Preserving roadway conditions improve a community’s quality of life, and the city continues to invest in the maintenance, rehabilitation and repaving of neighborhood streets. Roadway maintenance is currently funded at $4 million for this fiscal year and 34 lane miles have been milled, resurfaced and striped.
Which streets are getting repaved?
In March, work will begin in the Cedar Highlands neighborhood, off Jimmy Ann Drive. Libby Avenue, Libby Court, N. and S. Gertrude Court, Patrick Circle and Stocking Street are scheduled to be repaved. Cedar Highlands Boulevard was repaved seven years ago. Crews will work from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday. There will be temporary lane/road closures during construction.
After work in the Cedar Highlands neighborhood is completed, these roadways will be scheduled:
- Following utility work to level manholes, South Palmetto Avenue area from Orange Avenue to Bellevue Avenue including Palm Place, Gardiner Court, Loomis Avenue and Live Oak Avenue.
- 3rd Street from Jimmy Ann Drive to Berkshire Road and all of the roads in between 3rd Steet and 5th Street.
- Beachside roadways from Plaza Boulevard to Woodland Avenue.
- Several roads between Mason Avenue and George W. Engram Boulevard and Nova Road to Ridgewood Avenue.
How streets are selected
Roadways and adjacent sidewalks and ramps are visually evaluated to identify issues needing to be addressed. Utilities Department staff also evaluates underground utilities. Groups of candidate roads are selected from all parts of the city, taking into consideration other planned or recently completed projects, so that all areas of the city will benefit from roadway improvements. These groups of roadways are presented to the City Manager and City Commission when the funding agenda item is under consideration.
Staff uses the Pavement Surface Evaluation & Rating (PASER) system to evaluate, document and develop maintenance plans for roads. The 10-point rating system (one is the worst score and 10 is the best) is widely used by communities and road agencies across the country. A roadway's rating determines what type of maintenance is required, minimal or extensive.
Rating | Condition | Maintenance Category |
1-3 | Poor | Reconstruction |
4-5 | Fair | Resurfacing |
6-10 | Good | Routine Minor Maintenance |
Differences between Routine Minor Maintenance, Resurfacing and Reconstruction
Routine minor maintenance: Occasionally required through life of roadway; includes right-of-way mowing, sign replacement, striping, and repairs to shoulders, sidewalks and ramps.
Resurfacing: Removing the top layer of asphalt and replacing it with a new surface layer; generally needs to be done every 20 years on average with higher volume roadways needing more frequent resurfacing. An average cost for resurfacing work is about $100,000 per lane mile (12’ width x 1-mile length).
Reconstruction: Most involved and costly option. Necessary when the roadway base has deteriorated to the point where it loses structural strength to support the weight of traffic. This process involves removing the entire pavement and base material, reworking and recompacting the base material (about 8”-10” below the asphalt), and replacing the asphalt layer(s). The average cost is approximately $500,000 per lane mile. Fortunately, the list of roadways in this maintenance category is relatively short in Daytona Beach.
Roadways are selected based on the condition rating and if there is any necessary underground utility work, as is often the case, and the amount of traffic on the roadway. These projects tend to be longer term since many of these roadways need extensive utility work (for example Grandview Avenue), and this coordination and construction can take years to design and complete.