The influence of vegetation and surrounding traffic noise parameters on the sound environment of urban parks
The influence of vegetation and surrounding traffic noise parameters on the sound environment of urban parks
The main aim of this study was to investigate the effects of vegetation and traffic-noise parameters on the sound environment of urban parks. Eight parks of different sizes and varying proximity to the city's ring road were selected in Antwerp, Belgium. The sound environment was evaluated with a dual approach, using primarily simulated traffic data from the surrounding roads and then measurement noise data from mobile devices within the parks. Percentile weighted sound levels were calculated considering various indicators (LA10, LA50, LA90, LAeq.) with special emphasis on background noise (LA90) and peak values (LA10).
Results showed that simulated noise levels were slightly overestimated compared to the actual ones. Within the parks very small differences were found no matter whether measurement points were examined individually or aggregated on grids. Overall, background noise (LA90) presented more fluctuations than LA10. At the same time, the average noise levels both for LA90 and LA10 were higher in the surrounding environment of the parks - compared to the inside – most probably because of traffic sound sources and the proximity to main roads. Additional analysis was also performed within the parks for the identification of “hot” and “cold” spots for LA90 using GIS tools. Relationships between noise levels and morphological features of the surrounding environment were also identified. The final step of analysis dealt with the effects of tree or grass areas in noise indices. The effect of additional sources other than traffic is also explained as part of the limitations and the actual findings of this research.
199-212
Margaritis, Efstathios
bccaaf39-3821-485e-b282-a54b71033fe4
Kang, Jian
6afbc9a6-9338-449c-9cb9-24994c1c1c87
Filipan, Karlo
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Botteldooren, Dick
8d4430b7-9435-4ef6-bf18-cad8225c7fb8
5 April 2018
Margaritis, Efstathios
bccaaf39-3821-485e-b282-a54b71033fe4
Kang, Jian
6afbc9a6-9338-449c-9cb9-24994c1c1c87
Filipan, Karlo
2832db28-1c2d-4d5e-a94b-f1a5c6fcae4f
Botteldooren, Dick
8d4430b7-9435-4ef6-bf18-cad8225c7fb8
Margaritis, Efstathios, Kang, Jian, Filipan, Karlo and Botteldooren, Dick
(2018)
The influence of vegetation and surrounding traffic noise parameters on the sound environment of urban parks.
Applied Geography, 94, .
(doi:10.1016/j.apgeog.2018.02.017).
Abstract
The main aim of this study was to investigate the effects of vegetation and traffic-noise parameters on the sound environment of urban parks. Eight parks of different sizes and varying proximity to the city's ring road were selected in Antwerp, Belgium. The sound environment was evaluated with a dual approach, using primarily simulated traffic data from the surrounding roads and then measurement noise data from mobile devices within the parks. Percentile weighted sound levels were calculated considering various indicators (LA10, LA50, LA90, LAeq.) with special emphasis on background noise (LA90) and peak values (LA10).
Results showed that simulated noise levels were slightly overestimated compared to the actual ones. Within the parks very small differences were found no matter whether measurement points were examined individually or aggregated on grids. Overall, background noise (LA90) presented more fluctuations than LA10. At the same time, the average noise levels both for LA90 and LA10 were higher in the surrounding environment of the parks - compared to the inside – most probably because of traffic sound sources and the proximity to main roads. Additional analysis was also performed within the parks for the identification of “hot” and “cold” spots for LA90 using GIS tools. Relationships between noise levels and morphological features of the surrounding environment were also identified. The final step of analysis dealt with the effects of tree or grass areas in noise indices. The effect of additional sources other than traffic is also explained as part of the limitations and the actual findings of this research.
Text
2017-Relationship_between_green_space-related_morphology_and_noise_pollution
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 27 February 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 April 2018
Published date: 5 April 2018
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 483064
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483064
ISSN: 0143-6228
PURE UUID: cff20e94-332e-4562-a297-81446b083837
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Date deposited: 20 Oct 2023 17:34
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:12
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Contributors
Author:
Efstathios Margaritis
Author:
Jian Kang
Author:
Karlo Filipan
Author:
Dick Botteldooren
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