Sealed road
A sealed road is a road whose surface has been permanently sealed by the use of one of several pavement treatments, often of composite construction. In some countries, such as Australia and New Zealand, this surface is generically referred to as "seal".[1]
Surface treatments used on sealed roads include:
- Asphalt concrete
- Chipseal
- Tarmac
- Bitumen
See also
- Road surface
References
- ^ "Tarmac Surface Treatments". Maria Sherry. Retrieved September 24, 2013.
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Road hierarchy
Limited-access |
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By country | |
Main roads | |
Local roads |
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Other terms |
Interchanges (grade-separated) |
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Intersections (at-grade) |
factors
Road and environment |
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Human factors | |
Vehicles |
time allocation
- Barrier transfer machine
- Bicycle lane
- Climbing lane
- Complete streets
- Contraflow lane
- Contraflow lane reversal
- High-occupancy toll lane
- High-occupancy vehicle lane
- Lane
- Living street
- Managed lane
- Median / Central reservation
- Motorcycle lane
- Passing lane
- Pedestrian crossing
- Pedestrian zone
- Refuge island
- Reversible lane
- Road diet
- Road verge
- Runaway truck ramp
- Shared space
- Sidewalk / Pavement
- Shoulder
- Street running railway
- Traffic calming
- Traffic directionality
- Traffic island
- Traffic lanes
- Traffic signal preemption
- Truck bypass
- Unused highway
- Wide outside lane
- Woonerf
indicators
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