City goes extra mile on Fairview
Andrew Glazer
COSTA MESA -- Drivers gnashing their teeth as they’re held up by
construction on Fairview Road should know the city is doing a good deed,
a city engineer said.
For the first time, the city will reuse its old pavement instead of
tossing it into nearby dumps -- which has costly economic and
environmental impacts.
The city pays more than $22 for each ton of refuse it throws into
landfills. And that’s without accounting for shipping, which can cost
much more.
“Right now, we’re making a bit of a mess,” joked Assistant City Engineer
Ernesto Munoz. “But the road was beyond maintenance. It needed to be
replaced.”
Not only will cars cruise smoothly on pothole-free pavement when the
project is completed in August, but their wheels will be rolling on tons
of concrete and ground-up tires that otherwise would have been piled high
in landfills.
“This will really make a difference,” said Donna Thierault, the city’s
recycling coordinator. “Anything that can be kept out of landfills is
welcome.’
Road crews also will widen the intersection at Fairview Road and Baker
Street, allowing for turning lanes which should allow traffic to flow
more freely, Munoz said.
Munoz said construction would be halted during the Orange County Fair in
July.
The roughly 40,000 tires that will be shredded for the pavement will
create a longer-lasting, quieter, blacker driving surface, allowing water
to run off better than regular asphalt, Munoz said.
As for the recycled pavement, a giant pulverizing machine will pound the
existing asphalt into bits, mixing it with wet concrete and laying it
down as a foundation for the new, rubberized surface.
“We just hope the utilities don’t touch it once we’re finished,” Munoz
said. “When you start cutting, you’ve destroyed the whole thing.”
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