Advancing the concepts of soundscapes and soundscape planning
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David J Mee and Ian D.M Hillock
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Gold Coast, Australia
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Abstract
The role and application of the concept of the soundscape, vis-୶is that of environmental noise management, needs elaboration. In noise control, sound is a waste product, managed to reduce the immision of sounds that cause human discomfort. The soundscape approach, by contrast, considers the acoustic environment as a resource, focussing on sounds people want, or prefer. Quiet is not a core requirement for acoustic preference in the outdoor acoustic environment. Core requirements include that soundscape and landscape are congruent, and that wanted sounds in a place are dominant over, or not masked by, unwanted sounds. Soundscape design, planning and management, based on this principle, are a useful augmentation to environmental noise management approaches, expanding the scope of application of the tools of acoustic specialists.
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Australian Acoustical SocietyConference 2011, Acoustics 2011: Breaking New Ground
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© 2011 Australian Acoustical Society. The attached file is reproduced here in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the conference's website for access to the definitive, published version.
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Other environmental sciences not elsewhere classified
Urban and regional planning not elsewhere classified