Reclaimed Asphalt Pavement RAP
A sustainability term linked to carbon, resilience, environmental impact or responsible infrastructure delivery.
Also Known As
Reclaimed Bituminous Pavement
Reclaimed Asphalt Pavement Explained
Reclaimed Asphalt Pavement is a key term within sustainability & esg, where it is used across construction, infrastructure, transport and industrial project delivery. In practical terms, it helps describe how work is planned, specified, delivered, measured or maintained on real sites and assets. Understanding reclaimed asphalt pavement is useful because the same language is often shared by contractors, designers, suppliers, asset owners, public authorities and investors.
Within Highways.Today’s Dictionary, reclaimed asphalt pavement should be read as part of the wider vocabulary of carbon, circular economy, environmental management, social value and sustainability terms. It may appear in technical specifications, tender documents, project reports, equipment guides, safety plans, design models, maintenance schedules or news articles. Exact requirements can vary by country, project type, contract form, standard and manufacturer, so readers should always check the relevant local guidance, drawings, regulations and professional advice before relying on the term for design, procurement or operational decisions.
Articles Featuring Reclaimed Asphalt Pavement
Lafarge Canada now offers reclaimed asphalt as a high quality construction solution
11th May 2021
Lafarge Canada now offers reclaimed asphalt as a high quality construction solution Asphalt is widely recognized as one of the…
Asphalt Recycling is all about the Perfect Process Chain
8th October 2019
Asphalt Recycling is all about the Perfect Process Chain In order to turn aggregates and bitumen into asphalt for road…
Editorial Note
The Highways.Today Dictionary is maintained as an editorial reference resource for construction, infrastructure, transport and industrial technology professionals. Definitions are intended to support understanding, discovery and research, and may be expanded over time as the Dictionary evolves into a broader illustrated industry reference.
















