4.3 Review

Green infrastructure performance in arid and semi-arid urban environments

Journal

URBAN WATER JOURNAL
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages 275-285

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/1573062X.2021.1877741

Keywords

Green infrastructure; arid climates; stormwater; urban heat; air quality; water quality

Funding

  1. Arizona State University Knowledge Exchange for Resilience

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Urbanization can have negative impacts on residents' health and well-being. The use of green stormwater infrastructure (GSI) is being increasingly promoted as a solution to address multiple urban issues. Research on quantifying the benefits of GSI is growing, but there is a lack of studies on its performance in arid and semi-arid cities. The need for more monitoring and research on GSI, especially focusing on air and water quality benefits, is highlighted.
Urbanization can negatively affect residents' health and wellbeing. Green stormwater infrastructure (GSI) is increasingly advocated as a win-win strategy for addressing multiple urban problems. Literature quantifying GSI benefits is growing, but it is unclear how it performs in arid and semi-arid cities. This study, co-designed with practitioner partners in Phoenix, Arizona, evaluates the current state of knowledge on GSI performance with respect to hydrologic, water quality, urban heat, and air quality benefits. Our systematic literature review confirms a lack of research quantifying GSI performance in arid and semi-arid cities. Our findings, which we summarize in the paper and present in a searchable, online database, suggest that GSI is beneficial in mitigating runoff, urban heat, and air pollution in the surrounding area to some degree. Results for water quality are more mixed. This points to the need for more GSI monitoring and research, especially of air and water quality benefits.

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