US contractor Robert Smith based in Chattanooga has long experience in the asphalt paving market but has recently added roller compacted concrete (RCC) to its paving portfolio. This heavy-duty cement mix can be poured as quickly as asphalt and the company has now developed its skills at laying large areas of RCC in just a few days for its industrial client base. Demand has grown and RCC work now accounts for over 90% of the firm’s workload, which it carries out using a Volvo CE paver.    
One important job the firm had to carry out was to repave the Jack Daniels distillery site in Lynchburg, Tennessee, to deal with a major maintenance issue regarding its warehouse access roads. The asphalt roads were proving unable to cope with the weight of the heavily laden trucks carrying products to and from the warehouse. Using the Volvo CE ABG 7820 paver, the contractor was able to pave some 92m2/hour of concrete. This covered over 49,000m2 of new roads and stockyards, with a 130mm layer of the compacted concrete placed over 150mm of compacted aggregate base. 
While 
Demand for RCC is growing in the US, such as for sites where there are large numbers of heavy delivery vehicles. In Europe the RCC market has yet to develop, but The Concrete Centre in the UK believes that the benefits of this technique will see increasing use. The Concrete Centre is part of the 
Originally developed in the 1970s, it is increasingly being viewed as  an  economic, long-term road surfacing material according to Minson. The   RCC surfaces use cement, water and aggregates as with conventional   concrete but feature drier mixes that are stiff enough to be compacted   by vibratory rollers. This paving method needs no joints, dowels or   steel reinforcement and needs no finishing. 
Minson says that RCC  combines the strength, long-term performance and minimal maintenance of  conventional concrete with the ease of construction associated with  asphalt paving. For roads RCC offers key advantages in that it can span  localised soft subgrades, provide resistance to deformation under heavy  concentrated loads and will not soften in high ambient temperatures.
Laying  RCC is not complex and delivery requires large-capacity mixers to blend  the material as it is transported to site and discharged into a  modified asphalt paver. The machine places the materials in layers up to  250mm thick and 13m wide. 
Compaction  starts immediately after placement and continues until the pavement  meets density requirements. Curing ensures a strong and durable  pavement. Where appearance is important, joints can be saw-cut into the  RCC to control crack location. If economy is more important than  appearance, then the RCC can be allowed to crack naturally. 
In  the UK, RCC with induced cracking and binder/surface courses is  increasingly being considered for truck lanes and highway widening  projects, and as an alternative to fully flexible pavements. 
The  benefits of RCC have been underlined by research carried out at  Sheffield University. There, researchers as part of the Ecolanes FP6  project have developed a RCC with recycled steel fibres from waste tyres  that is 12% cheaper than conventional road construction and is 15%  faster to construct. According to The Concrete Centre, RCC has  significant potential as it is economical and fast to lay, has long-term  performance with minimum maintenance, resists rutting and potholing and  can use waste materials for its construction. In addition, at the  end-of-life the material can be crushed and recycled for a new pavement.