Roads and Infrastructure March 2022

Page 18

BEHIND THE CONSTRUCTION OF

‘AUSTRALIA’S GREENEST FREEWAY’ MELBOURNE’S MORDIALLOC FREEWAY HAS BEEN CALLED ‘AUSTRALIA’S GREENEST FREEWAY’ FOR ITS UNIQUE DESIGN FEATURES AND HIGH PERCENTAGE OF RECYCLED MATERIAL. ROADS & INFRASTRUCTURE SPEAKS TO THE TEAM AT ALEX FRASER, ONE OF THE PROJECT’S KEY SUPPLIERS. TOM O’KEANE REPORTS.

T

he delivery of the new Mordialloc Freeway in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs by McConnell Dowell, Decmil Group and Major Road Projects Victoria (MRPV) in November last year marked the completion of one of Australia’s most sustainable freeway constructions. The project was one of the six selected by the Australian Constructors Association and Engineers Australia as finalists to compete for the prestigious 2022 Australian Construction Achievement Award (ACAA), with the winner due to be announced in May. The project delivered nine kilometres of dual carriageway between Mornington Peninsula Freeway and the Dingley Bypass, eight kilometres of shared walking and cycling paths and six new bridges, including four with new freeway entry and exit ramps. Construction of the project commenced in October 2019 and was completed four weeks earlier than scheduled, on 21 November 2021. The Mordialloc Freeway construction was firmly focused on sustainability, using large volumes of recycled materials and emission reduction initiatives. Hundreds of tonnes of plastic waste was reused in the noise walls and the drainage pipes, and thousands of tonnes of kerbside glass and construction and demolition waste was recycled into the green pavement. MRPV also put strategies in place to 18

ROADS MARCH 2022

minimise the project’s impact on local wildlife and the environment. As a result, more than a million plants, grasses, shrubs and indigenous and native trees were planted along the freeway and 44 per cent of the energy used during the construction was sourced from green energy providers. This emphasis on sustainable practices extended to the project’s suppliers, who were tasked with delivering innovative sustainable and recycled materials to lower the carbon footprint and broader environmental impact of the project. USE OF GREEN MATERIALS The nine-kilometre section of newly developed arterial features more than 150,000 tonnes of recycled asphalt and over 193,000 tonnes of recycled roadbase material supplied by Alex Fraser, one of Melbourne’s leading manufacturers of sustainable construction materials. Alex Fraser also provided its paving expertise to the iconic freeway project. The project chose to use Alex Fraser’s ‘Green Roads’ roadbase and asphalt products, containing volumes of recycled content, including concrete, brick, rock, reclaimed asphalt products (RAP) and waste glass fines. Alex Fraser worked with project leads from McConnell Dowell Decmil Joint Venture to innovate their asphalt supply resulting in unprecedented carbon savings on the pavement build for a project of this type. The supplier introduced a Green Roads

asphalt mix design, incorporating much higher volumes of RAP, which in itself contains quantities of aged, high viscosity bitumen. As a result, significantly less new bitumen was required to bind the mix, and was added at a lower viscosity. This high

The Mordialloc Freeway construction in Melbourne used around 800,000 tonnes of recycled and reused materials.


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Articles inside

Women In Industry Awards Finalists Announced

3min
page 61

A summary of the major contracts awarded for infrastructure projects across the nation.

5min
pages 62-64

The Infrastructure Sustainability Council refl ects on the IS Rating system’s impact on promoting greater sustainability of infrastructure projects over the past decade.

4min
pages 59-60

Precast coating solutions from Dulux

5min
pages 56-58

Secmair’s Chipsealer moving forward

5min
pages 40-41

AfPA Member Profi le

3min
pages 54-55

AfPA’s take on diversity

3min
pages 52-53

A one-stop-shop for temporary fencing

6min
pages 48-49

Looking out for overhead damage

6min
pages 50-51

From strength to strength

5min
pages 37-39

Soil treatment: Leaving no trace behind

9min
pages 44-47

Excavating in tight spaces

4min
pages 34-36

Creating a place for women in construction

7min
pages 14-17

Cutting a fi ne line

5min
pages 31-33

News

9min
pages 6-11

People on the move

2min
pages 12-13

We ask the roads and infrastructure industry experts to share their views on barriers to more diversity.

7min
pages 23-25

Learning by doing

4min
pages 26-27

Laying the groundwork

7min
pages 28-30

Behind the construction of ‘Australia’s greenest freeway’

6min
pages 18-22
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