4.7 Article

Reconceptualizing urban heat island: Beyond the urban-rural dichotomy

Journal

SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY
Volume 77, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scs.2021.103581

Keywords

Complex urban system; Environmental sustainability; Mitigation and adaptation; Networks; Urban heat island

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) [AGS-1930629, CBET-2028868]
  2. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) [80NSSC20K1263]

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In the past decades, research on urban heat island (UHI) phenomenon has made significant progress, but the oversimplification and inadequacy of the urban-rural dichotomy in its definition are becoming increasingly apparent. This study conducts a comprehensive investigation and proposes a new paradigm that treats the entire urban environment as a complex dynamic system, expanding the boundaries of traditional urban environmental research.
Past decades have seen drastically increasing research effort and progress on the study of the phenomenon of urban heat island (UHI). Despite its simplicity, this convenient concept has promoted significant advances in scientific research and policy making processes in the urban environmental community. Nevertheless, the oversimplification and inadequacy of the urban-rural dichotomy, inherited in the UHI concept, is increasingly manifest today in the continuously urbanized world. In this study, we conduct a holistic and in-depth survey of the inadequacy of the urban-rural dichotomy intrinsic to the definition of UHI, from theoretical, technical, and practical perspectives. In addition, in the light of recent research advances, we urge to radically reconceptualize UHI by proposing a novel paradigm by treating the total urban environment as a complex dynamic system. The new framework broadens the frontier of conventional urban environmental study by utilizing advanced techniques of complex systems and data sciences, including complex network theory, machine learning techniques, causal inference, etc. The reconceptualization of UHI is also expected to foster decision making and urban planning, and to avoid the one-sidedness of the singular and often too exclusive aim of heat mitigation.

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