Skip to main content

Kapsch gantry has wooden heart

Familiar product is given new spin by making motorway structure out of wood
By Adam Hill December 1, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Rethinking an established concept: the Green Gantry (© Kapsch TrafficCom)

Kapsch TrafficCom has put a new spin on a familiar piece of steel and aluminium infrastructure: the motorway gantry.

The company's Green Gantry is made from wood but can still support signs, sensors and so on, and has a modular design.

Kapsch says this "allows an installation comparable to standard steel bridges and also with the same service life and maintenance intensity".

Each steel gantry creates over 30 tons of CO2 during its production, the company says - but the wood version "binds more than 20 tons of CO2 and thus has a positive carbon footprint" and "paves the way for sustainable road infrastructure".

Guaranteed for 20 years, the project is funded by the Waldfonds, an initiative of the Austrian Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, Regions and Water Management and is carried out as part of the Think.Wood programme of the Austrian Wood initiative.

Kapsch says the product is protected from water, ice and snow and, even after it is dismantled, "does not pollute the environment, as no harmful chemical substances are used to treat the wood".

Katharina Rynesch, innovation manager at Kapsch TrafficCom, says the design complies with all relevant European standards.

"Our road infrastructure is currently a blind spot in efforts to make the transport sector more sustainable," she explains.

"With our Green Gantry, we hope on the one hand to contribute to greater sustainability, but on the other hand also to demonstrate that even concepts that have been established for many years can be rethought and made sustainable."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ITS benefits escape public
    June 8, 2015
    John Kendall considers the public’s awareness of the benefits of ITS. While the results of developing ITS technology may be clear to readers of ITS International, there is far less evidence that drivers have any appreciation of what the technology is doing for them. So how aware are drivers of the developments that are designed to make their journeys less congested and safer?
  • APT Skidata and CitiPark partner to reduce city emissions at car parks
    July 3, 2017
    Parking technology business APT Skidata has teamed up with UK parking operators CitiPark in a trial which aims to reduce emissions in car parks, building on an eight-year relationship that has seen APT Skidata’s technology at 12 of CitiPark’s 15 sites.
  • Successful Bio-DME field tests point to a cleaner transport system
    June 4, 2012
    Volvo Trucks has announced it is running successful field tests with vehicles powered by bio-DME, a fuel that can be produced cost- and energy-efficiently from biomass. Since last autumn, ten specially adapted Volvo trucks have been operating on Swedish roads using the fuel which reduces carbon emissions by 95 per cent compared with conventional diesel. The field tests have now reached the halfway point and the results so far have both met, and exceeded, expectations.
  • Transponder contract for Q-Free with Via Verde Portugal
    May 29, 2025
    Firm will deliver 2.4 million devices to enable cross-border interoperability