling process used by Gallagher and Tinley Park is a multi-step, continuous method that heats the pavement slowly to a viscous state, introduces a liquid rejuvenating agent, then remixes the pavement with tines and augers, usually to a 2-inch depth, which removes typical aging imperfections. |
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Gallagher抯 hot-in-place recycling train heats and scarifies old asphalt to a depth of 2 inches along the curb line. The train completes a 420-foot city block in less than an hour and residents have access to their driveways as soon as the train passes by. |
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Gallagher Asphalt抯 crew starts recycling the second lane of a Tinley Park residential street. The two-block project was completed in one day last May and is part of a 350,000- to 400,000-cubic yard contract Gallagher has with the village this year. |
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At the end of the day, the HIR-processed pavement is open to traffic. An overlay of virgin asphalt ?typically 1.5 to 2 inches ? usually follows within a day or two. | |
The heated pavement is then re-profiled and compacted. The rehabilitated pavement then receives an overlay of fresh hot-mix asphalt ?usually a 1.5-inch lift. For some applications, less expensive surface treatments are used, including micro surfacing, chip seals, and slurry seals.
Robinson, which has contracts with 36 municipalities in the region, says the savings HIR offers are even higher today, with liquid asphalt prices having more than doubled in the past year or so.
Gallagher Asphalt
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The hot-in-place recycling train is followed by a tandem roller. Note that at the end of the block, the project turns right and continues on a second street. |
Gallagher Asphalt抯 HIR division is currently under contract to complete about 175,000 square yards of recycling for Tinley Park this year. The work is spread over a number of different streets and locations. Most of the work will recycle the top 1.5 to 2 inches of pavement. A 1.5-inch overlay of new hot-mix asphalt is being laid by the primary contractor.
Depending on the locations and pavement composition, Gallagher recycles in excess of 10,000 square yards per day.
Gallagher has had a close relationship with the village and with Robinson Engineering for many years, partly because they are located in close proximity to each other, and especially because as Patrick Faster, head of the company抯 HIR division, says, 揟hey spec a lot of hot-in-place and we do it.?/p>
Faster points out that Gallagher抯 HIR customer base has been comprised of forward thinkers. 揥e抳e been doing this for 20 years, so a lot of our long-time customers are way ahead of the curve,?he says. 揗any of our agency people and consulting engineers signed on to HIR years ago, realizing that aggregates and oils are in inelastic supply. Today, with agencies seeing 50% to 100% increases in installed tonnage prices (for new asphalt), even more of them are becoming forward thinkers.?/p>

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Robinson Engineering and the Village of Tinley Park have calculated the results of various levels of preventive maintenance funding in terms of its affect on the village抯 pavement conditions. As pavement conditions decline on the deterioration curve, says Robinson, the cost to improve goes up. |
Even without the price spike in liquid asphalt, HIR makes imminent sense for a pavement management program, Faster points out. 揑f you have two towns the same size, one using HIR, the other not, the non-believer may be doing 10 miles of standard rehab a year while the recycler is doing 13 miles,?says Faster. 揂t the end of five years, the recycling program has rehabbed 15 more lane miles than the other town...and that抯 how you get big OCI numbers.?/p>
Finding contractors
For agencies interested in starting in-place recycling programs, Faster says a good place to look is the Asphalt Recycling and Reclaiming Association Web site. It lists dozens of contractors and what specialties they perform ?hot-in-place, cold-in-place, full-depth reclamation, soil stabilization, and milling.
Many of these contractors are very mobile. Gallagher, for example, focuses on the upper midwest during the spring and summer, then moves its HIR trains south in the winter. Many other recycling contractors have a similar seasonal migration.
There is another benefit to locating a recycling contractor through ARRA, says Faster: not only does the organization focus exclusively on recycling, its member contractors are dedicated to the processes and have literally written the books on cutting edge techniques and technologies.
This article was created from materials provided by Christopher King (president, Robinson Engineering) and Patrick Faster (president, Hot-in-place Recycling Division, Gallagher Asphalt). |
How Aggressive Maintenance Pays Off |
The Village of Tinley Park has prepared a formal program of aggressive, early-intervention pavement maintenance practices and set specific goals for the road conditions to be maintained.
Since the late 1990s, the village has been developing a pavement management program to predict, forecast, and budget future expenses with the assistance of a Geographic Information System. Computerized pavement management is designed to allow an agency to track the current condition of the roadway, predict future conditions, assign rehabilitation categories, provide charts and reports, and assist in preparing long-range budgets.
The village抯 Pavement Management Program encompasses many categories of work intended to address a variety of maintenance considerations on a number of different pavement types, ages, and conditions. The program generally falls into four major forms of work: 1) preventive maintenance, 2) rehabilitation, 3) renovation, or 4) reconstruction. The method selected to be used on individual portions or sections of street within the Village are tailored to implement the most cost-effective treatment, which will gain the greatest enhancement and extension of the useful life of the pavement.
In terms of pavement management, explains Christopher King, P.E., president of Robinson Engineering, the general theory is to rehabilitate the pavement well before its condition deteriorates up to what is termed the Critical Zone.
Once pavements hover in and around the Fair Zone, says King, pavement deterioration really accelerates. 揑t has been documented that every dollar spent on preventive maintenance at the appropriate time saves four dollars in future rehabilitation costs,?King points out. 揟his system will help you objectively pinpoint and predict when the pavement needs rehabilitation. Hot-in-place recycling has been a key instrument in the village抯 program,?he adds.
The ability to predict future deterioration and the associated rehabilitation costs can be helpful when preparing long-range budgets. Approximately every four years the village performs an update of the pavement condition to measure the progress of the program. The next update will be completed in 2007.
Prevention抯 payoff
Robinson Engineering and the Village of Tinley Park use Projected Deterioration Curves to estimate how various levels of preventive maintenance spending will affect the overall condition of the city抯 pavements.
In the Overall Condition Index, 100 is the &#118alue for a new road.
While substantially more annual maintenance funding is necessary to keep the pavements at a high OCI level, as lesser-maintained pavements deteriorate, the types of interventions needed to bring them back to good condition becomes increasingly burdensome.
Robinson Engineering抯 Christopher King offers an even more dramatic example. 揕et抯 look at two alternatives for maintaining 1 mile of street. Alternative 1 is to do no maintenance at all. The pavement will fail in 25 years and the cost to replace it is $1,320,000, or $52,800 per year.
揂lternative 2 is to maintain pavement condition with preventive maintenance practices, including crack sealing and hot-in-place recycling every 8 to 12 years. Over a 25 year period, this program would cost about $320,000, or $12,800 a year. That represents a savings of 412% compared to doing nothing.?/p>
How High-OCI Pavement Pays Off |
Overall Condition Index (OCI) |
90 |
85 |
80 |
Average Cost per Foot to resurface |
25 |
30 |
50 |
Number of years in Pavement Management Program cycle |
12 |
12 |
8 |
Miles of Streets |
240 |
240 |
240 |
Estimated Annual Cost |
$2,640,000 |
$3,168,000 |
$7,920,000 |
Maintaining its 240 miles of pavements at an OCI level of 90 saves the Village of Tinley Park hundreds of thousands of dollars each year compared to holding at an OCI level of 85, and millions compared to an OCI level of 80. This reflects the fact that, as overall pavement quality declines, the cost of interventions increases substantially. | | |