Skip to main content

Kapsch wooden gantry installed on Austrian highway

Renewable timber construction means Asfinag installation 'saves 15 tonnes of CO2'
By Adam Hill July 18, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The Green Gantry is made from spruce and larch (© Kapsch TrafficCom)

Austrian roadway operator Asfinag has installed a Kapsch TrafficCom Green Gantry.

The largely prefabricated toll gantry is made from renewable timber rather than steel or aluminium, "which are associated with significant emissions due to their manufacturing and recycling processes", Kapsch says.

The company suggests that the Green Gantry on a highway in Carinthia, Austria, saves 15 tonnes of CO2, while comparable steel gantries create up to 30 tonnes of CO2 during production.

“Our Green Gantry not only has a positive CO2 balance, it has the same load-bearing capacity and an even better environmental impact as a traditional gantry," says Michael Weber, head of sales EMENA at Kapsch TrafficCom.

"In addition, it meets all relevant European norms and standards for gantries, so it is equally safe to deploy and to maintain, and after its lifetime of at least 20 years, it can be dismantled and re-used without causing additional pollution.”

"For us, sustainable construction is not just an empty slogan; we want to set new standards in this area," say Asfinag board members Hartwig Hufnagl and Herbert Kasser in a statement. "Innovations are the driving force behind this. Wood as a building material can also play an important role on the motorway in the future."

The gantry's load-bearing core is made of glued and laminated spruce timber, with weather-resistant larch wood used for the outer layer.

Installation of the gantry took "only about one day" and was managed by Asfinag and traffic technology specialist Forster.

Electricity for operating the gantry equipment comes from its own photovoltaic system, with battery storage also installed to ensure it works at night and in bad weather.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Development of cooperative driving applications for work zones
    July 17, 2012
    The German AKTIV project is researching several cooperative driving applications for use in work zones. PTV's Michael Ortgiese details progress. The steep increases in traffic volumes predicted back in the early 1990s have unfortunately been proven to be more than accurate. In Germany, the AKTIV project continues to look into cooperative technologies' potential to reduce the impact of those increased traffic volumes and keep traffic moving despite limitations in infrastructure capacity.
  • Asecap debates the future of tolling
    August 23, 2016
    Colin Sowman reports form Asecap’s Study & Information Days event in Madrid. At Asecap’s (the Association of European Toll Road Operators) recent Study and Information Days event there was no doubt about the subject at the top of the agenda: the European Union Directive 23/2014/EU. This will introduce fundamental changes to the concession model under which Asecap members operate more than 50,000km of tolled highways and, in response, it has compiled a report entitled Proposal for a Sustainable Concession Mo
  • Battery bottleneck: EV roll-out at risk
    June 17, 2019
    In order for the take-up of electric vehicles – a key part of the future mobility mix - to grow, we need batteries. And that might prove tricky, reports Graham Anderson Industry and commodities experts fear that the growth in electric vehicles (EVs) could be much slower than predicted due to bottlenecks in global battery market supply chains. “People seem to think that the switch from the internal combustion engine to electric vehicles just means you plug your car in rather than fill it with petrol,” a
  • Foundation funds research for informed campaigning
    April 29, 2015
    ITS International talks to Professor Stephen Glaister, director of the transport research and lobbying organisation, the RAC Foundation. It is through the eyes of an economist that Professor Stephen Glaister, emeritus professor of transport and infrastructure at Imperial College London and director of the RAC Foundation, views current and future transport problems. Having spent 30 years at the London School of Economics and another 10 at Imperial, the move to the RAC Foundation was a radical departure from