|
|
 |
 |
 |

Austrian
Noise Abatement Society
Prepared for Noise/News International, 1999 March
The Austrian Noise Abatement Society (OAL) was founded as a section of
the Osterreichische Arbeitsgemeinschaft fur Volksgesundheit (OAV) (Austrian
Working Group for Health) in 1958 October. The administration was done
in OAV with subsidies from the Ministry for Social Affairs, other Ministries,
and the governments of the 9 Austrian Lander.
The technical activities were led by the Federal Institute for Heat and
Sound Technology. The mail special tasks undertaken by the Institute included
establishment of guidelines, dissemination of the fundamentals of acoustics
and noise control by organizing meetings, exchange of information on practical
work in noise control within Austria and also with experts from other
countries.
Some of the most important guidelines in the first years were measurement
of noise emission of machines, measurement of noise emission of vehicles,
assessment of noise exposure (in the neighborhood and in the working place),
effects of noise on man, the acoustical basis for the construction of
factories, low noise machines, and the psychology of noise production
by man. Later, guidelines were established for calculation methods for
road traffic noise, aircraft noise zones around airports, rail traffic
noise, noise propagation outside and in factories, the basics for noise
control in town and country planning, and noise labeling of machines.
The guidelines were widely used in Austria by all persons and organizations
working in the field of noise assessment and noise control. Some of the
guidelines were also introduced in regulations (e.g. calculation of rail
traffic noise). In 1987, OAL Guideline 29 on low noise trucks was issued.
This guideline defined the criteria for low noise trucks in harmony with
criteria already existing in Germany. When the problems with high noise
levels alongside the transit route from Germany to Italy through Austria
became serious, the low noise truck guidelines were applied on the relevant
Austrian roads during nighttime (combined with a speed limit to 60 km/h).
The importance of low noise trucks grew rapidly in Europe and these trucks
are now state-of-the-art. Now, on all roads in Austria during night time,
only low noise trucks are allowed with a maximum speed of 60 km/h (with
exemption to 80 km/h on specially identified road sections that are not
in a noise sensitive environment).
After 1991, there were some difficulties financing the work of OAL within
OAV, and in 1994 an independent association, Osterreichischer Arbeitsring
fur Larmbekampfung, was founded.
The aim of OAL is still unchanged; the dissemination of state-of-the-art
information in noise control - especially through the preparation of guidelines
in working groups and exchange of experiences in 5 plenary meetings per
year. In 1997, OAL Guideline 36, Sound immission maps and conflict maps,
planning of noise control measures; acoustical basis for regional and
local planning" was issued, and at present two working groups - one
on Calculation of aircraft noise zones around airports and airfields and
a second on Basics in psychoacoustics, measurements and assessment - are
drafting guidelines.
OAL was a member of the Association Internationale Contre le Bruit (AICB)
and organized the International AICB Congress in 1962 in Salzburg and
in 1982 in Vienna.
OAL is also working within the newly-founded Austrian Acoustics Association
in the section noise control, and was been invited to work as a Non-Governmental
Organization (NGO) in the Conference on the European Union's Future Noise
Policy.
Go
to top of this file
Return to home page of International
INCE
|