Sustainable noise protection

100 % ecologically minded

Quick assembly

Stable, flexible, economical

Low-maintenance systems

Without constant irrigation

Innovative solutions

Can also be combined with photovoltaics

The substrate, connections and appearance determine the choice of system in the project. In the urban area of Lauf an der Pegnitz, noise protection often becomes a balancing point between usability, acceptance and construction progress. Current climate change R3 can be found on an ongoing basis. For local authorities, what counts most is the verifiability of documents, while developers pay attention to usability and interfaces in the neighborhood. Late clarifications lead to rescheduling, supplements and additional rounds that put pressure on deadlines and budgets. We provide a comprehensible decision-making logic so that requirements, variants and interfaces remain in line. If the focus is on design and environmental impact, we consider variants with a natural stone look and robust surfaces. A clean alignment of the boundary conditions reduces friction in the project team. For local authorities, it is important that requirements are described in a verifiable manner and that decisions can be explained to the administration and committees. For developers, it is important that land use, outdoor spaces and development are not blocked by late changes. Late clarifications lead to rescheduling, supplements and additional rounds of coordination, which put a strain on the budget and deadline. A brief preliminary review separates the must-haves from the options and speeds up the comparison of variants. Depending on the project, a range is often more helpful than fictitious accuracy when plans are still in flux.

Your advantages at a glance.
  • Up to 12 m height
  • Without deep foundation
  • Quick assembly
  • Economic implementation
  • Greenable
  • Flexible lines
  • Suitable for tight spaces
  • Durable and robust

Noise barriers Lauf an der Pegnitz Variants, appearance and space requirements

When construction site and use run in parallel, noise protection becomes a question of coordination. When comparing variants, space requirements, appearance, robustness, construction phase and existing buildings quickly lead to different priorities. We structure the choice of system in such a way that the direction taken by the project team remains justifiable and detailed planning does not come to nothing. Alpine noise barriers are a pragmatic option, especially during construction phases. If dual use seems sensible, we examine the combination of noise protection and photovoltaics as an option, depending on the project requirements. If dual use seems sensible, we examine the combination of noise protection and photovoltaics as an option, depending on the project requirements. A resilient system direction is created when application limits and maintenance ideas are also considered. For local authorities, it is important that requirements are described in a verifiable manner and that decisions can be explained to the administration and committees. For developers, it is important that land use, outdoor spaces and development are not blocked by late changes. Late clarifications lead to rescheduling, supplements and additional rounds of coordination, which put a strain on the budget and deadline. A brief preliminary review separates the must-haves from the options and speeds up the comparison of variants. Depending on the project, a range is often more helpful than fictitious accuracy when planning statuses are still in flux. In the Bavarian context, coordination and documentation often run parallel to planning, which is why a clean structure pays off in particular.

Gallery:

Noise protection projects in Lauf an der Pegnitz from preliminary inspection to handover

The system direction becomes viable if application limits are defined at an early stage. A stable process combines preliminary inspection, documentation status, interface clarification and the organization of the installation windows. We keep responsibilities and handovers clear so that unresolved issues are not transferred to the construction site. If dual use seems sensible, we examine the combination of noise protection and photovoltaics as an option, depending on the project requirements. Depending on the location, a noise barrier with photovoltaics may also make sense. A calm process with clear handovers makes deadlines more resilient and reduces friction. For local authorities, it is important that requirements are described in a verifiable manner and that decisions can be explained to the administration and committees. For developers, it is important that land use, outdoor spaces and development are not blocked by late changes. Late clarifications result in rescheduling, supplements and additional rounds of coordination, which put a strain on the budget and deadline. A brief preliminary review separates the must-haves from the options and speeds up the comparison of variants. Depending on the project, a range is often more helpful than fictitious accuracy when planning statuses are still in flux. In the Bavarian context, coordination and documentation often run parallel to planning, which is why a clear structure pays off in particular. Robust detail points and clear transitions reduce the need for special solutions later on and make operation easier.

FAQs:

An acoustic calculation is usually required for dimensioning. Among other things, traffic data (DTV/proportions), speed, topography and affected immission receivers are required. We coordinate the data collection and provide a clear list of requirements.

We draw up a clear specification of services including quantity estimates, quality requirements (material, coating, sound insulation values) and interfaces (pipes, traffic safety). On request, we can assist with bidder questions and evaluation.

The responsibility depends on the traffic route (municipal road, state/federal road, highway or railroad line). We clarify who is responsible for construction, who bears the costs and the approval channels in a short responsibility check and summarize this in a matrix. You will receive a short decision document.

The “wall effect” can be reduced through targeted height staggering, transparent elements or greenery. We check this in the design and coordinate variants with urban design and residents.

In the case of bottlenecks, we work with variants (e.g. different foundation, slimmer construction method, offset). The aim is to find a solution that can be approved and that enables construction and subsequent maintenance.

Interventions in vegetation, potential breeding and roosting areas and protected areas are typical. We clarify at an early stage which inspections are necessary and plan construction periods in such a way as to ensure that closure periods are adhered to.

We inspect existing pipelines, coordinate with utilities and recommend spot soundings. We define requirements for the foundation (e.g. strip foundation, piles) and calculate risk buffers transparently.

We structure costs in planning, construction, traffic safety, environmental measures and maintenance. You in Lauf a.d.Pegnitz receive variants (basic/plus) and a comprehensible derivation for committees.

It is low-maintenance thanks to suitable surfaces, modular elements and defined cleaning intervals. We calculate maintenance costs transparently and suggest suitable protection systems.

Section-by-section solutions are often possible once hotspots have been identified. We check where sections are sufficient and where gaps would greatly reduce the effect.