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It is already baked to use discarded tires in this fashion. |
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You can use anything you want for aggregate provided that it is inert and broken up into sufficiently small, clean, relatively uniform bits. Im not sure what inert stuff is in your trash. |
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Rubber and old concrete are already widely used for this in recycled form. |
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Glass and plastic are probably more economical if recycled into them selves, but could be used as aggregate if thoroughly washed, chopped, and sorted. Glass does look very good in polished terrazzo, but then, that isnt a road pavement. |
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Simply using lower quality materials for your pavement is more likely to increase the maintenance costs due to quicker failure. |
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[Laughs Last], Thinking about your comment, I suppose it would be better used as a temporary solution or to fix some potholes. |
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Technically, ashphalt kind of IS garbage. It's the crap that's left over when you process crude oil into useful forms. So...popsicle. Yeah. |
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Baked in my country. Only here the trash is just a layer, unattached to the pavement yet constant. |
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It's baked on some pavements used, for instance, in playgrounds. That brown-red, shock-absorving thick stuff they pave the playgrounds with nowadays is made of recycled stuff (don't know what, though). Not really asphalt, but is the same concept. |
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Is this the same stuff they make the 400m track out of? It is also usually red. |
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I read something once about how Nike used recycled sneakers to make running tracks for schools. But I'm not motivated enough to find a link right now. |
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Actually, a law was passed in 1991 (the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act - ISTEA - section 1038), requiring that, starting in 1994, 5 % of roads built with federal funds must use pavement made with crumb rubber, processed recycled tires, or modified asphalt. By 1997, 20 % of roads built with federal funds were required to use recycled tires in the pavement. |
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