Green-Roof Effects on Neighborhood Microclimate and Human Thermal Sensation

Green roofs have been recognized as an effective sustainable design tool to mitigate urban heat island (UHI) effects. Previous studies have identified green-roof benefits in cooling and energy-conservation at the building scale, with limited exploration of the wider influence on neighborhood microcl...

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Main Authors: C. Y. Jim, Lilliana L.H. Peng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-01-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/6/2/598
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spelling doaj-46d58d7b9461416bb85c2b662de50b282020-11-24T22:49:48ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732013-01-016259861810.3390/en6020598Green-Roof Effects on Neighborhood Microclimate and Human Thermal SensationC. Y. JimLilliana L.H. PengGreen roofs have been recognized as an effective sustainable design tool to mitigate urban heat island (UHI) effects. Previous studies have identified green-roof benefits in cooling and energy-conservation at the building scale, with limited exploration of the wider influence on neighborhood microclimate and human thermal comfort (HTC). This paper investigated the impacts of community-scale green-roof installation on air temperature and HTC in five typical residential neighborhoods of subtropical Hong Kong. The microclimate models ENVI-met and RayMan permitted studies of two main green-roof scenarios, namely extensive (EGR) and intensive (IGR). Microclimatic monitoring data from a local experimental green-roof site validated the modeling methods. The results verified that green-roof cooling effects were not restricted to rooftops, but extended to the ground to improve neighborhood microclimate. EGR reduced pedestrian-level air temperature by 0.4–0.7 °C, and IGR by 0.5–1.7 °C, with maximum effect in open-set low rise sites. Coverage by building footprints and building height dampened lateral and vertical advection of cool air generated by green roofs. Roof greening also improved notably the rooftop-podium level HTC. Diurnal duration of high heat stress was reduced by 6–9 h for EGR scenarios, and 9–11 h for IGR. The findings indicated that large-scale green-roof installation could bring neighborhood-wide cooling, mitigate urban heat island effect, and furnish more comfortable thermal environment for urban residents.http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/6/2/598green roofclimate changecooling effecthuman thermal comforturban heat islandcompact citysustainable urban design
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author C. Y. Jim
Lilliana L.H. Peng
spellingShingle C. Y. Jim
Lilliana L.H. Peng
Green-Roof Effects on Neighborhood Microclimate and Human Thermal Sensation
Energies
green roof
climate change
cooling effect
human thermal comfort
urban heat island
compact city
sustainable urban design
author_facet C. Y. Jim
Lilliana L.H. Peng
author_sort C. Y. Jim
title Green-Roof Effects on Neighborhood Microclimate and Human Thermal Sensation
title_short Green-Roof Effects on Neighborhood Microclimate and Human Thermal Sensation
title_full Green-Roof Effects on Neighborhood Microclimate and Human Thermal Sensation
title_fullStr Green-Roof Effects on Neighborhood Microclimate and Human Thermal Sensation
title_full_unstemmed Green-Roof Effects on Neighborhood Microclimate and Human Thermal Sensation
title_sort green-roof effects on neighborhood microclimate and human thermal sensation
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Green roofs have been recognized as an effective sustainable design tool to mitigate urban heat island (UHI) effects. Previous studies have identified green-roof benefits in cooling and energy-conservation at the building scale, with limited exploration of the wider influence on neighborhood microclimate and human thermal comfort (HTC). This paper investigated the impacts of community-scale green-roof installation on air temperature and HTC in five typical residential neighborhoods of subtropical Hong Kong. The microclimate models ENVI-met and RayMan permitted studies of two main green-roof scenarios, namely extensive (EGR) and intensive (IGR). Microclimatic monitoring data from a local experimental green-roof site validated the modeling methods. The results verified that green-roof cooling effects were not restricted to rooftops, but extended to the ground to improve neighborhood microclimate. EGR reduced pedestrian-level air temperature by 0.4–0.7 °C, and IGR by 0.5–1.7 °C, with maximum effect in open-set low rise sites. Coverage by building footprints and building height dampened lateral and vertical advection of cool air generated by green roofs. Roof greening also improved notably the rooftop-podium level HTC. Diurnal duration of high heat stress was reduced by 6–9 h for EGR scenarios, and 9–11 h for IGR. The findings indicated that large-scale green-roof installation could bring neighborhood-wide cooling, mitigate urban heat island effect, and furnish more comfortable thermal environment for urban residents.
topic green roof
climate change
cooling effect
human thermal comfort
urban heat island
compact city
sustainable urban design
url http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/6/2/598
work_keys_str_mv AT cyjim greenroofeffectsonneighborhoodmicroclimateandhumanthermalsensation
AT lillianalhpeng greenroofeffectsonneighborhoodmicroclimateandhumanthermalsensation
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