Data collected by coupling fix and wearable sensors for addressing urban microclimate variability in an historical Italian city

This article presents the data collected through an extensive research work conducted in a historic hilly town in central Italy during the period 2016–2017. Data concern two different datasets: long-term hygrothermal histories collected in two specific positions of the town object of the research, a...

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Main Authors: Benedetta Pioppi, Ilaria Pigliautile, Anna Laura Pisello
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-04-01
Series:Data in Brief
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235234092030216X
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spelling doaj-64be3d93d8144b639d7bb86c2cc8c52d2020-11-25T02:04:16ZengElsevierData in Brief2352-34092020-04-0129Data collected by coupling fix and wearable sensors for addressing urban microclimate variability in an historical Italian cityBenedetta Pioppi0Ilaria Pigliautile1Anna Laura Pisello2CIRIAF Interuniversity Research Centre on Pollution and Environment Mauro Felli, via G. Duranti 63, 06125, Perugia, ItalyCIRIAF Interuniversity Research Centre on Pollution and Environment Mauro Felli, via G. Duranti 63, 06125, Perugia, ItalyCIRIAF Interuniversity Research Centre on Pollution and Environment Mauro Felli, via G. Duranti 63, 06125, Perugia, Italy; Department of Engineering, via G. Duranti 93, 06125, Perugia, Italy; Corresponding author. CIRIAF Interuniversity Research Centre on Pollution and Environment Mauro Felli, via G. Duranti 63, 06125, Perugia, Italy.This article presents the data collected through an extensive research work conducted in a historic hilly town in central Italy during the period 2016–2017. Data concern two different datasets: long-term hygrothermal histories collected in two specific positions of the town object of the research, and three environmental transects collected following on foot the same designed path at three different time of the same day, i.e. during a heat wave event in summer. The short-term monitoring campaign is carried out by means of an innovative wearable weather station specifically developed by the authors and settled upon a bike helmet. Data provided within the short-term monitoring campaign are analysed by computing the apparent temperature, a direct indicator of human thermal comfort in the outdoors. All provided environmental data are geo-referenced. These data are used in order to examine the intra-urban microclimate variability. Outcomes from both long- and short-term monitoring campaigns allow to confirm the existing correlation between the urban forms and functionalities and the corresponding local microclimate conditions, also generated by anthropogenic actions. In detail, higher fractions of built surfaces are associated to generally higher temperatures as emerges by comparing the two long-term air temperature data series, i.e. temperature collected at point 1 is higher than temperature collated at point 2 for the 75% of the monitored period with an average of +2.8 °C. Furthermore, gathered environmental transects demonstrate the high variability of the main environmental parameters below the Urban Canopy. Diversification of the urban thermal behaviour leads to a computed apparent temperature range in between 33.2 °C and 46.7 °C at 2 p.m. along the monitoring path. Reuse of these data may be helpful for further investigating interesting correlations among urban configuration, anthropogenic actions and microclimate variables affecting outdoor comfort. Additionally, the proposed dataset may be compared to other similar datasets collected in other urban contexts around the world. Finally, it can be compared to other monitoring methodologies such as weather stations and satellite measurements available in the location at the same time. Keywords: Wearable sensing techniques, Urban microclimate, Outdoor thermal comfort, Environmental monitoring, Human-centric approach, Urban heat islandhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235234092030216X
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benedetta Pioppi
Ilaria Pigliautile
Anna Laura Pisello
spellingShingle Benedetta Pioppi
Ilaria Pigliautile
Anna Laura Pisello
Data collected by coupling fix and wearable sensors for addressing urban microclimate variability in an historical Italian city
Data in Brief
author_facet Benedetta Pioppi
Ilaria Pigliautile
Anna Laura Pisello
author_sort Benedetta Pioppi
title Data collected by coupling fix and wearable sensors for addressing urban microclimate variability in an historical Italian city
title_short Data collected by coupling fix and wearable sensors for addressing urban microclimate variability in an historical Italian city
title_full Data collected by coupling fix and wearable sensors for addressing urban microclimate variability in an historical Italian city
title_fullStr Data collected by coupling fix and wearable sensors for addressing urban microclimate variability in an historical Italian city
title_full_unstemmed Data collected by coupling fix and wearable sensors for addressing urban microclimate variability in an historical Italian city
title_sort data collected by coupling fix and wearable sensors for addressing urban microclimate variability in an historical italian city
publisher Elsevier
series Data in Brief
issn 2352-3409
publishDate 2020-04-01
description This article presents the data collected through an extensive research work conducted in a historic hilly town in central Italy during the period 2016–2017. Data concern two different datasets: long-term hygrothermal histories collected in two specific positions of the town object of the research, and three environmental transects collected following on foot the same designed path at three different time of the same day, i.e. during a heat wave event in summer. The short-term monitoring campaign is carried out by means of an innovative wearable weather station specifically developed by the authors and settled upon a bike helmet. Data provided within the short-term monitoring campaign are analysed by computing the apparent temperature, a direct indicator of human thermal comfort in the outdoors. All provided environmental data are geo-referenced. These data are used in order to examine the intra-urban microclimate variability. Outcomes from both long- and short-term monitoring campaigns allow to confirm the existing correlation between the urban forms and functionalities and the corresponding local microclimate conditions, also generated by anthropogenic actions. In detail, higher fractions of built surfaces are associated to generally higher temperatures as emerges by comparing the two long-term air temperature data series, i.e. temperature collected at point 1 is higher than temperature collated at point 2 for the 75% of the monitored period with an average of +2.8 °C. Furthermore, gathered environmental transects demonstrate the high variability of the main environmental parameters below the Urban Canopy. Diversification of the urban thermal behaviour leads to a computed apparent temperature range in between 33.2 °C and 46.7 °C at 2 p.m. along the monitoring path. Reuse of these data may be helpful for further investigating interesting correlations among urban configuration, anthropogenic actions and microclimate variables affecting outdoor comfort. Additionally, the proposed dataset may be compared to other similar datasets collected in other urban contexts around the world. Finally, it can be compared to other monitoring methodologies such as weather stations and satellite measurements available in the location at the same time. Keywords: Wearable sensing techniques, Urban microclimate, Outdoor thermal comfort, Environmental monitoring, Human-centric approach, Urban heat island
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235234092030216X
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