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Writer's pictureSafer Highways

Keeping our local roads safe, without costing the Earth-the case for surface dressing


As the RSTA joins forces on a new campaign aimed at promoting the benefits of surface dressing as a solution to reducing potholes, the two organisations go into further details as to why all local authority asset managers should be using surface dressing as part of a proactive highways asset management strategy.


Local authorities have a statutory responsibility to ensure that their road networks are in a safe and serviceable condition. At the same time, there is mounting pressure on local authority Highway Engineers and Asset Managers to: optimise the use of allocated highway maintenance funding; deliver value for road users and taxpayers more generally; minimise costs (both financial and nonfinancial), risk and environmental impact.


Planned, preventative Surface Dressing treatments must be considered as a highly advantageous solution in this context.


97% of our road network in England and Wales is maintained by local highway authorities. It is an asset valued at over £400bn, and the biggest physical asset the public sector owns.

The local road network is fundamental to economic growth and prosperity – connecting communities, workers to jobs, and businesses to consumers – and to unlocking new investment and development opportunities.


The future of transport infrastructure will also see roads play a vital role in supporting the mass adoption of green and smart transport – both in terms of private vehicles and the heavy goods / logistics fleet, as well as low carbon alternatives such as cycling. This includes the transition to net zero highways.


But success will be dependent on Asset Managers taking the strategic decision to prioritise long term resilience, lifetime value, and proactive, preventative interventions.


A long term approach is needed

Many years of under investment in highways, and a reluctance (or inability due to the funding decision making process) to pursue maintenance policies with a multi-year horizon, have resulted in a road network which is struggling to cope with user demand and climatic change.

Pothole repairs are extremely expensive and disruptive to the UK taxpayer. A pothole is filled every 22 seconds, at a total annual cost of £93.7 million in 2022/23. (Source: AIA Alarm Survey 2023).


Repairing a significant number of potholes isn’t a sign of success, but a sign of failure.

The allocated pothole repair fund provided by central government has been and gone, and yet more than 1 million potholes are still being repaired each year. Why?




According to statistics from the Department for Transport the percentage of roads (A, B & C) receiving Surface Dressing treatment has declined 30% since 2016. This is mirrored by feedback from REA members who report a 36% decline in the application of surface dressing – and an increase in potholes. The graph below shows the correlation of reduced surface dressing treatments and subsequent increase in pot holes over the past decade.


Longer term, the DfT statistics show a steady decline of the use of surface treatments over not just years, but decades.


We would argue that this is aligned with the continued pivot towards shorter term funding decision making.


The case for Surface Treatments

The decline in the use of surface treatments represents a failure to leverage the advantages that such a planned preventative approach provides.


Through the appropriate planned application of such treatments prior to the development of serious surface and structural defects (such as potholes), road conditions can be managed and maintained far more effectively as well as road lifespans extended – potentially indefinitely.

This provides significant cost benefits. Previous research from the AIA has shown that it is 20 times more expensive to carry out reactive maintenance (filling potholes) than planned, preventative maintenance.


Surface Dressing is the most cost-effective method, both financially and environmentally, to improve skid resistance and seal the road surface, which will stop the ingress of water and help prevent potholes appearing in the first place.


The days of “tar & chip” are obsolete. Proven technology using polymer modified, high performance bituminous emulsions are now used together with modern plant and equipment.

The development and introduction of proprietary finishes, while providing all the benefits described above, has also further improved the chip retention and provides a “new road” look for a fraction of the cost.


Application examples and cost benefits


Typically, a 6-metre-wide road that is one kilometre long (6,000 sq m) can be surface dressed for approximately £30,000 and has a service life of 10-15 years. This is equivalent to the service life of an untreated thin (asphalt) surface course system.



(Source: ADEPT RSTA – Service Life of Asphalt Materials for Asset Management Purposes)

To fully resurface the same road in traditional asphalt using primary aggregate could cost up to ten times the amount and, without surface treatment intervention, last no longer.


So, for the amount that it costs to fix potholes an additional 3,500km of local roads could be surface dressed, preventing the need for costly and timeconsuming interventions in the future and the closure of roads to the public for pothole filling.


Furthermore, Surface Dressing brings major environmental benefits.


Modern asphalt surfaces are durable but by design sacrificial. Once their anticipated design life is achieved the eventual replacement of a typical Thin surface (asphalt) course systems uses a significant amount of high-quality and expensive aggregates. These are used throughout the entire surface course and not just the contact area of the road surface.


Surface Dressing uses up to 75% less bitumen and up to 80% less aggregate per square metre than thin surface (asphalt) courses.


This ensures that high value mineral reserves can be kept in the quarries for future generations, while mitigating the added high carbon cost of transporting quarried aggregates to sites across the UK.


Surface Dressing interventions extend the surface course design life. If untreated deterioration eventually results in the need to resurface. A 6,000sqm road with a 40mm surface course being laid on top, the amount of aggregate used will be approximately 580 tonnes. To transport this aggregate to site will take 30 vehicles, plus the same again for the disposal of the old planed out surface.


If the same road was surface dressed with a 10/6 racked-in dressing the same site will be overlaid directly with approximately 100 tonnes of chippings. That will equate to a 75% reduction in transport movements.


Meanwhile, aggregate collected as part of the sweeper surface cleaning process are recycled and reused resulting in very little waste generated through the surface dressing application.

At the same time, the bitumen emulsion binders used are sprayed between 85°C and 90°C meaning significantly less embedded carbon is required than in asphalt surfacing.


Summary

Surface Dressing not only significantly extends the service life of the pavement, with a reduced impact on the environment, but can also be reapplied in many layers over a number of years. They can help keep the road network safe while maximising the service life and restricting emissions through requiring fewer interventions and reductions in the use of equipment over the 60-90 year road lifespan.

In conclusion, the application of sustainable, low-carbon, Surface Dressing systems on some of the “Amber” and “Green” local authority roads will further extend the life of the highway, mean fewer potholes, whilst preventing these routes from becoming “Red”, and resulting in a costly and disruptive repair for the taxpayer.

By taking the required decisions to adopt longer term strategies to future proof roads and act early to prevent, rather than cure, road defects, local authorities can achieve significant cost advantages.

We would therefore strongly urge local authorities to seek to reverse the long-term downward trend of the use of surface treatments.

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