4.6 Article

Urban Heat Island Mitigation and Urban Green Spaces: Testing a Model in the City of Padova (Italy)

期刊

LAND
卷 12, 期 2, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/land12020476

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climate change; canopy cover; land use; urban greening; urban heat island

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The urban heat island effect has adverse impacts on human health and the environment as well. The use of vegetation, particularly urban tree planting, is considered as a potential strategy to mitigate the heat island effect. By using the i-Tree Cool Air model, the variations and spatial distribution of air temperature in the city of Padova, Italy were analyzed, showing lower air temperatures in areas with tree canopy. However, further research is necessary to determine the reliability of temperature predictions.
The urban heat island (UHI) is a critical issue in most urbanised areas. Spatial variation of urban air temperature and humidity influences human thermal comfort, the settling rate of atmospheric pollutants, and the energy demand for cooling. UHIs can be particularly harmful to human health and there are numerous studies that link mortality and morbidity with extreme thermal events, that can be worsened by UHIs. The temperature difference between city centres and the surrounding countryside, which is accentuated in the summer months and at night, is the result not only of a greater production of anthropogenic heat but is mainly due to the properties of urban surfaces. The use of vegetation, and in particular urban tree planting, is one of possible strategies to contrast the heat island effects. In order to analyse the mitigation effects produced by green spaces in the city of Padova, a municipality in the northeast of Italy, simulations of the air temperature variations and their spatial distribution were carried out using the i-Tree Cool Air model. High-resolution RGBir aerial photos were processed to produce a tree canopy and a permeability map and the model was applied on a 10 m x 10 m grid over the entire city, producing a raster map of the aboveground air temperatures. A particularly hot July day with recorded air temperatures of 35 degrees C at 3 p.m. and 28 degrees C at 10 p.m. at a reference weather station was chosen for the test. In the daytime, the results show temperature differences up to almost 10 degrees C between urban open spaces with impervious cover (squares, streets) and green areas under tree canopy. At night, the simulated air temperatures are only slightly cooler in areas with tree cover than those recorded at the reference station, while urban areas with sealed surfaces maintain air temperatures 4.4 degrees C higher. The study was aimed at testing the applicability of the model as a tool for predicting air temperatures in relation to land use and canopy cover. The results show that the model can potentially be used to compare different urban forest and urban greening planning scenarios, however, further research is necessary to assess the reliability of the temperature predictions.

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