The Kenya road transport cost study : research on road deterioration.

Author(s)
Hodges, J.W. Rolt, J. & Jones, T.E.
Year
Abstract

This report describes a study of the performance of paved and unpaved roads which was undertaken in Kenya as part of a larger study designed to provide suitable relationships for use in a computer model capable of estimating the construction costs, maintenance costs and road user costs throughout the life of a road in a developing country. The paved-road sample consisted of thirty-nine sections located on surface-dressed roads with cement-stabilized bases and ten sections located on asphaltic concrete roads with crushed stone bases. The unpaved-road sample consisted of thirty-eight test sections located on properly engineered gravel roads (lateritic, quartzitic, volcanic and coral) and eight sections on earth roads. The deterioration of the surface of the paved roads was quantified in terms of surface roughness, amount of cracking and depth of ruts. These parameters together with the transient deflections and the cbr and the moisture content of the various pavement layers were monitored for a period of up to four years. The deterioration of unpaved roads was quantified in terms of surface roughness, depth of ruts, depth of loose surface material and the thickness of the gravel layer. These parameters were monitored for a period of two years. The deterioration of the roads was related to the traffic loading, the original design and construction standard of the roads, the maintenance policy in use and the environmental conditions. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
B 12040 [electronic version only] /10 /22 / IRRD 216456
Source

Crowthorne, Berkshire, Transport and Road Research Laboratory (TRRL), 1975, 56 p., 32 ref.; TRRL Laboratory Report ; LR 673

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.