• Highways
  • 23 Sept 2021

A partnership between Hampshire County Council, Milestone Infrastructure and specialist recycling contractor, OCL, has invested in a new purpose-built recycling centre for Hampshire Highways’ road materials.

The plant in Micheldever is being used to provide the means to reprocess and recycle material generated from road repairs, for re-use in road maintenance, leading to reduced carbon emissions, costs, and travel miles.

Within 12 months, the Micheldever facility aims to deliver a net reduction in the use of virgin aggregates, and some warm and hot mix traditional asphalts can be replaced with cold lay materials. There will also be a reduction in the total miles travelled for material supply. The new facility will also facilitate the recycling of tar bound material which would otherwise require specialist and expensive disposal.

The recycled material is laid cold which means specialist insulated lorries are not needed to collect and deliver the material, and there is no waste from unused material which can be used elsewhere. The cold recycled road surface uses about a fifth of the energy of traditional materials and saves 40 per cent in CO2 emissions.

It is anticipated that up to £320,000 per year could be saved for the County Council through the reduction in highway construction costs.

The site itself has also been recycled, having previously been an asphalt plant up until the late 1990s. The depot has been fully refurbished and brought up to modern environmental standards. The latest technologically advanced plant and equipment has been brought in to produce the recycled products, and a significant amount of material that had previously been stored on the site, over time, has been recycled during construction of the new plant.

To meet Environment Agency (EA) requirements, a new sealed drainage system also had to be built. The system is capable of holding all the water for a one in 100-year storm event, with an additional 40 per cent capacity to cope with future climate change impacts.