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The history of portland cement concrete over portland cement concrete (PCC/PCC) composite pavements in the United States dates back to the first concrete pavement constructed in the United States, located in Bellefontaine, OH, in 1891, shown in Figure 1.
The first PCC pavement in the U.S. was constructed in 1891 in Bellefontaine, Ohio. This pavement was only 3.0 m wide and 67.1 m long (probably what we would call a “test section” today). In 1909, in Wayne County, Michigan, a PCC highway system was constructed.
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Almost all rigid pavement is made with Portland Cement Concrete (PCC). Rigid pavements are differentiated into three major categories by their means of crack control: Jointed plain concrete pavement (JPCP) This is the most common type of rigid pavement.
More than 100 years ago in the small town of Bellefontaine, Ohio, city officials decided to build an experimental section of concrete street. Thus began the portland cement concrete (PCC) pavement industry. Concrete pavements have since helped transform our society from agricultural to industrial, and from rural to urban. 20TH-CENTURY DEVELOPMENTS