Fresh asphalt doesn't "set" instantly; it goes through a short cooling phase and a much longer curing phase, and both are strongly shaped by temperature, rain, humidity and sun.

What "curing" means for asphalt

Hot‑mix asphalt is a blend of aggregates and bitumen placed at high temperature and compacted while still hot. Immediately after paving, the mix begins to cool; once it drops below certain temperatures it can safely carry traffic, but the binder continues to harden and oxidise over months, not hours.

Two timescales matter:

Temperature: too cold, too hot, and just right

Air and surface temperature control both workability during laying and the speed of cooling and curing.

Rain and humidity: moisture, emulsions and surface damage

Water in the wrong place at the wrong time is bad news for fresh asphalt:

Solar radiation: surface heat, cooling and long‑term performance

Sunlight influences asphalt in two ways:

Putting it together: why local weather data matters for asphalt

Because asphalt curing is so sensitive to temperature, rain, humidity and solar load, local weather conditions should be treated as part of the design and construction process, not as an afterthought:

In short, asphalt "strength" is not just a lab property of the mix; it is the outcome of how that mix interacts with the real atmosphere above it. Paying close attention to local meteorology — before, during and after paving — is one of the most effective ways to get longer‑lasting, safer bitumen road surfaces.

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