The Australian Society for Concrete Pavements (ASCP)
will hold a FREE Online Forum
THIS Wed. May 27 (NY & LA) & Thu. May 28 (Sydney & Paris)!
WED., May 27th:
Los Angeles, California, USA: 15:30 to 17:30 PDT
New York, New York, USA: 18:30 to 20:30 EDT
THU., May 28th:
Sydney, Australia: 8:30 am to 10:30 AEST/UTC+10
Paris, France: 00:30 to 2:30 CEST
To register, please go to:
https://concretepavements.com.au/Events/EventDetails.aspx?EventID=198
To join the Forum on May 27 and 28, please go to: https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_Y2Y1ZGFmNWItNmQ1Yi00M2U3LWIwZTEtMzJmM2EwZTdiNzIx%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%227f90057d-3ea0-46fe-b07c-e0568627081b%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%2238db4dda-15cf-47f5-bb0d-41793bc65388%22%2c%22IsBroadca
When attending the forum, you can turn on ‘captions’ with
choices in English, French, German or Spanish!
For the 2-page FLYER, please click on image below left, or go to: https://concretepavements.com.au/Documents/ASCP%20OnlineForum%20Notice%2028%20May%20v2.pdf
Concrete paving has come a long way since the early 1900’s. Whilst high durability pavements were able to be hand-placed 100 years ago, concrete pavements today are produced faster, stronger and more cost efficiently using slipform pavers. We’ve come a long way. While acknowledging that the right pavement is needed in the right place, modern slipform-concrete pavements have been through an evolution in design and specification, and now represent the best value for money durable pavements they have ever been.
This presentation titled “100 Years’ Experience with Concrete Roads in NSW” by Peter Carson, Senior Project Manager-Roads & Maritime Services Greater Newcastle is designed to take you along some of that historical journey.
Bruce Perry, Technical Account Manager Northern-Cement Australia, will focus on a novel means by which the presence of activated carbon in fly ash can be “deactivated”, thereby minimizing its deleterious effects on the efficiency of the of AEA’s in air entrained pavement concrete mixes. His presentation, “Features Benefits and Challenges of Air Entrained Pavement Concrete Mixes Using Fly Ash” previously won the inaugural Ed Haber Award at the 5th ASCP Conference for the paper which makes the best contribution to knowledge and advancement of pavement concrete technology.
Justin Moss, President-ASCP, will elaborate on the background and key supporting references to Pavement Note 002. Sustainable Concrete Pavements is the key focus for Note 002. Concrete pavements can offer several properties that significantly reduce the ongoing environmental impact including low-noise, light reflective, reduced heat entrapment and reduced rolling resistance.
Continuing Professional Development (PDH) – Attendance at this event may be eligible for credit towards Engineers Australia and other organizations’ Continuing Professional Development requirements
Contact: Kevin Abrams, Executive Director-ASCP
Phone: 02 9918 2610 | E-mail: exec@concretepavements.com.au