LATEST NEWS
January 5, 2012
Late season paving is an avoidable reality for road construction
Late season paving is going to occur in road construction despite precautions which should be taken to avoid it, members of the Ontario Hot Mix Producers Association (OHMPA) were told at the association’s recent annual conference.
Contractors and the municipal officials who award their contracts should work to avoid late season paving, if possible, said the association’s technical director, Sandy Brown.
In the cool weather of late fall paving asphalt cools faster and it’s more difficult to achieve compaction and good joints, he warned.
Municipalities should issue critical contracts early in the year to allow them to be completed in favourable weather, as well as calling for night work early in the season when there is also better weather.
Some of the steps contractors can take include prioritizing scheduling, completing the mix designs and obtaining approvals well in advance of the construction start, plus having sufficient manpower and serviceable equipment available, said Brown.
But he acknowledged late season paving is going to happen because of factors such as late tender calls, unrealistic schedules, and unforeseen utility removals. “Plan for it… it’s not like it’s a surprise.”
When dealing with late season paving municipalities need to have experienced contractors on site to deal quickly and constructively with issues as they arise. Officials should also be wary of predicting weather patterns, especially after Thanksgiving.
“Don’t try to be a meteorologist, sometimes you have to allow paving in borderline conditions on work that can’t be postponed but if you do, accept that performance may be compromised.”
Some of the design strategies that may assist late season work include: finer mixes which are easier to place and obtain compaction; thicker lifts which keep asphalt heat longer with the result it is easier to place; echelon paving; and using warm mix asphalt which loses heat slower than hot mix.
For their part contractors can put into action several protective measures such as placing tarps on hot mix asphalt delivery trucks to keep the heat in or using insulated truck boxes.
Other precautions include using material transfer vehicles to store and distribute mix to the pavers, which should also be equipped with preheated screeds.
In the end, however, those safeguards may not be enough and the project may have to be rescheduled to spring if quality of the pavement is going to be jeopardized, said Brown.
In those cases “somebody has to stand up to the plate and say I think we’re finished for the year.”
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- Where does labour law stand on ladder safety?
- Stakeholders react to Ontario College of Trades proposed membership fees
- Cliffs Natural Resources to invest $3.3 billion in Ring of Fire
- Toronto studies construction of new islands
- PCL Constructors works on Humber River Regional Hospital in Toronto
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 455 projects with a total value of $1,378,405,540 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on Thursday.
COMMERCIAL OFFICE BUILDING, RETAIL
$55,000,000 Ottawa ON Negotiated
TOWNHOUSE AND CONDOMINIUM APARTMENT DEVELOPMENT
$43,000,000 Clarington ON CANCELLED/ DEFERRED
$23,000,000 Ottawa-Carleton Reg ON Tenders
| CURRENT STORIES |
- EllisDon to build performing arts centre for Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario
- Historic Burlington, Ontario railway station to be moved
- Widespread opposition to Ontario College of Trades membership classes
- The hunt for environmentally friendly cement continues with Michigan State University research on portland cement
- Safety training today builds safety leaders of the future, says IHSA
- Denis Dixon new Professional Engineers Ontario president
- University of Windsor design competition winners announced
- Construction material costs “took a breather” in April: Associated General Contractors of America
- VIDEO: Highlights from the May 18 Daily Commercial News
- VIDEO: Common ladder safety errors in construction
- Electrical Worker Crushed
- High School Construction
- Victoria bridge inches closer to construction
- Collapse injures worker at Commonwealth Stadium
- Panel appointed to oversee hearings into B.C. mine project
- Bockstael celebrates 100 years
- More work needed to protect flaggers
- Co-founder of ATCO announces his intention to step down as chair
- SNC-Lavalin hit with $1.5 billion class action lawsuit
- PST returns to British Columbia
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Canada’s Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- Economic Nuggets - May 15, 2012 (May 14, 2012)
- Canada Rode a Second Consecutive Month of Strong Job Gains in April (May 11, 2012)
- U.S. Employment Rose by a Mediocre 115,000 in April (May 4, 2012)
- More








