Module 1 Highway
Module 1 Highway
Module 1 Highway
MODULE 1
INTRODUCTION
Early roads with hard surfaces were found in the land of Mesopotamia. These roads
were constructed as early as 3,500 B.C. Another stone-surface roads were also found in the
Mediterranean island of Crete.
The early road systems were constructed primarily for the following purpose:
1. For the movement of armies in their conquest and for defense against
invasion.
2. For transport of food and trade of goods between neighboring towns and
cities.
The romans, who discovered cement, expanded their vast empire through extensive
road networks radiating in many directions from the capita city of Rome. Many of the roads
built by the Romans still exist even after 2,000 years.
Thirty years later, a Scottish Engineer born in Westminster Abbey, Thomas Telford
(1757-1834), president and founder of the Institute of Civil Engineer, introduced some
improvements in the construction methods of Jerome Tresaguet. The road foundation course
of Telford was made of stones having 3 inches minimum thickness, 5 inches breadth and 7
inches height. Smaller stones were driven by mauls on top voids and trued the surfaces by
breaking the projecting points. Telford employed a flat sub-grade, providing slight crown using
stones of varying sizes.
England followed the ongoing highway development started by France. The Macadam
road concept named after John Louden Mac Adam (1755-1836), another famous Scottish
Engineer road builder and contemporary of Telford, was developed and widely accepted. The
invention of road building equipment enhances the development of road in Europe. In 1858,
Eli Blake invented the first stone crusher and at the same period, a steam road roller weighing
30 tons was introduced in France by its inventor Aveling and Porter.
In the early part of 1900, transportation in the country depended largely on trails,
waterways, railroad, earth roads and partially graveled roads. Highway in the Philippines at
that time is nothing more than a dream to most Filipinos. The American government initiated
the development of roadways in the Philippines, connecting towns, cities, and provinces. The
popular Macadam road type was introduced. It gained wide acceptance because of the abundant
supply of stones and gravel.
After the Second World War, the new independent Philippine government, continued
the rehabilitation and construction of roads and bridges, through the reparations and war
damages paid by the Japanese government. Other financial grants and aids received from the
U.S. government were used in the construction and rehabilitation of roads and bridges.
REFERENCES:
1. Garber, Nicholas; & Hoel, Lester. 2009. Traffic and Highway Engineering, Fourth Edition,
Cengage Learning.
2. Fajardo, Max Jr. B., Elements of Roads and Highways, Second Edition, 5138 Merchandising
Publisher, Manila, 1998.
3. Rodrigue, Jean-Paul. The Geography of Transport Systems, Fifth Edition, Routledge, 2020.