The urban thermal environment varies not only from its rural surroundings but also within the urban area due to intra-urban differences in land-use and surface characteristics. Understanding the causes of this intra-urban variability is a first step in improving urban planning and development. Toward this end, a method for quantifying causes of spatial variability in the urban heat island has been developed. This paper presents the method as applied to a specific test case of Portland, Oregon. Vehicle temperature traverses were used to determine spatial differences in summertime ~2 m air temperature across the metropolitan area in the afternoon. A tree-structured regression model was used to quantify the land-use and surface characteristics that have the greatest influence on daytime UHI intensity. The most important urban characteristic separating warmer from cooler regions of the Portland metropolitan area was canopy cover. Roadway area density was also an important determinant of local UHI magnitudes. Specifically, the air above major arterial roads was found to be warmer on weekdays than weekends, possibly due to increased anthropogenic activity from the vehicle sector on weekdays. In general, warmer regions of the city were associated with industrial and commercial land-use. The downtown core, whilst warmer than the rural surroundings, was not the warmest part of the Portland metropolitan area. This is thought to be due in large part to local shading effects in the urban canyons.
Presentation by David Sailor, professor in the School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning and director of the Urban Climate Research Center at ASU. Sailer's presentation addresses how to define urban heat islands (UHI), and decisions about why and how to measure these complex ecosystems.
Ozone is a highly reactive compound that is harmful at very low concentrations as compared to other pollutants. One method of pollution control is the use of photocatalysis, specifically with titanium dioxide to induce ozone decomposition. An experiment was designed and executed in order to determine the rate of decomposition by coating concrete in 5% by weight titanium dioxide mixed with paint. The experiment was unsuccessful in inducing decomposition but gave important insight into the adsorptive properties of ozone over surfaces, particularly with bare concrete that had an adsorption of 22.51 ± 2.457 ppbv, which was much better than the coated samples. Further studies into the development of photocatalytic paint is needed in order to develop an effective urban ozone pollution control method to be implemented in major cities, particularly in the most polluted such as Los Angeles, California.
The City of Phoenix Street Transportation Department partnered with the Rob and Melani Walton Sustainability Solutions Service at Arizona State University (ASU) and researchers from various ASU schools to evaluate the effectiveness, performance, and community perception of the new pavement coating. The data collection and analysis occurred across multiple neighborhoods and at varying times across days and/or months over the course of one year (July 15, 2020–July 14, 2021), allowing the team to study the impacts of the surface treatment under various weather conditions.
Major urban centers are warming due to a combination of global and local phenomena. City governments are increasingly adopting strategies to mitigate the causes and impacts of extreme heat on their populations. Among these strategies are high solar-reflectance (cool) surfaces installed on building roofs and walls. Use of cool surfaces is a cost-effective and simple strategy that replaces conventional darker surfaces with surfaces that have a high reflectance to shortwave (solar) energy.
This report reviews the recent history of cool-surface deployment efforts. This includes peer-reviewed literature, conference proceedings, and grey literature to identify challenges and barriers to wide-scale deployment of cool surfaces. We have also researched heat action plans and programs from cities and different codes and standards, as well as available incentive and rebate programs.
The review identifies challenges, barriers, and opportunities associated with large-scale deployment of cool surfaces and categorizes them broadly as being related to product development & performance or policies & mandates. It provides a foundation upon which we intend to build a roadmap for rapidly accelerating future deployments of cool surfaces. This roadmap will address identified challenges and incorporate lessons learned from historical efforts to generate a practical and actionable plan.
Cities are experiencing rapid warming due to the urban heat island (UHI) effect, which causes the city center to have higher air temperatures than the surrounding rural areas. This dissertation studies the effects of building design on the surrounding environment, particularly for heat release.The first paper in this dissertation (Chapter 2) quantifies the anthropogenic heat emissions from buildings and focuses on an archetype office building, the study is considering four U.S. cities with different climates. The results demonstrate that the building envelope is the main contributor to heat emission from a building, accounting for over 60% of the total heat emission in all cities for four-story buildings. Additionally, the study finds that substituting bare terrain with a constructed building increases sensed heat by more than 70% in all cities and building heights. The second paper (Chapter 3) of this dissertation identifies the key design variables that affect heat emissions and energy consumption in buildings. The study considers 15 U.S. cities that represents all 15 climate zones as defined by American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE). 10 design variables known for their impacts on energy consumption were identified via a literature review and used in the analysis. The results show that the window-to-wall ratio (WWR) consistently has a strong correlation with energy consumption in all climate zones. Roof and wall solar reflectance variables showed a very strong correlation with heat emissions from a building. The final paper of this dissertation (Chapter 4) presents the results of a survey distributed to experts in the architectural field, to evaluate the importance of different design variables that are related to heat emission and energy consumption. The survey also assessed the importance of considering heat emission as a design criterion during the design process when compared to energy consumption. These survey results provide new insights into how heat emission can be incorporated into the early design process. The dissertation then highlights the difference found via the survey results from the expert with the simulation results to identify the key design variable that relates to both heat emission and energy consumption.