The use of seawater in road construction: part 1 – the swartklip and lambert’s bay experiments

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Netterberg, F.

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Southern African Transport Conference

Abstract

Construction of a new road may require the daily use of upwards of 1 000 m3 of water – usually fresh – sufficient for 20 000 people at the Cape Town drought ration of 50 litres/day. The Swartklip experiment was therefore constructed in 1975 in a moderate macroclimatic area near Cape Town and the Lambert’s Bay experiment in a dry area of the Western Cape Province, South Africa, in order to ascertain how to use seawater for the compaction of graded crushed stone bases without incurring damage to the base during construction or compromising its long-term performance. After completion, the seawater crushed stone bases had salinities as determined by the saturated paste electrolytic conductivity test of 0,5 S/m in comparison with the freshwater controls of 0,06 and 0,08 S/m respectively, and the maximum of 0,15 S/m later normally permitted. After up to 30 years of monitoring both during and after construction, it is concluded that seawater can successfully be used in all layers of a flexible pavement with a graded crushed stone base under a 13 or 19 mm Cape seal for at least a 20-year design life, provided that certain precautions are taken in the design and during construction

Description

Papers presented virtually at the 41st International Southern African Transport Conference on 10-13 July 2023.

Keywords

Seawater, Road Construction

Sustainable Development Goals

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