Sealed Roads in Yass Valley

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Sealed Roads

Covering approximately 650km, our sealed roads form half of our extensive network, surpassing the distance from Yass to Melbourne.

To ensure these roads are safe and smooth, we utilise our patching truck alongside our Capital Works program. Our dedicated sealed maintenance crew, led by a supervisor operating the patching truck, includes two labourers responsible for traffic control.

Supporting this team is our minor maintenance unit, comprising a supervisor and a labourer, who handle sign replacements, line markings and temporary potholes fixes using cold mix.

For larger projects, our Capital Works program is carried out by trusted external contractors, ensuring the ongoing quality of our road network.

Safety is our top priority.  We regularly inspect and maintain our roads to ensure they meet safety standards, keeping our community safe on their travels throughout Yass Valley. 


Potholes

Potholes are a common issue on roads, and Yass Valley Council addresses thousands of them each year.

These road imperfections occur when pavement surfaces become saturated with rain. The Council roads crew works diligently to repair these potholes, ensuring the safety and smoothness of the roads for all motorists.

Understanding Sealed Road Repairs

Why are some roads in poor condition?
Like most structures, road pavements have a defined life and eventually need to be replaced. Due to the load from traffic over time, the pavement materials weaken and can no longer support the traffic. Water infiltrating the pavement can also cause it to lose strength. This weakening causes the road surface to deform (no longer a flat, even surface), cracks appear in the surface and potholes start to form.

The cost to rebuild all the pavements that have reached this point is more than is available in Council’s annual budget, so it will take many years to fix all the roads.

Council undertakes condition assessments of the roads and data collected is used to determine which roads are programmed for repair in the coming year. The ‘worst’ road is not always selected for replacement. Often intervening on a road nearing failure can be more economic to repair, as the existing pavement materials can be salvaged, strengthened and reused.

This is much more cost effective than fixing a road where the pavement material cannot be salvaged and needs to be entirely replaced.

Why are pothole repairs and other patching necessary?
To keep the road network trafficable, Council crews undertake reactive maintenance repairs to fix defects in the pavement, like potholes. Potholes form when water infiltrates the road surface and the bitumen seal lifts under the action of vehicles driving over. That is why they commonly appear during wet weather. The repeated wheel movements remove more and more gravel making the hole deeper and dangerous.

To remove this hazard, the hole is commonly filled with ‘cold mix’, which is a bitumen based product specifically designed for this purpose. Pothole repairs are necessary to remove the hazard until a more permanent repair can be arranged. With many roads requiring rebuilding, ongoing pothole repairs are sometimes the only viable repair method and the process may need to be repeated numerous times to keep the road trafficable until the pavement is replaced.

Another repair method is a called a ‘heavy patch’. This is where a small section (say 5m x 5m or larger) of the road is rebuilt to remove a localised defect. This repair method is used when surrounding pavement is in otherwise good condition. Heavy patching does require more resources and planning than a pothole repair. So, the pothole repair may be implemented initially to manage the hazard while the heavy patch can be designed and programmed.

Heavy patching is a longer term repair method than pothole repairs and is appropriate when the road is in otherwise good condition. It is more expensive than pothole repairs, so work crews need to be selective on where and how this type of patching is done.

Did you know Council undertakes a Road Resealing Program every year?
Council’s preventive maintenance program helps roads reach their intended life span. The bitumen surface becomes brittle over time, which can lead to cracking that allows water to penetrate in the pavement gravel and soils below. Each year Council undertakes a resurfacing program to rejuvenate the bitumen before it starts to fail.

This is why it may look like we are resurfacing a road that appears to be in otherwise good condition.

How are roads rebuilt?
Road pavements are made up of three main elements:

  • wearing surface or bitumen layer;
  • pavement materials; and
  • sub-grade or underlying soils.

These three elements act together to create a structure that supports the traffic. Engineers consider a number of factors when designing a road pavement including the traffic volume, the type of traffic, available materials and strength of the natural soils to support the weight of the traffic.

Sometimes additives are included in the pavement to strengthen the material. This is called stabilisation. New aggregates for pavements is expensive, so strengthening the existing material in this way, not only saves money from not having to buy new materials, there is also reduced waste disposal costs.

New aggregates are used for the top layer of the new road. The road is then sealed with bitumen or, occasionally, asphalt concrete. If using bitumen, Sometimes Council will place a first coat, known as a prime seal when the works are first completed and a second coat usually 6 to 12 months later.

Rebuilding roads does take a number of weeks. All effort is made to minimise the disruption, but unfortunately motorists will be inconvenienced.