NEWPRODUCTONDISPLAY Crews with Green Acres Contracting of Scottdale, Pa., on Wednesday installed along Marquette Avenue in Follansbee about 1,800 feet of guardrail, including several sections coated with ZAM, a new coating produced by Wheeling-Nisshin Steel said to be at least three times more resistant to corrosion. Officials said sections of ZAM coated guardrail were alternated with galvanized steel sections to show the difference between the durability. -- Warren Scott

FOLLANSBEE When crews installed about 1,800 feet of guardrail along Marquette Avenue Wednesday, they were not only helping to protect drivers traveling to and from the citys Parkview section.

They also were helping to showcase a relatively new product produced by a local industry.

The crews with Green Acres Contracting of Scottdale, Pa., installed alternating sections of guardrail, some comprised of standard galvanized steel and some coated with ZAM, a zinc, aluminum and magnesium alloy produced and applied by Wheeling-Nisshin Steel.

Developed by Nisshin Steel, the steel firms parent company, ZAM is super resistant to corrosion and scratching because it is nearly three times harder than commonly used galvanized coatings, said Art Bertol, Wheeling-Nisshin general manager for ZAM marketing, who was on hand to observe the guardrails installation.

City Manager John DeStefano said all of the guardrail was donated by Wheeling-Nisshin in hopes of showing the West Virginia Division of Highways and others the durability of the coating, which is offered in the U.S. only by Wheeling-Nisshin, compared to that of standard guardrail.

Bertol said the steel firm hopes the state will include ZAM as a specification in guardrail and other projects and that ultimately, the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials will be persuaded to use the product.

Bertol said the coating also may be applied to signs and other steel structures. He added since Wheeling-Nisshin began offering it in 2013, ZAM has been used on roofs and siding for many barns, silos and other agricultural structures and has many other applications, including the walls for in-ground swimming pools, cooling towers and sound/wind and snow barriers.

DeStefano said the city benefits from the donated guardrail, which would have cost almost $10,000, while possibly helping to increase the customer base for a major local industry.

The city manager said the cost for the city was about $400 to have steel coils slit for the guardrail and about $9,800 to have it installed.

He was asked if there are any concerns about the stability of the hillside, which overlooks an area of Follansbee Park where a slip caused major damage to a shelter.

DeStefano said staff with Garvin Boward and Beitko, a geotechnical engineering firm in Pittsburgh, has monitored 86 survey points in the area and not found any significant movement.

(Scott can be contacted at wscott@heraldstaronline.com.)

STEUBENVILLE The Jefferson County Drug Task Force took three people into custody during two drug raids on ...

WEIRTON Indivisible Weirton is launching its Indivisible Weirton Give Back initiative with a meeting to be held ...

WEIRTON Sponsors and vendors are needed for the sixth-annual Top of West Virginia Resource Fair to be held from ...

WHEELING West Virginias residents wished the state a happy 154th birthday Tuesday, offering hope that the ...

See the article here:
Guardrail used to showcase product of local industry - The Daily Times

Related Posts
June 22, 2017 at 11:47 pm by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Siding Installation