Microclimate Environmental Assessment and Impact of Mountain City Pedestrian Streets in Summer

In mountainous cities, walking is an important form of transportation. The microclimate environment of pedestrian streets in summer affects the comfort of pedestrians, especially in hot summer cities. Besides, there are many height differences in mountainous city pedestrian streets, while existing r...

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Main Authors: Xiong Ke, Yang Zhenjing, Cheng Canhua
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2020-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2020/32/e3sconf_nsb2020_11001.pdf
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spelling doaj-0991fff10d844147a27b114104169b4a2021-04-02T14:10:01ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422020-01-011721100110.1051/e3sconf/202017211001e3sconf_nsb2020_11001Microclimate Environmental Assessment and Impact of Mountain City Pedestrian Streets in SummerXiong Ke0Yang ZhenjingCheng Canhua1School of Architecture and Urban Planning Chongqing UniversitySchool of Architecture and Urban Planning Chongqing UniversityIn mountainous cities, walking is an important form of transportation. The microclimate environment of pedestrian streets in summer affects the comfort of pedestrians, especially in hot summer cities. Besides, there are many height differences in mountainous city pedestrian streets, while existing researches of the thermal environment were mainly aimed at plain cities. We used typology to analyze different spatial patterns and tested microclimate of five kinds of streets in the Shanchengxiang of Chongqing. Then the universal thermal climate index (UTCI) was used to evaluate the thermal comfort of different spatial spaces. Firstly, the thermal environment of the mountain city street in summer is extremely uncomfortable and needs to be improved. Secondly, the sky view factor (SVF) has a great impact on the street thermal environment. Among all kinds of streets, the one-sided open B-N (SVF = 0.474) has the worst thermal environment, with an average UTCI of 44.7℃. However, the two-sided enclosed B2-B2 (SVF = 0.052) represents a better thermal environment, with an average UTCI of 35.5℃. The R2 value of 0.88 reflects that the linear correlation between UTCI and SVF is larger than that of H/W, whose R2 value is mere 0.04. Finally, different interfaces and enclosure forms have a great impact on space thermal comfort. This study quantifies the parameters that influence the design of pedestrian streets in mountain cities from the perspective of outdoor microclimate environmental assessment and provide a reference for the sustainable design of regional streets.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2020/32/e3sconf_nsb2020_11001.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xiong Ke
Yang Zhenjing
Cheng Canhua
spellingShingle Xiong Ke
Yang Zhenjing
Cheng Canhua
Microclimate Environmental Assessment and Impact of Mountain City Pedestrian Streets in Summer
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Xiong Ke
Yang Zhenjing
Cheng Canhua
author_sort Xiong Ke
title Microclimate Environmental Assessment and Impact of Mountain City Pedestrian Streets in Summer
title_short Microclimate Environmental Assessment and Impact of Mountain City Pedestrian Streets in Summer
title_full Microclimate Environmental Assessment and Impact of Mountain City Pedestrian Streets in Summer
title_fullStr Microclimate Environmental Assessment and Impact of Mountain City Pedestrian Streets in Summer
title_full_unstemmed Microclimate Environmental Assessment and Impact of Mountain City Pedestrian Streets in Summer
title_sort microclimate environmental assessment and impact of mountain city pedestrian streets in summer
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2020-01-01
description In mountainous cities, walking is an important form of transportation. The microclimate environment of pedestrian streets in summer affects the comfort of pedestrians, especially in hot summer cities. Besides, there are many height differences in mountainous city pedestrian streets, while existing researches of the thermal environment were mainly aimed at plain cities. We used typology to analyze different spatial patterns and tested microclimate of five kinds of streets in the Shanchengxiang of Chongqing. Then the universal thermal climate index (UTCI) was used to evaluate the thermal comfort of different spatial spaces. Firstly, the thermal environment of the mountain city street in summer is extremely uncomfortable and needs to be improved. Secondly, the sky view factor (SVF) has a great impact on the street thermal environment. Among all kinds of streets, the one-sided open B-N (SVF = 0.474) has the worst thermal environment, with an average UTCI of 44.7℃. However, the two-sided enclosed B2-B2 (SVF = 0.052) represents a better thermal environment, with an average UTCI of 35.5℃. The R2 value of 0.88 reflects that the linear correlation between UTCI and SVF is larger than that of H/W, whose R2 value is mere 0.04. Finally, different interfaces and enclosure forms have a great impact on space thermal comfort. This study quantifies the parameters that influence the design of pedestrian streets in mountain cities from the perspective of outdoor microclimate environmental assessment and provide a reference for the sustainable design of regional streets.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2020/32/e3sconf_nsb2020_11001.pdf
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