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Porous pavement
- Porous pavement is a special type of pavement which allows surface water to pass through it, thereby keeping the road surface water-free, as well as providing drainage outlet to storm water.
- Porous pavement may be effectively used in light traffic areas like parking areas, airport taxiway and runway shoulders, footpaths, playgrounds etc. provided that the subsoil drainage, groundwater level and topography of the area is suitable (Michele, 2003; USEPA 1999; DEQ 1992).
- Pavement structure consists of
a top porous bituminous layer placed over a filter
layer below which a highly permeable open-graded
stone layer (known as reservoir course).
- A geotextile layer is placed at the bottom to screen off fine soil particles. Porous bituminous layer consists of gap-graded aggregates (lower percentage fines), held together by a fiber-bitumen blend, giving a matrix structure which allows movement of water through its fine voids.
- Besides load bearing, the reservoir course stores the runoff water (in the void spaces in aggregate layers) until it can infiltrate into the soil beneath.
- Porous pavement has been found (RPL 2001) to be quite effective in reducing noise levels, splash and spray during rains, and aquaplaning tendency thereby improving the wet skid resistance.
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