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Noise Barrier from Recycled Wind Turbine Blades Unveiled

The Netherlands has launched a world-first with the Blade Barrier, a noise-reducing wall made from old wind turbine blades. Installed along the A58 motorway near Oirschot, this 60-metre prototype will undergo testing until the end of 2026. The project takes place on Rijkswaterstaat’s Innovation Strip, a test site for sustainable infrastructure.

Giving Wind Turbine Blades a New Purpose

The Blade Barrier uses two full blades and one cut section. This setup allows engineers to test different ways to connect the parts and measure how well they reduce noise. Unlike traditional noise barriers, these large blades need only minimal foundation. When placed into an earth embankment, they easily reach the required three-metre height.

The project supports circular building practices. It reuses blades from local wind farms and keeps the materials within the same region. This reduces the need for new raw materials and avoids landfill.

Blade-Made’s Circular Mission

Dutch startup Blade-Made created the Blade Barrier. The company wants to repurpose large amounts of used wind turbine blades by turning them into new structures. Their goal is to design scalable objects that give the material a second life.

Co-founder Tonny Wormer urges the wind energy sector to help with blade reuse. “Wind energy is clean, but its waste should be handled responsibly. Projects like this create new circular systems, but we need everyone—especially the wind sector—to invest and share in both costs and benefits.”

Working Together for Greener Infrastructure

Rijkswaterstaat’s InnovA58 team contributed funding, expertise, and the test location. This fits their goal to make Dutch infrastructure more sustainable. The province of North Brabant also supported the project through a circular innovation grant.

Construction firm Dura Vermeer helped build the wall and sees it as part of their mission to become carbon-neutral by 2030. Director Jaap Hulshoff said, “Reusing blades in a lightweight structure cuts CO₂ emissions and saves raw materials. It’s a step toward our zero-emission goal.”

As the number of retired wind blades increases, this innovation offers a circular solution. It turns a growing waste problem into a material opportunity for designers and infrastructure developers.

Source: Rijkswaterstaat / Blade-Made
Photos : Rijkswaterstaat / Jem Sanchez

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