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Brussels Airport

Brussels Airport

Brussels Airport

At Brussels International Airport the hypermodern Pier A was put into service in 2002. The pier is 650 metres long, 38 metres wide, and equipped with 31 contact gates. The sound system in the concourse consists of 34 AXYS Intellivox columns. System design was by Lichtveld Buis & Partners of the Netherlands, engineering by Tyco Integrated Systems Belgium

closeupBelgium's capital Brussels is home to the European Parliament and many other European Union institutions and organisations. Most of the 20 million passengers that pass through Brussels airport each year are business travellers, the vast majority travelling on EU related business. Pier A now handles over fifty percent of Brussels entire traffic. In addition to the new concourse a connecting building - the Topaz - has been constructed, linked to the terminal by a 250-meter long tunnel under the apron. Pier A was officially opened on May 15th, 2002. The architecture of this pier is special in several ways. Firstly, the design has been highly influenced by the reading of the airport’s radar and instrument landing (ILS) system. It was necessary to give the building a round edge on the north side and an inclined straight edge on the south side, to minimise distortions and interference patterns. This led to the overall shape of the building, which is reminiscent of an aeroplane wing and gives it a sense of movement.

A second, and quite spectacular feature of the new pier is the absence of any conventional supporting columns in the passenger area. This has been made possible by an aluminium roof skin supported by 68 3D-profiled steel beams. On this project there was a requirement to have a reduction rate of 53 dB(A) on any sound passing through the roof so a new composite material had to be conceived especially for the project. A third feature, also conceived for this project, are the fully transparent, allglass facades. They are cantilevered to add to the effect of volatility and they provide passengers with a grandstand view of takeoffs and landings on the runway that runs parallel to Pier A at a distance of just 400 m. The imposed acoustical transmission reduction of 43 dB(A) is realized by a laminated glass panelling construction.

Model
Fig.1 Model used for acoustical simulations

Electro-acoustic consultant Cees Mulder of Dutch company LBP designed the sound system, in cooperation with Duran Audio's Evert Start, who carried out the CATT simulations. Mulder was first contacted for the project in December 1999 by Jean-Marie Malchair of Tyco Belgium. At the time Mulder was working on the sound system for Dubai International Airport, which was near completion and happened to be quite similar to Pier A: a very long pier with gates on either side. “Since the system worked so well in Dubai, it made a lot of sense to use the same concept for Brussels,” he says. Basically the design consists of a series of Intellivox-4c columns (now known as the DC 430) used in pairs, mounted on either side of the pier. Each pair, Mulder explains, covers an area of approximately 60 m deep and 38 m wide, which holds four gates. At the end of such an area the pier slightly narrows, working like an acoustic silencer. To compensate for this effect a pair of 2b’s (DC 180) are used in these narrower areas to augment the 4c’s (DC 430), filling in until the pier widens again into the next gate area where the next 4c’s (DC 430) take over. This pattern is repeated over the full 650 m.

SPL and RASTI simulations
Fig.2 Simlations of SPL (left) and RASTI (right)

The vertical opening angle of the individual 4c (DC 430) columns has been set to 60, with the acoustical mounting height at 2.5 m. All further system adjustments were based upon MLSSA measurements and extensive listening tests, in which the overall performance of the system was evaluated. The system has been set to produce an equivalent sound pressure level Leq of 64 dB(A) when an automatic message is reproduced. Automatic gain correction has been implemented with a range of 6 dB. It is activated whenever a noise level of 58 dB(A) is exceeded. Measurements carried out at Gate A51/A53, representative for all other gates, show that the sound level at 1 kHz varies between 74 dB and 80 dB in the entire area (for sufficient signal to noise ratio, these measurements were carried out at a higher level than the normal operating level). As to equalisation, system response has been smoothed out between 200 Hz and 4 kHz, SPL drops below 200 Hz and above 4 kHz.

Measurements
Fig.3 Measurement positions 1-17, Gate A51/A53 (not to scale)

All Intellivox units are equipped with two line inputs, enabling separate connection of ‘general’ and ‘local’ audio feeds. Level dependent input priority switching is implemented in the DSP software, any local message is overruled by an incoming general announcement. Furthermore, the predelay can be adjusted for each input individually. For general (’all-call’) announcements all units are time-aligned (’point zero’ at the beginning of the 650 m long pier), for local announcements the predelay has been set to 0 ms. Due to the late (> 100 ms) arrival of the direct sound at some of the desks used for the local announcements, the comfort of speaking was expected to be insufficient without any special precautions. A solution was found in local monitoring with small conventional loudspeakers that are installed in the desks. The STI (Speech Transmission Index) was measured over a distance of 80 m in the area of Gate 51/Gate 53, and reaches values between 0.50 and 0.66. According to the STI standard these values represent sufficient speech intelligibility, for well articulated complicated messages, to be interpreted by non-trained listeners. The average STI is 0.57 with a deviation of 0.065. Even the lowest STI value of 0.45, measured at one single point, still stands for reasonably good. That the sound system works really well is not only confirmed by these figures, but also by the airport authorities and passengers, listening to announcements. In fact they have been giving positive response very spontaneously. According to Jean-Marie Malchair the general feeling is “that the quality of the speech intelligibility is remarkable for this kind of large structure.”

Position Distance (M) STI - Walking Area STI - Waiting Area
1 0 0.65 -
2/11 3.5 0.66 0.65
3/12 13.1 0.63 0.57
4/13 22.7 0.62 0.55
5/14 32.3 0.53 0.53
6/15 41.9 0.50 0.55
7/16 51.5 0.45 0.50
8/17 61.1 0.50 0.50
9 70.1 0.63 -
10 79.1 0.64 -
Fig.4 Measured STI Values at Gate A51/53

 


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