Skip to main content

Swedish slope barrier offers safe option

New barrier protection technologies can boost road safety – Mike Woof writes According to Swedish specialist Blue Systems, slope barriers can offer technical benefits in comparison with conventional side barriers. The firm says that moving the road barrier from the hard shoulder out into the embankment slope delivers a wider road without having to widen the carriageway. “It’s a very cost-efficient way of creating more space and raising road safety, there is no widening of hard shoulder required – just a sui
December 3, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
The SAFENCE barrier technology from Swedish firm Blue Systems has been widely deployed in the country and offers major benefits for users
New barrier protection technologies can boost road safety – Mike Woof writes

According to Swedish specialist Blue Systems, slope barriers can offer technical benefits in comparison with conventional side barriers. The firm says that moving the road barrier from the hard shoulder out into the embankment slope delivers a wider road without having to widen the carriageway. “It’s a very cost-efficient way of creating more space and raising road safety, there is no widening of hard shoulder required – just a suitable road barrier,” said Blue Systems’ Rickard Svensson.

Blue Systems is a pioneer in the field, originally developing the slope fence and showing the concept to the 3530 Swedish Transport Administration back in 2000. The firm says that the SAFENCE slope barriers are high enough to cope with a car departing the roadway and into the slope, as well as being low enough to redirect a car that follows the slope of the embankment towards the barrier.

Blue Systems’ SAFENCE Slope fence has been successfully installed on the Swedish road network and is now being exported into several markets around the world. A key feature is that the slope fences meet both the US NCHRP 350 standards with TL3 classifications, as well as the European EN 1317 standards.

There are other advantages even if snow is not a concern and Svensson said, “A slope installation offers a wider road space creating less of a ‘wall effect’ and more wobble room, which lowers maintenance costs. A slope installation even offers space for a car that is broken down, which can sometimes be a concern with regular side barriers installed close to traffic lanes."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Safety on 'The King's Highway
    February 23, 2012
    California State Route 82 in the United States, a major urban arterial, is part of the historic El Camino Real or The King's Highway, connecting the communities of San Jose and San Francisco in northern California. Consisting of two to three lanes in each direction with a median, on level terrain and tangent alignment, the route between Hickey Boulevard in Colma and Mission Road in south San Francisco carries 17,400 vehicles/day
  • Safety on 'The King's Highway'
    May 3, 2012
    California State Route 82 in the United States, a major urban arterial, is part of the historic El Camino Real or The King's Highway, connecting the communities of San Jose and San Francisco in northern California. Consisting of two to three lanes in each direction with a median, on level terrain and tangent alignment, the route between Hickey Boulevard in Colma and Mission Road in south San Francisco carries 17,400 vehicles/day
  • Geosynthetics revolutionise ground stabilisation
    March 13, 2012
    As powerful fabrics, geosynthetics and geotextiles have a wide range of applications in many civil engineering applications including roads and airfields. Geosynthetics specialist Tensar is introducing a radical new product that it thinks will revolutionise the construction industry. According to the company, its new product represents the "biggest advance in ground stabilisation technology for 25 years. Six years in development, it is said to offer major improvements in aggregate confinement and soil stabi
  • Turkey’s important new tunnel will improve transport links
    May 18, 2016
    Major advances in tunnelling will allow cars to travel underneath the Bosphorus sea channel in Turkey's Istanbul next year when its third road link is opened, writes Adrian Greeman. The Bosphorus is redolent with history and strategic significance. As one of the world's most significant sea connections, linking the landlocked Black Sea to the Marmara Sea and the Mediterranean beyond, it has been vitally important for trade and crucial for military access. It is also one of the biggest obstacles for land tra