Defendants appeal from the circuit court’s order enjoining defendants from enforcing the township’s zoning ordinance so as to prevent the construction of an office building on plaintiffs property.
The subject property consists of a tract of vacant land containing 1.2875 acres of net usable area located at the northeast corner of Telegraph and Lone Pine Roads in Bloomfield Township. The parcel has approximately 313 feet of frontage along Telegraph Road and about 182 feet along Lone Pine Road. The depth measured in an east-west direction from Telegraph Road varies from 99.7 feet at the north property line to approximately 220 feet at its maximum depth near the southern property line. The property is zoned R-3 for residential use only.
Telegraph Road is a four-lane divided highway and is the subject of a proposed widening project which would expand it to eight lanes. Plaintiffs property lies near the midpoint of that project.
After unsuccessfully seeking a hearing before the zoning board of appeals plaintiff commenced the instant action requesting relief from the residential zoning restriction so that an office building might be constructed on the property. After a hearing the trial court granted that relief.
Defendants appeal, raising three issues:
(1) Were the trial court’s findings of fact concerning the cost of residential construction on the property clearly erroneous?
(2) Did plaintiff meet its burden of proving the unreasonableness of the residential zoning restriction?
(3) Did the trial court err in issuing injunctive relief ?
Defendants’ first contention is that the cost esti*563mates upon which the trial court relied in its decision were unsupported by the record.
The purpose of the findings required by GCR 1963, 517.1 is to facilitate appellate review by revealing the law applied by the trial court in reaching its decision. People v Jackson, 390 Mich 621; 212 NW2d 918 (1973), People v Jackson, 81 Mich App 18; 264 NW2d 101 (1978). Consequently, those findings are significant only insofar as they affect the outcome of the case.
Our de novo review of the record reveals that there was substantial and persuasive testimony that plaintiff’s property is not marketable at any price for residential use. In view of that evidence, whatever errors exist in the findings concerning construction costs were unnecessary to the trial court’s legal ruling that the property had "little or no value” for residential use. For that reason, further discussion of this issue would serve no purpose.1
Defendants next challenge the sufficiency of plaintiff’s evidence to rebut the presumption of the ordinance’s validity.
In order to sustain an attack on a zoning ordinance, an aggrieved property owner must affirmatively demonstrate that enforcement of the ordinance will preclude the property’s use for any purpose to which it is reasonably adapted. Kirk v Tyrone Twp, 398 Mich 429; 247 NW2d 848 (1976), Kropf v Sterling Heights, 391 Mich 139; 215 NW2d 179 (1974). Having carefully read the transcript *564and examined the exhibits we are firmly convinced that plaintiff sustained its burden of proof.
Plaintiff’s witnesses2 were unanimous in their conclusion that the property is unmarketable at any price for residential use primarily because of the unacceptable level of noise generated by the traffic on Telegraph Road. Plaintiff supported that contention with an impressive array of proofs, which we shall briefly summarize.
The noise level at the site upon which the residential buildings would be constructed averages 70 decibels — a level slightly higher than that in an urban shopping center and slightly lower than that in a second floor New York City tenement. Furthermore, the State Highway Department had asked the Federal Highway Administration for a variance from the latters’ environmental standards because of the excessive and uncontrollable noise to be generated by the proposed widening of Telegraph Road.
There was also testimony that because of the subject parcel’s size and proximity to Telegraph Road, an earthen berm of feasible proportions would not ameliorate the situation.3 Furthermore, the parcel’s size precluded setting the houses back as far as the existing developments along Telegraph.
*565In addition, evidence was adduced concerning the use of other residentially zoned lots in the vicinity that are located as close to Telegraph as the subject property. Those lots are significantly underdeveloped despite the fact that other houses in the pertinent developments sell for more than $100,000. The reluctance to build houses in such close proximity to the highway is due to the fact that there is not a viable market for such housing.4
In short, plaintiff presented substantial and persuasive evidence that there was no market whatever for residential housing built on its lot. The trial court did not err in finding the zoning restriction unreasonable as applied to plaintiff’s property. Long v Highland Park, 329 Mich 146; 45 NW2d 10 (1950). Its enforcement would not permit the property to be used for any purpose for which it is reasonably adapted. Kirk, supra.
Defendants’ final argument is that the trial court was limited to determining the constitutionality of the ordinance and that it should not have issued an injunction effectively rezoning the property in question. We disagree.
Injunctions such as that issued by the lower court in this case have been approved by our Supreme Court. E.g., Daraban v Redford Twp, 383 Mich 497; 176 NW2d 598 (1970), Dequindre Development Co v Warren Twp, 359 Mich 634; 103 NW2d 600 (1960), Industrial Land Co v Birmingham, 346 Mich 667; 78 NW2d 656 (1956). The trial court heard testimony concerning the proposed use and concluded that it was reasonable and would have no deleterious effect on the existing residential area. Our review of the record confirms his assessment; the injunction was warranted.
Affirmed.
*566N. J. Kaufman, P. J., concurred.We will not reverse or modify the trial court’s decision in an equity case unless we are convinced that we would have reached a different decision had we occupied the position of the trial court. Ford v Howard, 59 Mich App 548; 229 NW2d 841 (1975). Insofar as our review of the record convinces us that the trial court correctly ruled that the ordinance was unreasonable as applied to plaintiffs property, see infra, the alleged errors upon which defendants base this issue do not warrant reversal or modification of the lower court’s judgment.
Those witnesses included an experienced real estate appraiser, an architect and consulting city planner, an accoustical engineer employed by a testing laboratory specializing in the evaluation of accoustical environment, and a real estate broker and appraiser.
One of plaintiffs witnesses testified that a berm 10 to 12 feet high would be necessary to buffer the parcel. Defendants’ witness proposed that a berm 5 feet high and 27 feet wide could be built and still leave room for a cluster development of 5 units. (That proposal would leave 13 feet between the berm and the unit closest to it.) We infer that a larger berm would leave yet less room for the development, and in this regard it is significant that plaintiffs witnesses testified that there simply was not enough room on the parcel to construct both a berm and a marketable housing development.
The only comparable cluster development in the area was a "financial disaster” for its owner because of the greatly depressed market value of the lots abutting Telegraph Road.