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Pittsburgh Park Protects Turf
With Crumb Rubber
Thirty-seven tons of crumb rubber were recently applied to one
acre of new turf installed at the Point State Park, Pittsburgh,
PA. The crumb rubber was applied as top dressing using a patented
method and technology developed by Michigan State University and
marketed under the Crown III label by patent licensee holder Jai
Tire Inc., Denver, CO.
The crumb rubber
was installed by Dan Eichenlaub Landscaping Co. in a heavily used
area of the park commonly known as the "finish line area"
where Pittsburgh's marathon, the Great Race, and several charity
walks end.
"The crumb
rubber top dressing is designed to protect the crowns of the grass
and absorb some of the shock and weight of the park's pedestrian
traffic, " Eichenlaub said. In addition, using crumb rubber
as a top dressing has been shown to reduce the amount of resodding
required, thus reducing costs. Less watering is required and it
has been shown to provide a longer grass-growing season, Eichenlaub
said.
AgRecycle,
Inc., Cheswick, PA supplied the crumb rubber which was prepared
using a cryogenic process to freeze size reduced tire chips and
grind the embrittled chips into 3/8" fiber and steel-free granules
for use as top dressing or as an ingredient in other products
and applications.
The project
is being financed by a $50,000 state grant to the Western Pennsylvania
Conservancy and is part of a state Department of Environmental
Protection initiative to promote the use of scrap tires and scrap
tire derived rubber in recreation sites. Other recycling projects,
such as making crowd-control fencing and signs from recycled tire
rubber, are being considered also.
"There's
a bigger goal here," Eichenlaub said. "This is an opportunity
to use products that demonstrate that tires have a viable use,"
he said.
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