The comfort, energy and health implications of London’s urban heat island

Author:

Mavrogianni A.1,Davies M.2,Batty M.3,Belcher SE4,Bohnenstengel SI4,Carruthers D.5,Chalabi Z.6,Croxford B.2,Demanuele C.2,Evans S.3,Giridharan R.7,Hacker JN8,Hamilton I.2,Hogg C.8,Hunt J.5,Kolokotroni M.7,Martin C.9,Milner J.2,Rajapaksha I.2,Ridley I.2,Steadman JP2,Stocker J.5,Wilkinson P.6,Ye Z.2

Affiliation:

1. The Bartlett School of Graduate Studies, University College London, London, UK,

2. The Bartlett School of Graduate Studies, University College London, London, UK

3. Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London, London, UK

4. Department of Meteorology, University of Reading, Reading, UK

5. Cambridge Environmental Research Consultants, Cambridge, UK

6. The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK

7. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Brunel University, Uxbridge, UK

8. Arup, London, UK

9. Energy Monitoring Company, Newport Pagnell, UK

Abstract

The urban heat island (UHI) is a well-known effect of urbanisation and is particularly important in world megacities. Overheating in such cities is expected to be exacerbated in the future as a result of further urban growth and climate change. Demonstrating and quantifying the impact of individual design interventions on the UHI is currently difficult using available software tools. The tools developed in the LUCID (‘The Development of a Local Urban Climate Model and its Application to the Intelligent Design of Cities’) research project will enable the related impacts to be better understood, quantified and addressed. This article summarises the relevant literature and reports on the ongoing work of the project. Practical applications: There is a complex relationship between built form, urban processes, local temperature, comfort, energy use and health. The UHI effect is significant and there is a growing recognition of this issue. Developers and planners are seeking advice on design decisions at a variety of scales based on scientifically robust, quantitative methods. The LUCID project has thus developed a series of tools that (1) quantify the effect of urbanisation processes on local environmental conditions, and (2) quantify the impact of such conditions on comfort, energy use and health. The use of such tools is vital, both to inform policy but also to be able to demonstrate compliance with it.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Building and Construction

Reference54 articles.

1. Murphy J., Sexton D., Jenkins G., Boorman P., Booth B., Brown K., Clark R., Collins M., Harris G., Kendon L. UKCP09: Climate change projections, Version 2 (July 2009). Exeter: UK Climate Projections, Met Office Hadley Centre, 2009.

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