| Literature DB >> 23202816 |
Knut Veisten1, Yuliya Smyrnova, Ronny Klæboe, Maarten Hornikx, Marjan Mosslemi, Jian Kang.
Abstract
Economic unit values of soundscape/acoustic effects have been based on changes in the number of annoyed persons or on decibel changes. The normal procedure has been the application of these unit values to noise-attenuation measures affecting the noisier façade of a dwelling. Novel modular vegetation-based soundscape measures, so-called green walls, might be relevant for both noisy and quieter areas. Moreover, their benefits will comprise noise attenuation as well as non-acoustic amenity effects. One challenge is to integrate the results of some decades of non-acoustic research on the amenity value of urban greenery into design of the urban sound environment, and incorporate these non-acoustic properties in the overall economic assessment of noise control and overall sound environment improvement measures. Monetised unit values for green walls have been included in two alternative cases, or demonstration projects, of covering the entrances to blocks of flats with a green wall. Since these measures improve the noise environment on the quiet side of the dwellings and courtyards, not the most exposed façade, adjustment factors to the nominal quiet side decibel reductions to arrive at an estimate of the equivalent overall acoustic improvement have been applied. A cost-benefit analysis of the green wall case indicates that this measure is economically promising, when valuing the noise attenuation in the quieter area and adding the amenity/aesthetic value of the green wall.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23202816 PMCID: PMC3524597 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph9113770
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Value estimates, per household per year, green roof/wall †.
| Study | Year Data | Country Data | Curr-ency | Property Price | Annu-ity | Gree-nery % Value | Gree-nery Value | EUR/ Curr-ency | CPI | EUR-2010 Gree-nery Value | Gree-nery Size (m2) | Unit Value (per m2) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peck | 1999 | Canada, Toronto | CAD | 230,000 | 12,599 | 10.50% | 1 323 | 0.6313 | 1.25 | 1,044 | 50 | 20.88 |
| Hunt (2008) [ | 1999 | Canada, Toronto | CAD | 230,000 | 12,599 | 9% | 1 134 | 0.6313 | 1.25 | 895 | 50 | 17.9 |
| Gao & Asami (2007) [ | 1999 | Japan, Tokyo | JPY | 602,400 | 32,998 | 1.40% | 8 400 | 0.0082 | 1.25 | 87 | 25 | 3.46 |
| 2003 | Japan, Kitakyushu | JPY | 73,200 | 4,010 | 2.70% | 1 980 | 0.0076 | 1.15 | 17 | 25 | 0.69 | |
| Ichihara | 2000 | US, New York | USD | 73,024 | 4,000 | 16.20% | 648 | 1.0827 | 1.22 | 859 | 50 | 17.18 |
| Des Rosiers | 1999 | Canada, Québec | CAD | 112,000 | 6,135 | 3.90% | 239 | 0.6313 | 1.25 | 189 | 50 | 3.78 |
| Tomalty & Komorowski (2010) [ | 2010 | Canada, Toronto | CAD | 395,460 | 21,662 | 20% | 4 332 | 0.7325 | 1 | 3,174 | 50 | 63.47 |
| 2010 | Canada, Toronto | CAD | 395,460 | 21,662 | 7% | 1 516 | 0.7325 | 1 | 1,111 | 50 | 22.22 |
† Values in currency of a study are converted to Euro in the year of the study, and these Euro values are adjusted to Euro 2010 values applying the consumer price index (CPI) for the Euro zone. A discount rate of 5% and a 50 year lifetime to calculate annuity values from the property values have been applied. If the study reports annual rental values, these are put under the annuity column. The “value” is the total green roof/wall annual value for the household. Since Hunt [40] reported only a percent interval of value effects, in this paper the same Toronto property values as for Peck et al. [34] has been applied. Thus, the EUR-2010 value equals the annuity times the greenery percentage value, times EUR/currency, times CPI; and the unit value equals the EUR-2010 value divided by the greenery size (in the valuation study).
Figure 1(a) Green walls at the entrance to an inner courtyard covering 58 m2, on a block of flats, six storeys high, with eight apartments on each floor; (b) Green walls at the entrance to an inner courtyard covering 369 m2 facade, on a block of flats, six storeys high, with eight apartments on each floor (Source: [51]).
Figure 2Top view of the one of the periods of the model representing the layout of the apartments at each floor.
Weighting of unit values, green roof/wall †.
| Study | Country Data | Uncertainty Measure | EUR-2010 Greenery Value | “Effect”, Unit Value (per m2) | Wg = 1/Vg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peck | Canada, Toronto | interval | 1,044 | 20.88 | 0.048 |
| Hunt (2008) [ | Canada, Toronto | interval | 895 | 17.90 | 0.027 |
| Gao & Asami (2007) [ | Japan, Tokyo | SE of parameter | 87 | 3.46 | 0.368 |
| Japan, Kitakyushu | SE of parameter | 17 | 0.69 | 6.351 | |
| Ichihara | US, New York | SE of parameter | 859 | 17.18 | 0.014 |
| Des Rosiers | Canada, Québec | SE of parameter | 189 | 3.78 | 0.281 |
| Tomalty & Komorowski (2010) [ | Canada, Toronto | none | 3,174 | 63.47 | 0.001 |
| Canada, Toronto | none | 1,111 | 22.22 | 0.008 |
† 1/W yields V, the variance, and the square root of V yields the standard error estimate, SE. See further explanations in Table 1.
Calculation of benefit-cost (B/C) ratios, for the two demonstration projects with differently sized green walls—3 m high and 19.2 m high, assuming a green wall unit price of 2.4 EUR (2010) per m2 per person per year.
| Measure | Size | Benefits | Costs | BC ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Green wall, 3 m façade opening | 58 m2 | |||
| Investment costs | 3,301 | |||
| Maintenance costs | 1,450 | |||
| Noise attenuation benefits | 1,932 | |||
| Amenity/aesthetic benefits | 16,935 | |||
| Total | 18,867 | 4,751 | 3.97 | |
| Green wall, 19.2 m façade opening | 369 m2 | |||
| Investment costs | 20,999 | |||
| Maintenance costs | 9,225 | |||
| Noise attenuation benefits | 1,761 | |||
| Amenity/aesthetic benefits | 118,698 | |||
| Total | 120,458 | 30,224 | 3.99 |
Calculation of benefit-cost (B/C) ratios, for the two demonstration projects with differently sized green walls—3 m high and 19.2 m high, assuming a green wall unit price of 0.5 EUR (2010) per m2 per person per year.
| Measure | Size | Benefits | Costs | BC ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Green wall, 3 m façade opening | 58 m2 | |||
| Investment costs | 3,301 | |||
| Maintenance costs | 1,450 | |||
| Noise attenuation benefits | 1,932 | |||
| Amenity/aesthetic benefits | 4,234 | |||
| Total | 6,166 | 4,751 | 1.30 | |
| Green wall, 19.2 m façade opening | 369 m2 | |||
| Investment costs | 20,999 | |||
| Maintenance costs | 9,225 | |||
| Noise attenuation benefits | 1,761 | |||
| Amenity/aesthetic benefits | 29,674 | |||
| Total | 31,435 | 30,224 | 1.04 |
Figure 3Monte Carlo simulations of benefit-cost (B/C) ratios, for the two demonstration projects with differently sized green walls—3 m high and 19.2 m high, assuming a green wall unit price of 2.4 EUR (2010) per m2 per person per year.
Figure 4Monte Carlo simulations of benefit-cost (B/C) ratios, for the two demonstration projects with differently sized green walls—3 m high and 19.2 m high, assuming a green wall unit price of 0.5 EUR (2010) per m2 per person per year.