Inside of an acoustic measuring room

Image: BHMA

In 2025, BHMA published a new standard to establish methods for defining levels of acoustic performance of door hardware.  In the current issue of Construction Specifier, Tony Gambrall of BHMA tells us more about the standard, and why it’s important for evaluating hardware used on projects where noise is a concern.

Construction Specifier

Bringing acoustics to hardware:  The science behind low-noise design

Increasingly, building projects are not only concerned with requirements such as safety and energy efficiency, but also occupant comfort. One aspect of this is noise. Noise from HVAC units, noise from other work areas, and noise from door hardware. How many times has a person’s concentration been disrupted at a meeting or conference by someone entering or exiting the room? It is essential to specify door hardware for those areas of the building that require an additional level of quiet. The Builders Hardware Manufacturers Association (BHMA) has undertaken the task of determining door hardware suitable for quiet environments with its new standard, ANSI/BHMA A156.42, Acoustic Performance Rating for Operational Noise of Architectural Hardware.

Click here to continue reading this article in Construction Specifier.

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