Abstract

This paper examines the concept of “quiet” as an “environmental value” in terms of amenity and wellbeing from a legislative context. Critical review of two pieces of environmental legislation from Australia and New Zealand forms the basis of the paper. The Australian legislation is Queensland’s Environmental Protection Act, and the New Zealand legislation is that nation’s Resource Management Act. Quiet is part of the psychoacoustic continuum between a tranquil and an intrusively noisy sound environment. As such, quiet possesses intrinsic value in terms of overall sound within the environment (soundscape) and to individuals and communities. In both pieces of legislation, guidance, either directly or indirectly, is given to “maximum” sound levels to describe the acoustic environment. Only in Queensland is wellbeing and amenity described as environmental values, while in the New Zealand approach, amenity is identified as the core value to defend, but guidance is not well established. Wellbeing can be related to degrees of quietness and the absence of intrusive noise, the character of sound within an environment (“soundscape”), as well as the overall level of sound. The quality of life experienced by individuals is related to that person’s physical and mental health, sense of amenity and wellbeing. These characteristics can be described in terms of subjective and objective measures, though legislation does not always acknowledge the subjective.

Highlights

  • Quiet: A Human Perception of SoundscapesThe expression “peace and quiet” is often given as the benchmark for amenity in relation to sound in an environment (i.e., soundscapes), but what is meant by peace, quiet, amenity and noise can vary across contexts, and these expressions can mean different things to different people at different times

  • The expression “peace and quiet” is often given as the benchmark for amenity in relation to sound in an environment, but what is meant by peace, quiet, amenity and noise can vary across contexts, and these expressions can mean different things to different people at different times

  • We present a description of legislative approaches taken in Queensland (Australia) and New Zealand to define wellbeing and amenity in acoustical terms

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Summary

Quiet: A Human Perception of Soundscapes

The expression “peace and quiet” is often given as the benchmark for amenity in relation to sound in an environment (i.e., soundscapes), but what is meant by peace, quiet, amenity and noise can vary across contexts, and these expressions can mean different things to different people at different times. Booi and van den Berg [8] suggest that, for an urban environment, “...areas can be considered to be quiet at sound levels due to road and rail traffic up to 60 dB Lday, a level that is known to cause indoor noise annoyance in a part of the population.”. People relate to environments on an emotional level by interpreting the sensory information afforded by their landscape including the character of sound within the environment. This is a quality of life relationship, where general pleasurable sounds promote, and annoying sounds impede, health [12,13,14]. This can be defined as a person’s sense of amenity with respect to environmental noise

Amenity: A Sense of Place
Wellbeing: A Determinant of Good Health
The Economics of Quietness
Soundscape Analysis in Australia and New Zealand
The Concept of “Environmental Values”
Amenity—Analysis and Examples of Application
New Zealand’s Approach to Amenity
Applying the Different Approaches
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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