
Urban Heat Island mitigation strategy
Green wall installation can provide cooling effects for both indoor and outdoor environments.
Image Credit: Osaka Metropolitan University
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Urban Heat Island Mitigation Strategies (UHIMS)
The Core Concept: Urban Heat Island Mitigation Strategies (UHIMS) encompass ecological and architectural interventions—such as vertical greenery and reflective surfaces—designed to reduce extreme localized temperatures in urban environments by managing how building envelopes interact with local microclimates.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike traditional approaches that isolate indoor air conditioning or outdoor shading, advanced UHIMS operate dynamically across the building envelope. By utilizing vertical greenery and targeted surface albedo (reflectivity), these strategies simultaneously cool indoor spaces and outdoor immediate environments without relying on active electrical grids.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Building Energy Model (BEM): A simulation framework used to reproduce, analyze, and predict indoor thermal conditions and overall energy performance.
- Urban Microclimate Model (UMM): A spatial analytical tool utilized to capture outdoor microclimate dynamics and environmental interactions.
- Physiologically Equivalent Temperature (PET): A standardized bioclimatic metric used to consistently assess human thermal comfort across both indoor and outdoor settings.
- Surface Albedo Modulation: The strategic use of surface reflectivity, where high-albedo materials reduce indoor temperatures, and low-albedo exterior surfaces enhance localized outdoor thermal comfort.




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