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

  • Microgrids & the new power generation
    August 31, 2021
    Public transportation agencies are turning to microgrids to provide critical resilience in the event of local and regional power interruptions. Gordon Feller looks at projects in Maryland, New Jersey and Massachusetts
  • Counting the environmental costs of ITS deployment
    October 29, 2015
    David Crawford looks at the latest thinking about calculating the benefits associated with the environmental side of ITS schemes. The penny is dropping that some environmental costs “are being shifted outside the traditional bounds of evaluation methods” for ITS-based road transport projects, according to researchers at the UK University of Leeds’ Institute for Transport Studies.
  • Traffex snapshot reveals enforcement advances
    July 24, 2017
    An indication of just how far beyond spot speed and red light the enforcement sector has progressed was evident in the range of new and improved equipment on display at the recent Traffex event in Birmingham. One of the key trends, particularly in the UK but also evident elsewhere, is the increase in average speed enforcement, according to RedSpeed’s managing director Robert Ryan, who predicts a big increase in installations this year. “The price point has reached a level authorities can afford,” he says, a
  • Slow development of Europe's road user charging
    April 24, 2013
    Delegates convened in Brussels for Europe’s 10th annual Road User Charging Conference in March, when both positive and negative developments came to light for advocates of more widespread introduction of RUC. Jon Masters reports. Goings on across Europe in recent months have again demonstrated how very sensitive road user charging (RUC) is politically. At the 10th annual Road User Charging Conference in Brussels at the beginning of March, a Danish delegation was notable for its absence, but Belgian governme