Sleepless in Woodbine: Resident irked by noisy generator at ring road construction site - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:07 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Sleepless in Woodbine: Resident irked by noisy generator at ring road construction site

A noisy generator is keeping at least one resident in Woodbine up at night and he wants something done about it.

'It literally sounds like a semi-truck right behind your house revving its engine'

Woodbine resident Randall Dyck says noise from a generator at the ring road construction site near his house is keeping him up at night. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

UPDATE March 15, 2017, at 5 p.m.:After the story was first published, Randall Dycksays Enmax contacted himabout the generator issue. The company said it wasn't aware their contractor had installed a generator that ranall night without a timer. Enmaxtold him they would stop the noise.


A noisy generator is keeping at least one resident in the southwest Calgary neighbourhood Woodbine up at night and he wants something done about it.

Randall Dyck said he has only been getting a couple hours of sleep at a time since Enmax started running the generator at its work site behind his house, where the province is doing prep work on the southwest portion of the ring road.

The solar-powered generator kicks in at night when the temperature hits10 C to keep equipment warm.

"It literally sounds like a semi-truck right behind your house revving its engine. That's the intensity of the noise," Dyck said.

The city told CBC News that because the ring road is a provincial project, city noise bylaws don't apply to the work site.

'Goes on all night long'

The university lecturer says the nightly noise near his southwest Calgary house is ruining his quality of life and affecting his job.

"It kicks on just after 10 o'clock, runs for about 30, 40 minutes, turns off for two hours, and then it kicks on again for another 30, 40 minutes. And this goes on all night long," he said.

"My students have noticed I'm right out of it in the classroom. It's hard when you only get about two hours of continuous sleep to carry on with a normal day."

Enmax says the noise levels are within provincial guidelines.

A company spokesperson was sympathetic about the disruption and said now that the weather has warmed up, it shouldn't be a problem going forward.