• Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Then they shouldn’t be using materials that succumb to potholes this quickly.

    We have potholes in Ohio. Mostly caused by salt on the roads, and lack of maintence over the years.

    This road opened on June 5th. Should be no salt. And there hasn’t been years of deterioration.

    If this pavement material is this weak, then it has no right being used here.

    • Life is Tetris@leminal.space
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      4 days ago

      If they didn’t use sub-standard materials, there wouldn’t be big repair contracts, would there? Guess who will land them.

      This is par for the course in India. They siphon off taxes this way, and on environmentally-inadvisable things no less. But that is how it is structured, weak-to-non-existent urban local bodies, and tax collection and disbursement centralized like it was in the times of the colonizer. That big pot of money is intensively fought over.

    • AdamEatsAss@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      You ever been to a tropical island? They do not salt their roads, but still have lots of pot holes.

      • Fjdybank@lemmy.ca
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        4 days ago

        Road builder here. Nope, unless you are being very creative with the term ‘sinkhole’.

        First clue - a sinkhole propagates from UNDER the road, whereas the photos simply show crap asphalt which has been essentially ‘plucked’ out. This suggests either a crappy binder, or it was placed in the rain, or a number of other quality issues.

      • IceBear@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        I mean, if these are caused by sinkholes, then that should have been addressed during construction. Roads can be very thick and are made of lots of different layers, each of which should be compacted very regularly and thoroughly during construction. If sink holes are common in the area, then they should have designed countermeasures to minimize their impact. My understanding of sinkholes, is that they typically form due to water phase erosion, which again, should have been known and at least partially accounted for. But, hey, I’m not a civil engineer, so I could wrong, but those definitely seem more likely to be potholes as opposed to sinkholes.