Skip to main content

Hammerglass barriers for Förbifart Stockholm

Swedish glazing specialist Hammerglass is supplying around 1,000 transparent sound barrier panels to the Stockholm Bypass – E4 Förbifart Stockholm - project over an 18-month period
November 25, 2021 Read time: 3 mins
The PostFree system in Stockholm is held by a steel plate, or a steel “foot”, embedded into, or bolted onto, the cement curb or a bridge’s superstructure

The Hjulsta part of the bypass consists mainly of bridges and road junctions which makes sound barriers essential for the residential areas.

Hammerglass says that it is the only supplier of what the company calls its PostFree system. The development process was made possible thanks to the company’s 20-years' production of customer-specific unbreakable glazing solutions which includes panels for the cabins of heavy construction machinery.

For the Stockholm Bypass project, the panels have a “bent” side and need no posts for installation. They will be part of a 4km-long wall although some sections will include other sound absorbing materials in accordance with the client’s wishes.

Each sheet is, to the human eye, totally transparent. The company says that people prefer to see through a sound barrier because it then feels less like a physical barrier. It is also not then “hiding” what is going on behind the structure, thereby adding to the viewer’s sense of security.

However, while the screen is transparent to humans, it also comes in three shades of green for a visually pleasing effect. There are also enough internal patterns which are not noticeable to humans but are to birds, meaning they can see the panels and not fly into them.

A Hammerglass sheet is around 1.5m wide and between 2-6m high. Around 50cm of one side is bent, or curved, to a 90° angle. The company also claims that each sheet is unbreakable. The most common sheet thickness for highway use is 12mm. For railroad applications the thickness is usually 15mm. Hammerglass says one of its PostFree panels weighs less than half that of a similarly sized glass sheet. Its lightness makes installation easier and faster than for glass.

A sheet’s effectiveness is measured in by Rw - or a weighted sound reduction index. This is an International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO) rating and part of the ISO 140 (Acoustic) family. The 12mm thickness has an Rw of 34dB, meaning the client can expect the noise it wants to block will be reduced by 34 decibels.

The PostFree system is fixed into position by a steel plate, or a steel “foot”, that is embedded into or bolted onto the cement curb, road section or a bridge’s superstructure. Each panel slightly overlaps the next one to it and is secured using several fixing bolts.

Importantly, the polycarbonate hard-coated surface has a layer of silicon oxide that makes it very easy to clean off graffiti and dirt which helps reduce maintenance costs. As well, a panel provides 99.96 % UV-protection. It will not cloud or discolour or undergo any other change in optical quality over time. The company says that a sheet’s estimated service life is more than 40 years.

Hammerglass has already delivered the unbreakable noise barrier panels for use in other projects by Sweden’s Transport Administration which, in 2018, held a public procurement process for a noise barrier that needed no posts for installation. Hammerglass says it was the only company to take on the challenge and came up with their solution now being used by the Administration.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Solar roads such as Colas’s Wattway could be the right way
    May 10, 2016
    Peter Harrop, chairman of independent research and consultancy IDTechEx, considers arguments in favour of solar roads. Nowadays a major trend is the move to off-grid clean energy created by “energy harvesting” to produce electricity where it is needed. This is more controllable and increasingly at lower cost than grid power or diesel gensets, cleaner and often less subject to interruption. It is taking new forms as revealed in the IDTechEx Research report, “High Power Energy Harvesting 2016-2026”.
  • Effective precast barrier units from Netherlands firm
    April 29, 2015
    Haitsma Beton in the Netherlands has developed a lightweight precast concrete barrier system for temporary use. This T3 system is said to make investing in vehicle guidance more cost-effective. Each HaiSafe T barrier weighs 1.5tonnes and is over 10% lighter than comparable precast concrete barriers. The system is said to be easy and quick to locate, as well as to to assemble and disassemble. A novel feature is that no anchoring is needed at the ends, because the system has been tested and approved without a
  • Kekava Bybass opens with Kapsch technology
    December 5, 2023
    Latvia’s recently opened “high-speed” Kekava Bypass is using Kapsch traffic technology to ensure safety of drivers as they travel between the capital Riga and Lithuania.
  • Sweden appoints Veidekke Anläggning to Förbifart Stockholm work
    May 2, 2019
    Sweden’s transport administration Trafikverket has appointed Veidekke Anläggning as a temporary contractor for work on the Lovön section of the Stockholm Bypass - Förbifart Stockholm. The deal is worth around €9.6 million. The contractor will take over work started by a tender winner whose contract has been cancelled, according to Swedish media. It is expected the new contractor will be on site until the end of the year, by which time Trafikverket says it hopes to have re-tendered the remaining work.