Skip to main content

Kapsch gantry goes green

Kapsch TrafficCom has put a new spin on a familiar piece of steel and aluminium infrastructure: the motorway gantry.
April 19, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Rethinking an established concept: the Green Gantry (© Kapsch TrafficCom)

The company's Green Gantry is made from wood but can still support signs, sensors and and other traffic management hardware thanks to its 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 tonnes of CO2 during its production, the company says. But the wood version "binds more than 20 tonnes of CO2 and thus has a positive carbon footprint". It also "paves the way for sustainable road infrastructure".

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. 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 stablished concepts can be rethought and made sustainable."

Guaranteed for 20 years, the project is funded by the Waldfonds – The Forest Fund - an initiative set up in 2020 by Austria’s Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, Regions and Water Management. The €350 million forest fund is to financially help forest plantations and other sources of wood production It is part of the Think.Wood programme of the Austrian Wood initiative.

Meanwhile, in September, Kapsch was awarded another gantry contract. The deal was awarded by French highway concessionaire SAPN for free-flow tolling gantries including hardware and related software. It will be installed along 250km of the A13 and A14 highways, a heavily-frequented route between Paris and Caen. Kapsch says it will save 30,000 tonnes of CO2 per year.

The gantries are able to detect, identify and classify vehicles and calculate the corresponding toll fee automatically. The project is a major stepping stone in the migration from traditional plaza tolling towards free flow systems for a cleaner mobility and a seamless driving experience for the people using the A13 and A14 highways.

The first parts of the new system are expected to become operational in the second half of 2023 to allow a free flow go-live in the course of 2024. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Green fuel reduces CO2 emissions by 90% | New ABG Pavers filled with HVO
    December 16, 2024
    LANGENTHAL, Switzerland – Ammann continues to explore the use of eco-fuels to advance sustainability on jobsites.
  • IRF World Congress: Road user charging
    October 16, 2024
    Where will the money come from to develop and maintain tomorrow’s sustainable road network, no mater in what nation? This was the focus of another session at the IRF World Congress in Istanbul of day of the three-day event.
  • Kapsch wins Financier of the Year award in Poland
    March 19, 2012
    At this year’s "Financier of the Year" gala event in Warsaw, Poland, Kapsch was given an award for the efficiency of its fully electronic toll system viaTOLL in bringing in higher revenues than expected last year.
  • IRF conference tackles transport green targets
    July 4, 2012
    The IRF's 2nd conference on roads and the environment addressed key transport targets, Mike Woof reports Reducing the impact of the road transport sector as a whole was the focus of the IRF's 2nd Roads & Environment Conference. Opening the event, Jean Beauverd, chairman of the IRF in Geneva said, "Evidence of global warming is now unequivocal. Even if we were to stabilise the effects of CO2 emissions, the effects would continue for decades. Eco-friendly processes have not yet reached the full acceptance tha