Skip to main content

Noise reducing pavement for Motorring 3?

The Danish parliament has ordered noise reduction studies to be done on the Motorring 3 motorway near the capital Copenhagen.
By David Arminas January 29, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
To widen or improve noise reduction along the busy Motorring 3 near Copenhagen? (image © Rolandm/Dreamstime)

The Danish road authorities are considering using a noise reducing pavement, similar types in Germany and the Netherlands, on Copenhagen’s busy Motorring 3.

The Danish parliament has said it will considering improving the noise reduction systems along Motorring 3 rather than spending money on widening the busy motorway from four to six lanes.

The 19km-long Motorring 3, west of the capital, connects the Helsingør motorway with the Køge Bugt motorway and is part of the European roads E47  and E55. Around 48,000 vehicles used the highway daily in 1990, rising to about 130,000 in recent years, according to data from Vejdirektoratet, Denmark’s national road directorate.

Around €48 million was set aside for extending the Motorring 3, a project that has now been put on hold, according to a report in the Danish engineering newspaper Ingenioren. The idea was to make the hard shoulder, or emergency land, into a live running lane, as well as a reduction in speed from 110kph to 90kph, the newspaper noted.

Instead, three noise-reduction methods will be studied: extension of the existing noise barriers, an updated more modern physical noise barrier to be built in the middle section of the motorway and a type of new noise-reducing asphalt already used in Germany and the Netherlands.

The noise reduction study must be completed by mid-2024 and then a final decision will be made on what the earmarked money will be must be used.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Transylvania Motorway: route to prosperity
    July 4, 2012
    Work is progressing apace on the biggest infrastructure project in Europe, the Transylvania Motorway or Autostrada Transilvania (A3) in Romania, with completion scheduled for 2013. The four-lane, 415km motorway, stretching northwest from Brasov in central Romania, at an altitude of nearly 600m, will reach the country's northwestern border with Hungary at Oradea in Câmpia Crisanei at 130m above sea level, and will connect the cities of Brasov, Fagaras, Sighisoara, Târgu Mures, Cluj-Napoca, Zalau and Oradea.
  • VIDEO: Freeway cycling is not for the faint hearted
    August 27, 2015
    Road designers and local authorities are getting much better at integrating roads for vehicles and cycle paths, tracks and lanes. But sometimes cyclist must take their chances on riding on a road with no designated cycle ways. Caution is essential for both cyclists and vehicle drivers, but in the end it will be the cyclist who is most likely to come off the worst in any crash. So why tempt fate, as the following news story and videos show.
  • Middle East financing for Moscow’s new toll route
    June 12, 2018
    Financing from the Middle East is helping to build the first toll road in Russia’s capital Moscow – Eugene Gerden reports. The first toll road within the Russian capital Moscow will be built this year with financing from a consortium comprising Russian and Arabian investors. This was revealed officially in a recent statement from the Moscow City Government. The heart of the project involves building a relief road for Kutuzovsky Prospekt, a major radial avenue in Moscow, which is known for its luxury stores
  • New Polish government of Jaroslaw Kaczynski rethinks road spend
    December 7, 2015
    Poland might double road spend after the new government criticised spending calculations up to 2025 put together by the previous administration. The Vice-Minister of Infrastructure said expenditure would need to nearly double to around €47 billion for the planned new dual carriageways and motorways. A report by daily economic and political newspaper Rzeczpospolita said the government is calling the estimate of €3.7 million to build a 1km of road “unrealistic”. The rethink comes after Poland's euros