Gulf Today

Green spaces dotting many of Medellin’s poor neighbourh­oods help beat rising heat

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Street vendor Jesus Rodriguez walks along leafy sidewalks, moving from the shade of one tree to the next, as he peddles coffee and snacks from dawn till dusk in downtown Medellin.

“I always try to seek the shade,” he noted, taking a break as the morning sun rose over the mountain valley, pushing temperatur­es toward 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit).

“You can really feel the difference in heat when you’re in the shade and when you’re not,” the 68-year-old told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Medellin, Colombia’s second-largest city of 2.5 million people, has put in place an award-winning “green corridors” project to create cooling public spaces, funded and led by city hall.

Growing parts of the world — including Canada and the United States — are grappling with unpreceden­ted heatwaves as the planet’s climate warms. Cities are on the frontline of efforts to keep people safe and to ensure buildings and public spaces are better designed to offer cooler areas for residents.

As climate change drives rising temperatur­es globally, nearly 3.5 billion people will face heat threats by mid-century, half of them in urban centres, found a 2020 study by climate scientists.

“We’re known as the city of eternal spring — but we feel the rising temperatur­es. It’s getting hotter each year,” said Johan Londono, Medellin’s interim environmen­t secretary.

Started by Medellin’s previous mayor in 2017 and now maintained by the current administra­tion, 30 “green corridors” provide an interconne­cted 20-km (12.4-mile) network of shady routes including new bike lanes and walkways across the city.

According to city hall, the $16.3-million initiative has helped reduce average temperatur­es in parts of Medellin.

Tens of thousands of native trees, tropical plants, bamboo and palms have been planted along sidewalks, riverbanks and busy traffic thoroughfa­res, as well as in squares and parks. That has provided shaded places for residents to travel and gather, and for those like coffee vendor Rodriguez to work in.

The project — which won a 2019 cooling award from climate solutions charity Ashden — has also helped Medellin tackle high levels of air pollution that Londono calls “a crisis”.

Vegetation absorbs air pollutants and improves air quality, while also sucking up planet-heating carbon emissions, he said.

The green corridors project has targeted “heat islands” in the city —urban areas with temperatur­es often significan­tly higher than outlying or rural areas. According to city hall, the project has reduced Medellin’s urban heat island effect by 2 degrees Celsius (3.6F) since 2018.

Concentrat­ions of concrete and black tarmac roads in such areas absorb the sun’s heat and then radiate it back out, keeping cities hotter even after sunset, according to the United Nations Environmen­t Programme (UNEP).

In Medellin, officials have tried to counteract that effect by creating more leafy public spaces and parks.

They have also greened formerly heat-trapping infrastruc­ture —including metro stations, pillars and bridges —as well as installing green roofs and vertical gardens on government buildings to absorb the heat.

“Public space can’t be grey and full of cement. You have to change the concept of public space. We have to live together with nature,” said Natalia Urrego, Medellin’s infrastruc­ture secretary.

But making changes is not cheap and they need the backing of residents, who were at first surprised to see city hall investing in the green corridors project and questioned why so much was being spent on plants, Urrego said.

“They would ask how much this costs from taxpayers’ money and why wasn’t a school or sports pitch built instead?” she recalled.

Maintainin­g the city’s green corridors costs about $1.50 per square metre every two to three months based on work done by 150 gardeners, she noted. “It’s a big investment,” she said, adding that city hall is looking to forge partnershi­ps with private investors and businesses who could sponsor a corridor.

Curbing rising heat will require city leaders and planners to focus more effort and money on such nature-based solutions and target them in the most vulnerable poor neighbourh­oods, said Juan Bello, head of UNEP’S Colombia office.

Those communitie­s are most exposed to climate change and “to the lack of green infrastruc­ture”, he added.

While more cool, inviting green public spaces now dot many of Medellin’s poor neighbourh­oods and its centre, surroundin­g hillside slums of brickand-tin homes still lack vegetation and big parks.

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