¶ Intro / Opening
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¶ Understanding Urban Noise Pollution
Hello, this is Six Minute English from BBC Learning English. I'm Neil. And I'm Georgie. Neil, I'm going to play you two sound recordings and I want you to tell me how you feel when you hear them. Okay. First this And now this. Oh well that first clip made me feel really relaxed. Um but the second one, oh it's horrible. I felt quite stressed out actually.
Oh no. Well, this little experiment shows how much we are affected by the noise around us, and that's a problem if you're one of the four billion people around the world who live in cities. Yes, whether it's the rattle of train tracks, honking car horns, or the roar of airplanes overhead, modern cities are full of noise, and this can have serious effects. The World Health Organization reports that by twenty fifty around two and a half billion people will experience hearing loss.
An exposure to loud noise has been linked to stress and anxiety. In this episode we'll be hearing about ways to make our cities quieter, more relaxing places. using some useful new words and phrases. And remember you'll find all the vocabulary along with a quiz and worksheet on our website, bbclearningenglish dot com. But now I have a question for you, Georgie. Sound is measured in units called decibels. But how many decibels would it be if I whispered? Like this.
Is it A three decibels, B thirteen decibels, or C thirty decibels? Oh, that's really hard. Uh I'll go for B thirteen decibel. Well, we'll find out the answer at the end of the programme. Let's start in one of the noisiest cities in the world, Mumbai, in India, where daytime noise levels regularly hit 80 decibels, which is over twenty decibels higher than World Health Organization recommendations.
Listen to Mumbai native Chavi Sachdev share her experiences of living in this noisy city with BBC World Service program People Fixing the World. I mean India in general is just really loud. We are a loud people. We dress loud, we talk loud, we celebrate loud, we watch movies loud. When people ask me what I miss about living abroad, I tell them it's the quiet because after twelve years of living in the US and Europe
When I got back I realised I couldn't handle it anymore. I'd gotten used to lower levels of noise. Chavi says Indians talk loud, celebrate loud and dress loud. To dress loud means to wear clothes with bright colours and large bold patterns. When Chavi returned to India after living overseas, she says she couldn't handle the noise. If you can't handle something, you find it difficult to deal or cope with.
¶ Innovative Soundscaping Solutions
So what can be done to tackle noise in cities like Mumbai? One interesting approach involves using sound itself to make things feel quieter. Soundscaping is the idea of adding certain sounds to busy public spaces so that they sound and feel more relaxing. Sound artist Charles Montambeau lives near the Parc de Madelineau, a busy city park in Montreal, Canada. Charles was inspired to recreate the ocean sounds he heard on holiday in the Magdalene Islands in his city park back home.
On BBC World Service program People Fixing the World, he tells reporter Natasha Fernandez that these sounds included ocean waves and some unusual sounding sand. The sand and the Magdalene Island can sing. When you walk into the sound firmly, the sand makes some squeaky sounds. So that's one sound that is kinda funny, kinda special. Inside this small park surrounded by busy roads, Charles and his team set up an immersive sound installation in the form of speakers planted in flower beds.
So the the installation was really to make this park a little quieter by adding some quiet noises. So it's counterintuitive but you can make a park less noisy by adding some calmer sound. The sand on the Magdalene Islands is squeaky. It makes a high pitched sound called a squeak when stepped on. Charles played recordings of this sand, ocean waves, and other relaxing sounds through speakers hidden in the park.
He created an art installation, a work of art designed to give people an interactive experience. By adding more relaxing sounds, Charles' installation actually made the park feel quieter. It's an example of something that's counterintuitive, meaning it happens differently from how you would expect it.
Perfect. What a great idea. And similar soundscapes are now helping city dwellers relax in other cities too, including Tokyo and Barcelona. Now, Neil, you asked me a question about a very quiet sound.
¶ Quiz Answer And Key Vocabulary
So are you going to reveal the correct answer? I asked you how loud a whisper is no. Yes, and I said thirteen decibels. Well, thirteen is an unlucky number, and you are wrong. It was actually thirty. Okay, let's recap the vocabulary we've learned, starting with decibel, the unit for measuring sound. Someone who dresses loud likes to wear clothes with bright colours and bold designs. If you can't handle something, you find it difficult to deal with.
An art installation is an artwork designed to create an interactive experience in a certain space. The adjective squeaky describes things which make a high pitched sound, like a mouse. Squeak squeak And finally, if you call something counterintuitive, you mean it happens differently from how you would expect.
Once again our six minutes are up, but if you'd like to hear more about this and many other trending topics, you'll find more episodes and learning activities on our website, bbclearningenglish dot com. See you again soon, but for now it's goodbye. Goodbye.
