Concrete Pavement Preservation & Restoration
Leading the Way in Concrete Pavement Preservation
Utilizing diamond grinding, a concrete pavement restoration (CPR) technique often used alongside other CPR methods, allows for the correction of various surface imperfections on concrete pavements. Diamond grinding is a proven, cost-effective solution for repairing PCC pavement roughness by improving vehicle ride quality, extending pavement life, and enhancing skid resistance while also reducing tire/pavement noise.
Pavement Preservation & Restoration Services
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Cross- and slot-stitching reinforce longitudinal cracks and joints in concrete pavements by inserting steel tie bars that lock slabs together and limit movement. Cross-stitching secures bars in angled drilled holes, while slot-stitching embeds them in narrow surface slots.
Strength and Stability:
These methods restore load transfer, control crack widening, and extend pavement life when used on joints and cracks that are still in fair condition.
Applications:
Commonly used on highways, city streets, airport pavements, industrial yards, and other concrete surfaces with longitudinal cracking or weakened joints. Ideal for extending service life without full replacement, especially in high-traffic areas where maintaining smoothness and stability is critical. Not recommended for transverse cracks or joints.
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Dowel Bar Retrofit / Load Transfer
Dowel bar retrofit restores proper load transfer across joints and cracks in concrete pavements by inserting steel dowels into precisely cut slots. This strengthens the connection between slabs, distributes traffic loads evenly, and reduces stress that leads to faulting and cracking.
Efficiency and Durability:
The process extends pavement life, improves ride quality, and lowers long-term maintenance costs by reinforcing structural performance without full reconstruction.
Applications:
Ideal for highways, arterial roads, and other high-traffic concrete pavements where smoothness, strength, and longevity are critical.
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Depth Repair (Concrete Patching)
Depth repair restores damaged concrete pavement by removing and replacing either the surface layer (partial depth) or the entire slab section (full depth), depending on the severity of deterioration. Partial depth repairs address surface-level issues like spalling and minor cracking, while full depth repairs correct major structural failures such as broken slabs or full-depth cracks. Both methods extend pavement life, prevent water intrusion, and restore a smooth, durable, and load-bearing surface.Efficiency and Longevity:
Depth repair is faster and more cost-effective than full replacement, targeting only the damaged areas while preserving sound pavement. Properly executed, it provides long-lasting performance and minimizes disruption.Applications:
Ideal for highways, intersections, industrial pavements, and other high-traffic concrete surfaces requiring durable, structural restoration.