Apply the right treatment to the right road at the right time.
Pavement preservation involves applying a series of low-cost treatments every few years to a road segment, at a minimum in good condition, to halt further deterioration. If the pavement surface and substrate have not significantly deteriorated, relatively inexpensive treatments can keep water out of the pavement, prevent oxidation of the asphalt, and maintain good skid resistance. In addition, the road surface can also be kept looking attractive. All of which are important factors for national park roads.
Some resources will always need to be devoted to building and reconstructing park roads, but with timely applications of carefully selected treatments to maintain and extend a pavement’s service life, more resources can be devoted to other transportation infrastructure needs, while maintaining safe, efficient roads for park visitors.
Why roads deteriorate?
All roads begin deteriorating as soon as they are built; subjected to water, freeze-thaw cycles, solar radiation, as well as varying traffic loads. Typically, pavements perform well under loads until a particular point in their life spans and then deteriorate precipitously and eventually fail. The road is then either rehabilitated or totally reconstructed.
Why a proactive approach?
Demands on the road networks in national park units continue to rise with increased visitation. At the same time, funds available for road maintenance grow ever tighter. Pavement preservation has proven to be very cost-effective. Several studies have found that a dollar spent on pavement preservation can save between $6 and $10 in future pavement rehabilitation costs. A more efficient and cost-effective approach is needed to maintain park roads and meet expectations for safety, ride quality, and optimum traffic flow, while protecting the capital investment in the park transportation networks.
Pavement preservation strategies can reduce or eliminate:
- the need for costly, time-consuming rehabilitation or reconstruction of roads that have reached or exceeded their useful lives;
- traffic disruptions, a major factor in national park units, where there may be only one road available;
- work zone dangers, because the maintenance treatments can be applied more quickly than full reconstruction.
Why not worst first?
Traditionally, transportation agencies have allowed the structural condition of a road segment to deteriorate to a fair or good condition before taking action to rehabilitate or totally reconstruct the road. The logic behind this process was to achieve the most useful life out of a road—typically 15 to 20 years for an asphalt segment—and thus maximize the required capital investment.
There are three problems with this reactive approach to road maintenance:
- motorists experience progressively worse driving conditions as the road segment ages;
- the rehabilitation or total reconstruction process is expensive;
- major reconstruction is disruptive to traffic flow, a particularly bad situation in a national park setting.
Pavement Preservation Process: A Best Practice

Pavement Preservation
FEDERAL LANDS TRANSPORTATION PROGRAM FACT SHEETDemands on the road networks in national park units continue to rise with increased visitation. At the same time, funds available for road maintenance grow ever tighter. Pavement preservation maintains roads at a lower cost and keeps them open for visitors better than traditional maintenance—applying the right treatment, to the right road, at the right time.
- Guilford Courthouse National Military Park
Guilford Courthouse National Military Park’s Tour Loop Road and Parking Lots Closed for Pavement Preservation Project
- Wright Brothers National Memorial
Wright Brothers National Memorial closed on July 13 to complete pavement preservation project
- Blue Ridge Parkway
Blue Ridge Parkway Begins Pavement Preservation Work in Virginia
- Type: News
- Locations: Blue Ridge Parkway
- Date Released: 2020-04-30
Over 80 miles of the Blue Ridge Parkway historic motor route in Virginia will be resurfaced as part of a pavement preservation program.
- Cape Hatteras National Seashore
Oregon Inlet boat ramp parking lot temporarily closed for resurfacing beginning March 23
- Type: News
- Locations: Cape Hatteras National Seashore
- Date Released: 2020-03-12
On March 23, the Federal Highway Administration will begin the process of preserving the pavement at the Oregon Inlet boat ramp parking lot as part of its pavement preservation project at Cape Hatteras National Seashore. During this phase of the project, the parking lot and public boat ramps will be closed for three-to-five days.
- Cape Hatteras National Seashore
NC Highway 12 reopening at Cape Hatteras National Seashore between Whalebone Junction and south Nags Head
- Type: News
- Locations: Cape Hatteras National Seashore
- Date Released: 2019-11-09
At 3 p.m. tomorrow, the detour on South Old Oregon Inlet Road will be discontinued and NC 12 will reopen. A layer of asphalt pavement has been applied to the highway to preserve the existing road condition and lengthen the life of the highway.
- Glacier National Park
Glacier National Park Reminds Public About Logan Pass Access in September
- Type: News
- Locations: Glacier National Park
- Date Released: 2019-09-12
Logan Pass will be accessible only from St. Mary entrance starting September 16
- Glacier National Park
Park shares travel tips for autumn in Glacier
- Type: News
- Locations: Glacier National Park
- Date Released: 2019-08-27
Public reminded that portion of Going-to-the-Sun Road will be temporarily closed
- Glacier National Park
Pavement Preservation Makes Progress at Glacier National Park
- Type: News
- Locations: Glacier National Park
- Date Released: 2019-07-12
Park approves night work to expedite project
- Blue Ridge Parkway
Blue Ridge Parkway Announces 2019 Pavement Preservation Work
- Type: News
- Locations: Blue Ridge Parkway
- Date Released: 2019-05-15
The National Park Service will be completing pavement preservation on 115 miles of the Blue Ridge Parkway starting in May and concluding in November. Parkway visitors can expect one-lane closures in affected areas.
- Glacier National Park
Going-to-the-Sun Road Expected to be Open in the Morning
- Type: News
- Locations: Glacier National Park
- Date Released: 2019-06-22
Last updated: February 12, 2021