Iran Daily

Build-up of heat in cities depends on design of streets, buildings

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Every city’s heat island effect is different. According to new research out of the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT), how a city heats up depends on the layout and design of its streets and buildings.

Scientists found cities with more geometric, grid-like layouts, such as New York and Chicago, had a greater heat island effect than cities with less uniformity, like London and Boston, UPI reported.

While grid-like cities boast a ‘crystallin­e’ texture, more chaotic cities have a ‘glass-like’ texture. In semi-solids like glass, the relationsh­ip between particles is less rigid and more liquid-like.

Because cities feature a higher concentrat­ion of asphalt and concrete, which absorb and store the Sun’s heat very efficientl­y, they tend to heat up faster and stay warmer than their less developed surroundin­gs. But as the latest research shows, the heat island phenomenon isn’t uniform.

To study how the design of a city impacts the phenomenon, researcher­s analyzed the structural design of 47 different cities using satellite images.

To measure the relationsh­ips between buildings in each city, scientists used a model normally designed to measure how a single atom is impacted by the external forces of its neighborin­g atoms.

Roland Pellenq, a senior research scientist at MIT, said, “We use tools of classical statistica­l physics.”

The model helped assign each city a score between 0 and 1, with 0 representi­ng a total lack of order and 1 representi­ng a perfect crystallin­e structure. The cities varied from 0.5 to 0.9.

Scientists combined the structural and temperatur­e data to determine the relationsh­ip between the two variables.

The analysis — published in the journal Physical Review Letters — showed cities with less crystallin­e structures have a lesser heat island effect.

The research could help city planners design more energy efficient cities.

Pellenq said, “If you’re planning a new section of Phoenix, you don’t want to build on a grid, since it’s already a very hot place.

“But somewhere in Canada, a mayor may say no, we’ll choose to use the grid, to keep the city warmer.”

But previous studies have shown that there’s no one-size-fits-all approach to boosting or curtailing the urban heat index, and that both sprawl and urban density can cause a city to overheat.

What the growing body of research does make clear, is that how a city is designed has a measurable impact on its temperatur­e?

 ??  ?? UPI A city’s layout affects how much it heats up.
UPI A city’s layout affects how much it heats up.

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