Porous Pavements in Cold Climates
   Part 1: Design, Installation, and
             Maintenance
A Green Infrastructure, Green Jobs, and Green
             Funding Workshop
     Onondaga Environmental Institute
                 March 2011

                Robert Roseen, PE, PhD, D.WRE,
Thomas Ballestero, PE, PhD, PH, CGWP, PG, James Houle, CPSWQ
        University of New Hampshire Stormwater Center
  Department of Civil Engineering, University of New Hampshire
Gregg Hall ● 35 Colovos Road ● Durham, New Hampshire 03824-3534
                                         603.862.4024 ● http://www.unhsc.unh.edu




     Dedicated to the protection of water resources through
                effective stormwater management

•   Research and development of stormwater treatment systems

•   To provide resources to stormwater communities currently involved in design
    and implementation of Phase II requirements
Acknowledgements and Sources
 UNHSC Design Specification for Porous Asphalt Pavements
  and Infiltration Beds
 Joshua F. Briggs, Geosyntec, Kristopher Houle, Horsley
  Witten Group
 Jeff Pochily, David Duncan, Mary Wescott, Pike Industries
 Andrew Potts, P.E., LEED AP, Water Resources Project
  Manager, CH2M HILL
 ASCE Committee Report on Recommended Design
  Guidelines for Permeable Pavements—Late 2010
 Bethany Eisenberg, VHB, Committee Chair
 Kelly Collins, CWP, Committee Vice Chair
 National Asphalt Pavement Association (NAPA): Information
  Series (IS)-131 Porous Asphalt Pavements (2008)
 NAPA IS-115 Open-Graded Friction Courses (2002)
                                                              3
Part I Overview
1. State of the Practice
2. Common Design and
   Installation Pitfalls
3. Design and Installation
   Specifications
4. Maintenance
5. Repairs

                             4
State of the Practice
 Water quality performance is strong to
  excellent depending on design
 Hydraulic performance is excellent
 Cold climate performance is strong
 Winter maintenance has tremendous
  potential salt reduction
 Design specifications are improving
 Construction and installation are developing

                                                 5
State of the Practice
 Significant advancements in PA strength,
  durability, an cost have been achieved
 Large increase in significant PA installs for
  light duty, residential, commercial, and
  state road applications
 However, a large number of installations
  STILL continue to be sub-standard


                 WHY???
                                                  6
Porous Asphalt Design Overview
 Porous pavements for new and
  redevelopment are a watershed-
  based strategy that can both
  mitigate impacts for new
  development and reverse impacts
  in areas with redevelopment.
 Porous asphalt systems combine
  stormwater infiltration, storage,
  and structural pavement in a
  single system.
 PA consists of a pavement
  surface underlain by a
  stormwater storage bed. The bed
  is usually placed on uncompacted
  soil to facilitate infiltration.

                                      7
Porous Asphalt Path, Grey Towers
Porous Asphalt Residential Lane, Pelham, NH   UNH Elliot Alumni Center Parking Lot       National Historic Site, PA
(Source: UNHSC)                               Durham, NH (Source: UNHSC)                 (Source: CH2M HILL)




  Porous Asphalt Commercial Parking Lot,      Porous Asphalt Section of State Highway,     Porous Asphalt Basketball Court,
  Greenland Meadows, Greenland, NH            South Portland, ME (Source: ME DOT)          Upper Darby, PA
  (Source: UNHSC)                                                                          (Source: CH2M HILL)



                                                                                                                       8
Typical Porous Asphalt System Sections
                Section with Filter Course for Water Quality
           Typical Section for Storage and Infiltration
                    Pervious pavement: 4-6” (10 - 15 cm) of porous asphalt


                            Choker Course: 4”-8” (10 – 20 cm) minimum




             Filter Course: 8” - 12” (20 - 30 cm) minimum thickness of subbase
                          (aka. bank run gravel or modified 304.1)



   Filter Blanket: intermediate setting bed: 3” (8 cm) thickness of 3/8” (1 cm) pea gravel

  Reservoir Course: 4” (10 cm) minimum thickness of 3/4” (2 cm) crushed stone for
   frost protection, 4-6” (10-15 cm) diameter perforated subdrains with 2” cover


              Optional-Liner for land uses where infiltration is undesirable
          (e.g., hazardous materials handling, sole-source aquifer protection)

                                     Native materials




                                                                                             9
Design and Installation
                          10
Common Pitfalls
 Inappropriate PA mix selection WRT to
  durability leads to raveling and low durability
 Poor subbase compaction—tendency to
  under-compact due to concerns regarding
  infiltration leads to rutting
 Poor asphalt compaction—tendency to
  under-compact due to weaker subbase
  leads to low pavement durability
All issues can be addressed through qualified
engineering oversight
                                                11
Why So Many Poor Installations?
Porous pavements are an filtration/infiltration
    system as well as a transportation
 surface.
 Because of dual functionality:
  Greater site evaluation and design effort
  Strict engineering oversight and skilled
   personnel through all phases of the project
  Requires a comprehensive maintenance
   schedule

                                                 12
Applications - Site Constraints
1. Minimum 2-foot separation from bedrock and
   seasonal high water table,
2. Measured soil infiltration rates typically between 0.25
   and 12 inches per hour, <0.25 in/hr may require
   additional drainage and recharge beds
3. Appropriate separation from wells, septic systems,
   subsurface structures (basements), etc.
4. Where risk of groundwater contamination exists, as
   with any LID filtration system, the system may be
   lined to prevent infiltration , thereby being limited to
   it’s filtration benefits


                                                          13
General Design Criteria
1. Pretreatment or avoidance of runoff from hot spots,
2. Locations of potential groundwater contamination from
   either high loading, high groundwater, or bedrock
   should employ liners.
3. Level, or nearly level stormwater bed bottoms; sloped
   installations will need to employ internal grade controls
4. A consideration of the loading ratio (ratio of drainage
   area to infiltration area),
5. Consideration of potential sediment, detritus, etc.
   sources that could lead to clogging,
6. Proper drainage


                                                               14
Porous Asphalt Mixes
1. LOW-MODERATE DURABILITY: PG 64-28* with 5
   pounds of fibers per ton of asphalt mix. This mix is
   recommended for smaller projects with lower traffic
   counts or loading potential. This mix is manageable at
   common batch plants.

2. MODERATE DURABILITY: Pre-Blended PG 64-28*
   SBS/SBR with 5 pounds of fibers per ton of asphalt
   mix. This mix is recommended for large projects >
   1acre where high durability pavements are needed.

3. HIGH DURABILITY: Pre-Blended PG 76-22** modified
   with SBS/SBR and 5 pounds of fibers per ton of
   asphalt mix. This mix is recommended for large sites
   anticipating high wheel load (H-20) and traffic counts
   for maximum durability.
   *or PG binder typical to region; **PG binder 2 grades stiffer
                                                                   15
Porous Asphalt Mix Criteria
           Sieve Size (inch/mm)                Percent Passing (%)
                  0.75/19                                100
                 0.50/12.5                             85-100
                 0.375/9.5                              55-75
                 No.4/4.75                              10-25
                 No.8/2.36                              5-10
            No.200/0.075 (#200)                          2-4
      Binder Content (AASHTO T164)                    6 - 6.5%
    Fiber Content by Total Mixture Mass          0.3% cellulose or
                                                   0.4% mineral
Rubber Solids (SBR) Content by Weight of the      1.5-3% or TBD 
                   Bitumen
              Air Void Content                     16.0-22.0%
       (ASTM D6752/AASHTO T275)
         Draindown (ASTM D6390)*                     < 0.3 %
 Retained Tensile Strength (AASHTO 283)**            > 80 %
  Cantabro abrasion test on unaged samples           < 20%
             (ASTM D7064-04)
Cantabro abrasion test on 7 day aged samples         < 30%
                                                                     16
Cold Climate Considerations
Thickness of sub-base materials is determined
    based on various factors
1. In cold climates / penetration of freezing Total
      system thickness ≥ 0.65 * Dmax frost
      depth (Ex. if Dmax = 48” sub-base depth =
    32”)
2. The high voids content of the reservoir course
    creates a capillary barrier to prevent wicking of
    moisture in subbase minimizing winter freeze-
    thaw and heaving

                                                    17
Recommended Installation




                           18
Compaction and Rutting



 Install filter, choker, gravel, and stone base course aggregate
  in 8-inch maximum lifts to a MAXIMUM of 95% standard
  proctor compaction (ASTM D698 / AASHTO T99).
 The density of subbase courses shall be determined by
  AASHTO T 191 (Sand-Cone Method), AASHTO T 204 (Drive
  Cylinder Method), or AASHTO T 238 (Nuclear Methods), or
  other approved alternate
 The infiltration rate (ASTM D3385 or approved alternate ) shall
  be no less 5-30 ft/day or 50% of the hydraulic conductivity
  (D2434) at 95% standard proctor compaction
                                                           19
Multiple lift installation
 PA can be installed as 1 or 2 lifts depending on site
 2nd lift improves pavement compaction
 Paving sequencing is important---plan to minimize traffic
  on completed lifts
 Should be up to the contractor. Small simple jobs may
  be easier in a single lift, larger jobs in two lifts.
 Two-lift scenario may require use of a light application of
  tackifier between the first and second lift.
 Enables installation of curbs and castings in typical
  fashion
 Simplifies use of “tacky” 64-28SBR/SBS or 76-
  22SBR/SBS as top layer and 64-28 with fibers as base
  course                                                20
21
Porous Pavement in Cold Climates Part 1
Asphalt Compaction


 Immediately after the asphalt mixture has been spread, struck off, and
  surface irregularities adjusted, it shall be thoroughly and uniformly
  compacted by rolling. The compaction objective is 16% - 19% in place
  void content (Corelock).
 Breakdown rolling shall occur when the mix temperature is between 275
  to 325°F
 Intermediate rolling shall occur when the mix temperature is between
  200 to 275°F
 Finish rolling shall occur when the mix temperature is between 150 to
  200°F
 The cessation temperature occurs at approximately 175°F, at which point
  the mix becomes resistant to compaction and will not achieve adequate
  durability.
 Rolling should not cause undue displacement, cracking, or shoving.23
Liners
 Federal guidelines regulate groundwater
  protection standards.
 Most states require 1-3 ft separation between
  the system and the seasonal high water table
  (or bedrock).
 Liners can be used for sites where the infiltration
      is not appropriate (eg. high water table,
      bedrock karst sites and hot spots where
      hazardous materials may be handled).
 The use of Liners will preserve water quality
      through detention and filtration but limit any
      infiltration.
 Liners can be made from HSG 'D' soils, HDPE,
      or clay
                                                    24
Compacted soil liner, subdrains with cover




                                             25
Bedrock covered by HDPE

          Construction of Subsurface Bed
           liner & BRG




                                     Choker course placed for stability


Under-drains set in crushed gravel




                                                                          26
Geotextiles
 Recommendations vary on the usage of
  geotextiles in pervious pavement systems.

 At minimum, geotextiles should be used on soils
  with poor load bearing capacity, high fines
  content, and on the sides of the excavation to
  prevent in-migration of fines.

 Infiltration systems, such as pervious
  pavements, that are subject to soil movement
  and deposition should carefully consider the
  usage of geotextiles.
                                                 27
Post Construction O&M




Curing time needs are site specific but there should be at
  least 24-48 hrs of curing. Common sense clause may
  lead to lower threshold for small jobs with lighter loading
  such as when pavement surface is less than 100 F (one-
  time measurement). Problems occur when the surface
  temperature is greater than 120 F.

                                                            28
Maintenance




              29
Maintenance
  The best maintenance is designing
   for low maintenance
  Preventing run-on is a key to
   extending the life of permeable
        surfaces.
  Powerful vacuum (36-in)
  Feeder broom effective at loosening
   some larger debris
  Onboard PW effective at unclogging,
   but some dripped back onto pvt
  Vacuuming minimum of 2-4 times per
   year for low use sites and up to
   weekly -monthly for high use sites
  Costs range from $350-500/acre
                                  30
Repairs and Replacement
 Damage can occur to PA from non-design
  loads
 Repairs may be needed from cuts for utilities
 Repairs can be made with standard HMA for
  most damages up to 15% of surface area
 PA can be repaired by heating and rerolling
  at $2000/day at approximately 500’ of trench
 When pavement reaches end of life, it is
  replaced by milling to choker coarse.

 March 25, 2010                                   31
 Used for repairs
  around manholes,
  catch basins, and for
  reworking rough
  pavement areas
 Asphalt in the repair
  area can be raked and
  rolled back into place
  and additional hot mix
  can be added when
 Repairs cost ~$2000



 March 25, 2010            32
Example Sites in the
    Northeast
Greenland Meadows Commercial
 “Gold-Star” Commercial
  Development
 Cost of doing business near
  Impaired Waters/303D
 High water table, poor soils
 Brownfields site, ideal location,
  15yrs
 Proposed site >10,000 Average
  Daily Traffic count on >30 acres
28 ac site, initially >95% impervious, now <10%EIC, with all drainage through filtration, expected to have minimal
                                      WQ impact except thermal and chloride

     3/23/2011                                                                                          35
3/23/2011   36
Boulder Hills, Pelham, NH
 2009 Installation of 900’ of
  first PA private residential
  road in Northeast
 Site will be nearly Zero
  discharge
 LID subdivision 55+ Active
  Adult Community
 Large sand deposit
 Cost 25% greater per ton
  installed
  3/23/2011                               37
3/23/2011   38
Maine Mall, Long Creek Watershed
          S. Portland, ME
 Surface
  Transportation ARRA
  Project
 First DOT PA road in
  the northeast-Sept 09
 1500 feet of Highway
  Reconstruction
 20,000 vehicles per
  day
Maine Mall
 Significant that DOT is
  even considering it
 DOT involvement in PA is
  crucial for success
 Rockstar Mix
    PG76-24SBS with
     Fibers
 High durability
 RDA/TMDL was essential
Conclusions
 Porous pavements are not a silver bullet
 PP are a watershed-based strategy that can
  both mitigate impacts for new development and
  reverse impacts in areas with redevelopment.
 Successful installations will require
   Greater site evaluation and design effort
   Strict engineering oversight and skilled personnel
     through all phases of the project
   Requires a comprehensive maintenance schedule



                                                         41
Looking Forward

 The need for training and possible
  certification for designers and installers
 Installation checklist
 Increased availability of PA suppliers
 Greater availability of pavement cleaning




                                               42
Questions?

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Porous Pavement in Cold Climates Part 1

  • 1. Porous Pavements in Cold Climates Part 1: Design, Installation, and Maintenance A Green Infrastructure, Green Jobs, and Green Funding Workshop Onondaga Environmental Institute March 2011 Robert Roseen, PE, PhD, D.WRE, Thomas Ballestero, PE, PhD, PH, CGWP, PG, James Houle, CPSWQ University of New Hampshire Stormwater Center Department of Civil Engineering, University of New Hampshire
  • 2. Gregg Hall ● 35 Colovos Road ● Durham, New Hampshire 03824-3534 603.862.4024 ● http://www.unhsc.unh.edu Dedicated to the protection of water resources through effective stormwater management • Research and development of stormwater treatment systems • To provide resources to stormwater communities currently involved in design and implementation of Phase II requirements
  • 3. Acknowledgements and Sources  UNHSC Design Specification for Porous Asphalt Pavements and Infiltration Beds  Joshua F. Briggs, Geosyntec, Kristopher Houle, Horsley Witten Group  Jeff Pochily, David Duncan, Mary Wescott, Pike Industries  Andrew Potts, P.E., LEED AP, Water Resources Project Manager, CH2M HILL  ASCE Committee Report on Recommended Design Guidelines for Permeable Pavements—Late 2010  Bethany Eisenberg, VHB, Committee Chair  Kelly Collins, CWP, Committee Vice Chair  National Asphalt Pavement Association (NAPA): Information Series (IS)-131 Porous Asphalt Pavements (2008)  NAPA IS-115 Open-Graded Friction Courses (2002) 3
  • 4. Part I Overview 1. State of the Practice 2. Common Design and Installation Pitfalls 3. Design and Installation Specifications 4. Maintenance 5. Repairs 4
  • 5. State of the Practice  Water quality performance is strong to excellent depending on design  Hydraulic performance is excellent  Cold climate performance is strong  Winter maintenance has tremendous potential salt reduction  Design specifications are improving  Construction and installation are developing 5
  • 6. State of the Practice  Significant advancements in PA strength, durability, an cost have been achieved  Large increase in significant PA installs for light duty, residential, commercial, and state road applications  However, a large number of installations STILL continue to be sub-standard WHY??? 6
  • 7. Porous Asphalt Design Overview  Porous pavements for new and redevelopment are a watershed- based strategy that can both mitigate impacts for new development and reverse impacts in areas with redevelopment.  Porous asphalt systems combine stormwater infiltration, storage, and structural pavement in a single system.  PA consists of a pavement surface underlain by a stormwater storage bed. The bed is usually placed on uncompacted soil to facilitate infiltration. 7
  • 8. Porous Asphalt Path, Grey Towers Porous Asphalt Residential Lane, Pelham, NH UNH Elliot Alumni Center Parking Lot National Historic Site, PA (Source: UNHSC) Durham, NH (Source: UNHSC) (Source: CH2M HILL) Porous Asphalt Commercial Parking Lot, Porous Asphalt Section of State Highway, Porous Asphalt Basketball Court, Greenland Meadows, Greenland, NH South Portland, ME (Source: ME DOT) Upper Darby, PA (Source: UNHSC) (Source: CH2M HILL) 8
  • 9. Typical Porous Asphalt System Sections Section with Filter Course for Water Quality Typical Section for Storage and Infiltration Pervious pavement: 4-6” (10 - 15 cm) of porous asphalt Choker Course: 4”-8” (10 – 20 cm) minimum Filter Course: 8” - 12” (20 - 30 cm) minimum thickness of subbase (aka. bank run gravel or modified 304.1) Filter Blanket: intermediate setting bed: 3” (8 cm) thickness of 3/8” (1 cm) pea gravel Reservoir Course: 4” (10 cm) minimum thickness of 3/4” (2 cm) crushed stone for frost protection, 4-6” (10-15 cm) diameter perforated subdrains with 2” cover Optional-Liner for land uses where infiltration is undesirable (e.g., hazardous materials handling, sole-source aquifer protection) Native materials 9
  • 11. Common Pitfalls  Inappropriate PA mix selection WRT to durability leads to raveling and low durability  Poor subbase compaction—tendency to under-compact due to concerns regarding infiltration leads to rutting  Poor asphalt compaction—tendency to under-compact due to weaker subbase leads to low pavement durability All issues can be addressed through qualified engineering oversight 11
  • 12. Why So Many Poor Installations? Porous pavements are an filtration/infiltration system as well as a transportation surface. Because of dual functionality: Greater site evaluation and design effort Strict engineering oversight and skilled personnel through all phases of the project Requires a comprehensive maintenance schedule 12
  • 13. Applications - Site Constraints 1. Minimum 2-foot separation from bedrock and seasonal high water table, 2. Measured soil infiltration rates typically between 0.25 and 12 inches per hour, <0.25 in/hr may require additional drainage and recharge beds 3. Appropriate separation from wells, septic systems, subsurface structures (basements), etc. 4. Where risk of groundwater contamination exists, as with any LID filtration system, the system may be lined to prevent infiltration , thereby being limited to it’s filtration benefits 13
  • 14. General Design Criteria 1. Pretreatment or avoidance of runoff from hot spots, 2. Locations of potential groundwater contamination from either high loading, high groundwater, or bedrock should employ liners. 3. Level, or nearly level stormwater bed bottoms; sloped installations will need to employ internal grade controls 4. A consideration of the loading ratio (ratio of drainage area to infiltration area), 5. Consideration of potential sediment, detritus, etc. sources that could lead to clogging, 6. Proper drainage 14
  • 15. Porous Asphalt Mixes 1. LOW-MODERATE DURABILITY: PG 64-28* with 5 pounds of fibers per ton of asphalt mix. This mix is recommended for smaller projects with lower traffic counts or loading potential. This mix is manageable at common batch plants. 2. MODERATE DURABILITY: Pre-Blended PG 64-28* SBS/SBR with 5 pounds of fibers per ton of asphalt mix. This mix is recommended for large projects > 1acre where high durability pavements are needed. 3. HIGH DURABILITY: Pre-Blended PG 76-22** modified with SBS/SBR and 5 pounds of fibers per ton of asphalt mix. This mix is recommended for large sites anticipating high wheel load (H-20) and traffic counts for maximum durability. *or PG binder typical to region; **PG binder 2 grades stiffer 15
  • 16. Porous Asphalt Mix Criteria Sieve Size (inch/mm) Percent Passing (%) 0.75/19 100 0.50/12.5 85-100 0.375/9.5 55-75 No.4/4.75 10-25 No.8/2.36 5-10 No.200/0.075 (#200) 2-4 Binder Content (AASHTO T164) 6 - 6.5% Fiber Content by Total Mixture Mass 0.3% cellulose or 0.4% mineral Rubber Solids (SBR) Content by Weight of the 1.5-3% or TBD  Bitumen Air Void Content 16.0-22.0% (ASTM D6752/AASHTO T275) Draindown (ASTM D6390)* < 0.3 % Retained Tensile Strength (AASHTO 283)** > 80 % Cantabro abrasion test on unaged samples < 20% (ASTM D7064-04) Cantabro abrasion test on 7 day aged samples < 30% 16
  • 17. Cold Climate Considerations Thickness of sub-base materials is determined based on various factors 1. In cold climates / penetration of freezing Total system thickness ≥ 0.65 * Dmax frost depth (Ex. if Dmax = 48” sub-base depth = 32”) 2. The high voids content of the reservoir course creates a capillary barrier to prevent wicking of moisture in subbase minimizing winter freeze- thaw and heaving 17
  • 19. Compaction and Rutting  Install filter, choker, gravel, and stone base course aggregate in 8-inch maximum lifts to a MAXIMUM of 95% standard proctor compaction (ASTM D698 / AASHTO T99).  The density of subbase courses shall be determined by AASHTO T 191 (Sand-Cone Method), AASHTO T 204 (Drive Cylinder Method), or AASHTO T 238 (Nuclear Methods), or other approved alternate  The infiltration rate (ASTM D3385 or approved alternate ) shall be no less 5-30 ft/day or 50% of the hydraulic conductivity (D2434) at 95% standard proctor compaction 19
  • 20. Multiple lift installation  PA can be installed as 1 or 2 lifts depending on site  2nd lift improves pavement compaction  Paving sequencing is important---plan to minimize traffic on completed lifts  Should be up to the contractor. Small simple jobs may be easier in a single lift, larger jobs in two lifts.  Two-lift scenario may require use of a light application of tackifier between the first and second lift.  Enables installation of curbs and castings in typical fashion  Simplifies use of “tacky” 64-28SBR/SBS or 76- 22SBR/SBS as top layer and 64-28 with fibers as base course 20
  • 21. 21
  • 23. Asphalt Compaction  Immediately after the asphalt mixture has been spread, struck off, and surface irregularities adjusted, it shall be thoroughly and uniformly compacted by rolling. The compaction objective is 16% - 19% in place void content (Corelock).  Breakdown rolling shall occur when the mix temperature is between 275 to 325°F  Intermediate rolling shall occur when the mix temperature is between 200 to 275°F  Finish rolling shall occur when the mix temperature is between 150 to 200°F  The cessation temperature occurs at approximately 175°F, at which point the mix becomes resistant to compaction and will not achieve adequate durability.  Rolling should not cause undue displacement, cracking, or shoving.23
  • 24. Liners  Federal guidelines regulate groundwater protection standards.  Most states require 1-3 ft separation between the system and the seasonal high water table (or bedrock).  Liners can be used for sites where the infiltration is not appropriate (eg. high water table, bedrock karst sites and hot spots where hazardous materials may be handled).  The use of Liners will preserve water quality through detention and filtration but limit any infiltration.  Liners can be made from HSG 'D' soils, HDPE, or clay 24
  • 25. Compacted soil liner, subdrains with cover 25
  • 26. Bedrock covered by HDPE Construction of Subsurface Bed liner & BRG Choker course placed for stability Under-drains set in crushed gravel 26
  • 27. Geotextiles  Recommendations vary on the usage of geotextiles in pervious pavement systems.  At minimum, geotextiles should be used on soils with poor load bearing capacity, high fines content, and on the sides of the excavation to prevent in-migration of fines.  Infiltration systems, such as pervious pavements, that are subject to soil movement and deposition should carefully consider the usage of geotextiles. 27
  • 28. Post Construction O&M Curing time needs are site specific but there should be at least 24-48 hrs of curing. Common sense clause may lead to lower threshold for small jobs with lighter loading such as when pavement surface is less than 100 F (one- time measurement). Problems occur when the surface temperature is greater than 120 F. 28
  • 30. Maintenance  The best maintenance is designing for low maintenance  Preventing run-on is a key to extending the life of permeable surfaces.  Powerful vacuum (36-in)  Feeder broom effective at loosening some larger debris  Onboard PW effective at unclogging, but some dripped back onto pvt  Vacuuming minimum of 2-4 times per year for low use sites and up to weekly -monthly for high use sites  Costs range from $350-500/acre 30
  • 31. Repairs and Replacement  Damage can occur to PA from non-design loads  Repairs may be needed from cuts for utilities  Repairs can be made with standard HMA for most damages up to 15% of surface area  PA can be repaired by heating and rerolling at $2000/day at approximately 500’ of trench  When pavement reaches end of life, it is replaced by milling to choker coarse. March 25, 2010 31
  • 32.  Used for repairs around manholes, catch basins, and for reworking rough pavement areas  Asphalt in the repair area can be raked and rolled back into place and additional hot mix can be added when  Repairs cost ~$2000 March 25, 2010 32
  • 33. Example Sites in the Northeast
  • 34. Greenland Meadows Commercial  “Gold-Star” Commercial Development  Cost of doing business near Impaired Waters/303D  High water table, poor soils  Brownfields site, ideal location, 15yrs  Proposed site >10,000 Average Daily Traffic count on >30 acres
  • 35. 28 ac site, initially >95% impervious, now <10%EIC, with all drainage through filtration, expected to have minimal WQ impact except thermal and chloride 3/23/2011 35
  • 36. 3/23/2011 36
  • 37. Boulder Hills, Pelham, NH  2009 Installation of 900’ of first PA private residential road in Northeast  Site will be nearly Zero discharge  LID subdivision 55+ Active Adult Community  Large sand deposit  Cost 25% greater per ton installed 3/23/2011 37
  • 38. 3/23/2011 38
  • 39. Maine Mall, Long Creek Watershed S. Portland, ME  Surface Transportation ARRA Project  First DOT PA road in the northeast-Sept 09  1500 feet of Highway Reconstruction  20,000 vehicles per day
  • 40. Maine Mall  Significant that DOT is even considering it  DOT involvement in PA is crucial for success  Rockstar Mix  PG76-24SBS with Fibers  High durability  RDA/TMDL was essential
  • 41. Conclusions  Porous pavements are not a silver bullet  PP are a watershed-based strategy that can both mitigate impacts for new development and reverse impacts in areas with redevelopment.  Successful installations will require  Greater site evaluation and design effort  Strict engineering oversight and skilled personnel through all phases of the project  Requires a comprehensive maintenance schedule 41
  • 42. Looking Forward  The need for training and possible certification for designers and installers  Installation checklist  Increased availability of PA suppliers  Greater availability of pavement cleaning 42