Porous Pave Inc. Surpasses 7.5 Million lb of Recycled Rubber
Porous Pave Inc. announced a major environmental milestone. When Greenbuild convenes in Los Angeles Oct. 5 to 6, Porous Pave Inc. will surpass 7.5 million lb of recycled rubber used in manufacturing its permeable paving material.
An eco-friendly green building product made in the U.S., Porous Pave is a highly porous, durable and flexible paving material consisting of recycled rubber, chipped granite aggregate and a liquid binder. The controlled shredding and processing of discarded tires produces the 1/8- to ¼-in, fine-cut chips of recycled rubber incorporated into Porous Pave.
“Topping 7.5 million lb of recycled rubber is an achievement for the environment,” said Dave Ouwinga, president of Porous Pave Inc. “For us it also signifies the continued confidence of builders, landscape architects, and contractors to request, specify, and install Porous Pave for a wide range of public, commercial and residential applications of permeable paving.”
Porous Pave retains storm water on site, decreasing the volume and velocity of runoff into storm drains and storm sewers. While the porosity of permeable pavers is limited to only the joints between them, the entire surface of Porous Pave is porous. For superior performance, it is engineered with up to 29% total void space. Water drains through it at a tested permeability rate of 5,800 to 6,300 gal of water per hour per sq ft.
With its recycled rubber, Porous Pave is slip resistant and resilient. It will not freeze, heave, crack or crumble. A pour in place material that can express any hardscape or landscape plan, Porous Pave offers unmatched design versatility and application flexibility. It is the only proven material for installing permeable surfacing on slopes of up to 30 degrees. Porous Pave is available in a variety of permanent and fade resistant colors.
Porous Pave Inc. will exhibit at Greenbuild Oct. 5 to 6, 2016, at booth #921. The Greenbuild conference and expo will be held at the Los Angeles Convention Center, Los Angeles.
Source: Porous Pave Inc.