Noise Levels in Blair, KY | Find Quiet Neighborhoods With Our Sound Map

48 dBA
Average noise across Blair
Quiet office
7
Residents above the EPA 55 dBA threshold
4% of Blair residents
65 dBA
Loudest residential point
Busy restaurant

This map shows modeled outdoor noise across Blair at 100-meter resolution, combining road, aviation, and rail sources. Green areas measure below 45 dBA. Orange and red exceed the EPA's 55 dBA outdoor threshold linked to long-term health effects. Use the layer toggles to view each source on its own or all together.

Overall
Road
Rail
Aviation
Blair, KY Map of Noise Levels in Blair
Click the map to explore
35 45 55 70 90
Quietest (dBA) Loudest
Colorblind friendly off

What the numbers sound like

  • 30 dBAWhisper
  • 40 dBASoft rainfall
  • 45 dBAQuiet suburban street at night
  • 50 dBAQuiet office
  • 55 dBAEPA outdoor threshold: light traffic 100 ft away
  • 60 dBANormal conversation an arm's length away
  • 65 dBABusy restaurant
  • 70 dBAHighway traffic 50 ft away
  • 80 dBACity bus interior

Population Above the EPA Outdoor Threshold

The EPA's 55 dBA outdoor reference level is a common benchmark for residential noise exposure, especially for activity interference, annoyance, and long-term community noise concerns. About 7 Blair residents, or 4.5%, live above that level. By land area, 4.2% of Blair is above 55 dBA.

See how noise in Blair compares to similar-sized cities.

Noise by Part of Blair

Average noise levels for Blair residents, grouped by direction from the center of Blair. Southern Blair carries the highest population-weighted average; Western Blair carries the lowest. Just 3% of residents in Western Blair live in blocks above the EPA's 55 dBA threshold, a fraction of the share in Southern Blair.

Eastern Blair

47.8 dBA · Mostly quiet
Quiet office

5% of people above 55 dBA

QuietLoud

Southern Blair

51.1 dBA · Moderate
Quiet office to normal conversation

0% of people above 55 dBA

QuietLoud

Western Blair

46.3 dBA · Mostly quiet
Quiet office

3% of people above 55 dBA

QuietLoud

Southern Blair sounds about 39% louder than Western Blair to the human ear, a 4.8 dBA gap. Every 10 dBA roughly doubles perceived loudness. Within any of these directions, two homes a quarter mile apart can still differ by 10 or more dBA depending on how close they sit to a major highway.

How far back from do you need to be?

produces an estimated 65 dBA at its loudest centerline points. Noise drops logarithmically with distance, with the exact rate depending on what's between you and the road. Tree cover, walls, terrain, and pavement type all matter. At roughly a quarter mile back, traffic fades into the noise level of a soft rainfall.

At source
65 dBA
Busy restaurant
165 ft
51 dBA
Quiet office
330 ft
43 dBA
Quiet suburban street at night
660 ft
35 dBA
Soft rainfall
¼ mile
35 dBA
Soft rainfall
½ mile
35 dBA
Soft rainfall

Calculated from the model's calibrated attenuation formula. About 94% of Blair sits under tree canopy (much heavier than most cities) and roughly 0% is impervious surface like pavement and rooftops. Both are folded into the per-place decay rate above. Heavier canopy pulls noise down faster with distance; impervious surfaces slow the drop.

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How Noise Is Distributed Across Blair

The bar chart below shows the share of Blair residents in each noise band. About 100% of residents live below the EPA's 55 dBA threshold, and roughly 0% live in blocks above 60 dBA. Long-term exposure in that range is linked to elevated stress hormones and cardiovascular risk.

How Blair Compares

Blair sits at the louder end of the spectrum. Below: how Blair's average outdoor noise and share of residents above the EPA threshold compare with Hiram, Skyline, Gordon, and Black Bottom.

Average noise level (dBA)

Blair's 47.6 dBA pop-weighted average is at the louder end of the spectrum. Kentucky as a whole averages 50.5 dBA and the U.S. averages 52.0 dBA. Both are lower than Blair because most of either area is rural land away from major roads.

Share of residents above 55 dBA

About 4.5% of Blair residents live in blocks where outdoor levels exceed the EPA's 55 dBA threshold. That's in the middle of its peer group. Measured by land area instead, 4.2% of Blair's footprint sits above 55 dBA, against a Kentucky average of 23.2% and a national average of 28.1%.

What This Means if You're Moving to Blair

  • Distance from highways matters more than the neighborhood name. Two homes in the same zip code can differ by 20 dBA if one sits 100 meters from and the other 500 meters away. The model captures this at 100-meter resolution, so noise exposure changes block by block.
  • Tree canopy can help reduce modeled noise exposure. Roughly 94% of Blair is under tree cover (much heavier than most cities), and the dominant land cover is deciduous forest. Both are measured from federal USDA Forest Service and USGS satellite imagery at 30-meter resolution. Streets with 60% or higher canopy show 3 to 5 dBA lower noise than comparable streets with bare ground or pavement, which is why the per-place decay rate above already accounts for it.

Sources & Methodology

The BestNeighborhood noise model is calibrated against nearly one million federal ground-truth measurements across four states. Road noise is computed from segment-level federal traffic data and propagated outward using physics-based acoustic decay, with attenuation rates that depend on the surrounding land cover.

Federal datasets used:

FHWA Highway Performance Monitoring System: road geometry, traffic counts, lane configuration
U.S. DoT Bureau of Transportation Statistics National Transportation Noise Map: aviation and rail noise, road calibration ground truth
USGS / MRLC National Land Cover Database: land cover and impervious surface coverage
USDA Forest Service Tree Canopy Cover: vegetation density for sound propagation
U.S. Census Bureau TIGER/Line: block-level geography and population
U.S. EPA Levels Document: 55 dBA outdoor reference level

All inputs are published federal datasets. Block-level noise is computed by combining road, rail, and aviation sound sources in the energy domain, the same physics used in professional environmental noise assessments. Read the full methodology.