Measuring production rate for the construction of the subgrade layer of a road
Abstract
The performance of the pavement is highly determined by the subgrade layer of the road due
to the fact that it’s the lowest component of a road and it supports the load carried from the
upper layers of the road laid on top of it. With the increasing investments by the government
of Uganda in the road sector, it is therefore important to determine accurately the production
rate of a road subgrade for accurate budgeting and scheduling purposes by the management.
This research therefore focused on measuring work undertaken during the construction of the
subgrade layer in order to come up with its production rate. A number of five construction sites
were visited in Kampala metropolitan to measure the production rate of activities carried out
for the construction of aa road sub-grade layer. The most major activities measured on site
were excavation of the ground, laying and levelling of the soil and its compaction and their
production rates computed for the different horizontal road profiles for a given section of a
road. Probability distribution functions for the different activities was obtained using Easyfit
and Monte Carlo simulation was then carried out on the probability distribution functions in
Mathematica to obtain the total production rate. The study revealed that the total production
rate proves the central limit theorem. A relative importance index was then assigned to the
different road profiles and probability distributions fit to the RII values and Monte Carlo
simulation carried out on the PDF. A linear regression model was then built with the road
profile as the independent variable and the total production rate as a variable to predict the
production rate for the construction of a road subgrade for the different horizontal road profiles.