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

  • Brine spraying can boost winter road safety and cut materials costs
    February 16, 2015
    A study on the use of a brine sprayer on the A8 Autobahn in Germany has yielded valuable data - *Jo Rommeswinkel writes. Since 2007, Autobahnplus Services (a+S) has been providing the operation and maintenance services on the 52km concession Autobahn A8 between Munich and Augsburg in Bavaria, a region renowned for its severe winter maintenance conditions. The Munich Augsburg section comprises 48km of six-lane dual carriageway and 4km of four-lane dual carriageway. Part of the road surface consists of low-no
  • Efficient asset management to trim maintenance budgets
    January 22, 2014
    Transport infrastructure is taken for granted in many, if not most, developed countries. This has resulted in a shortage of investment in maintenance, posing potential long term cost issues. In many developing nations transport networks are expanding fast, but insufficient thought is also being given to how these will be maintained.
  • Innovations in aggregates production will boost quarry efficiency
    March 16, 2016
    New innovations are underway that will help optimise rock crushing and screening operations and boost quarry efficiency overall - Mike Woof writes. Quarrying is a tough industry that provides enormous challenges to equipment providers as machines and technology have to be rugged, durable and productive. Cutting the cost of production while optimising output has been a major target for suppliers, with new technologies playing an increasingly important role. Taking the long view with regard to increased qu
  • Krohne Optiwave 6300 C takes the guesswork out of silo measuring
    August 3, 2017
    A variety of issues affect accurate continuous level measurement inside cement plants. The most critical concerns are dust, heavy build-ups, low-reflective media and uneven surfaces in conical and/or air-injected silos with internal objects. Now, new frequency-modulated continuous-wave – FMCW - radar technology, combined with high signal dynamics, offers a way to accurately and reliably measure product levels.