Sustainable Composite Materials for Infrastructure
Sustainable, Long-Lasting, Resilient Materials Driving Transformation of the Transportation Infrastructure Sector
The Policy Case:
Unlocking the Market for Composites
Advancing the use of materials like fiber reinforced polymers (composites) in our public infrastructure is compelling and urgent. The use of resilient and sustainable materials, practices and technologies used in the development and construction of our state and local transportation infrastructure is becoming a policy prerequisite. Using proven and tested strong, durable, and non-corrosive materials to build our infrastructure is the ultimate in building back better.
The promise of composite bridge technology and its potential application to a wide array of bridge sites is an important step in extending the lifecycle of bridges, accelerating bridge construction, and creating opportunities to substantially reduce the cost of bridge maintenance.
Under the Federal Aid Highway Program (FAHP), the demonstration project has long been an effective tool for state DOT’s to demonstrate specific technology in an accelerated manner to advance the state of knowledge for their own departments and other jurisdictions such as county and local transportation infrastructure owners.
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Infrastructure innovation always requires policy level leadership combined with the essential engagement of the civil engineering discipline, in this case the bridge community.
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Composite bridge technology, in addition to having clear sustainability advantages, will effectively bring clear benefits in value to the public's long-term bridge assets owned and managed by state and local agencies.
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The presence of these competitive advanced materials in your marketplace will create more competition to the traditional steel and precast products – competition is essential to competitive prices in any marketplace. That is why the FAHP and state procurement policies do and should encourage competition.