The silence of the trams
Posted October 12, 2011 in Curbing Pollution, Living Sustainably, Moving Beyond Oil
Among the many benefits that modern streetcars and many forms of light rail offer to the city environment is an exceptionally quiet ride compared to conventional buses or heavy rail systems. I have had the good fortune of traveling to Geneva a number of times over the past decade, and have never failed to be impressed by the quality of its transit system, including greatly reduced noise pollution from its light rail component.
That is welcome relief: the street noise in a city can be over 90 decibels, loud enough to cause hearing loss through long exposure. In fact, that’s as loud as a Boeing 737 taking off when heard from a short distance away (85 db), and almost as loud as a power mower (100 db). Vehicles running on electricity produce less noise than diesel or other conventional fuel-burning buses, and much less noise than the equivalent volume of automobile traffic.
In fact, in some places streetcar and light rail opponents have now shifted their argument from complaining that the new transit vehicles will be too noisy to complaining that they will be too quiet.
I say that’s a nice problem to have, and the public will quickly adjust and learn to look for approaching quieter vehicles, as they have all over the world. The fact that the routes will be fixed will help accustom pedestrians’ expectations. Additional crossing alerts and operator training can make the mode at least as safe as buses and far safer than the number of automobiles required to move the same passenger volume.In the case of systems that use tracks, smooth modern rails and vibration-absorbing fasteners can further reduce noise.
Ken Archer writes on the DC-based site Greater Greater Washington:
“An overlooked benefit of streetcars is the reduction in noise pollution associated with bus and car traffic. In fact, some pedestrians in Prague say the newest streetcars from Skoda are too quiet!
“An article from iDnes, a Czech news portal, describes the experiences of operators of the new 15T streetcars built by Skoda for the Czech capital's tram system. Operators of the new streetcars have to be alert to pedestrians who may not hear them approach . . .
“Buses are the source of DC residents' particularly frequent traffic noise complaints. As streetcars being operation in DC and replacing buses on the busiest routes, the benefit to the quality of our daily lives and the enjoyability of our urban spaces will be significant.”
DC’s first modern streetcars (currently awaiting deployment) have also been built by Skoda.
Compare the two short videos below. The first (only one minute) measures the noise level on a busy city street. The second (in Czech) shows the streetcars running smoothly and quietly:
Move your cursor over the images for credit information.
Kaid Benfield writes (almost) daily about community, development, and the environment. For more posts, see his blog's home page.
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Comments
United Streetcar — Oct 12 2011 02:08 PM
Just a correction. You note at the end of your article that DC's streetcars are being built by Skoda. While DC's current streetcars may have been built by Skoda, the newest streetcars to be added to DC's streetcar fleet will be built by United Streetcar, LLC and manufactured here in the United States in Clackamas, Oregon (green jobs and green transportation). Check them out at: www.unitedstreetcar.com
Kaid @ NRDC — Oct 12 2011 02:28 PM
Thanks for that important clarification. I believe the city has a number of Skoda cars warehoused and ready for deployment when the tracks are ready; but it's even better if future batches come from the a domestic source.