Optimal timing of pavement preventive maintenance treatment applications.

Author(s)
Peshkin, D.G. Hoerner, T.E. & Zimmerman, K.A.
Year
Abstract

As highway agency budgets shrink, more and more highway agencies are moving toward a policy of pavement preventive maintenance and away from worst-first programming (in which pavements are allowed to deteriorate to a highly distressed condition before any restorative work is performed). Preventive maintenance is a systematic process of applying a series of preventive maintenance treatments over the life of the pavement to maintain a good condition, extend pavement life, and minimize life-cycle costs. Although pavement preventive maintenance is believed to result in lower agency costs, improved pavement conditions, and increased customer satisfaction, these programs continue to face many obstacles. Among these obstacles are lack of proof that preventive maintenance is cost effective and insufficient guidance on when preventive maintenance treatments should be applied. Consequently, highway agencies need a procedure that can help to demonstrate the cost-effectiveness of preventive maintenance treatments and to provide guidance on the optimal timing of such treatments. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20050053 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Washington, D.C., National Research Council NRC, Transportation Research Board TRB / National Academy Press, 2004, 76 p., 29 ref.; National Cooperative Highway Research Program NCHRP Report ; 523 - NCHRP Project 14-4 FY 2000 - ISSN 0077-5614 / ISBN 0-309-08811-9

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