Abstract

This study analyses the interactions and impacts between multiple factors i.e., urban greening, building layout, and meteorological conditions that characterise the urban microclimate and thermal comfort in the urban environment. The focus was on two neighbourhoods of Lecce city (southern Italy) characterised through field campaigns and modelling simulations on a typical hot summer day. Field campaigns were performed to collect greening, building geometry, and microclimate data, which were employed in numerical simulations of several greening scenarios using the Computational Fluid Dynamics-based and microclimate model ENVI-met. Results show that, on a typical summer day, trees may lead to an average daily decrease of air temperature by up to 1.00 °C and an improvement of thermal comfort in terms of Mean Radiant Temperature (MRT) by up to 5.53 °C and Predicted Mean Vote (PMV) by up to 0.53. This decrease is more evident when the urban greening (in terms of green surfaces and trees) is increased by 1266 m2 in the first neighbourhood and 1988 m2 in the second one, with respect to the current scenario, proving that shading effect mainly contributes to improving the urban microclimate during daytime. On the contrary, the trapping effect of heat, stored by the surfaces during the day and released during the evening, induces an increase of the spatially averaged MRT by up to 2 °C during the evenings and a slight deterioration of thermal comfort, but only locally where the concentration of high LAD trees is higher. This study contributes to a better understanding of the ecosystem services provided by greening with regard to microclimate and thermal comfort within an urban environment for several hours of the day. It adds knowledge about the role of green areas in a Mediterranean city, an important hot spot of climate change, and thus it can be a guide for important urban regeneration plans.

Highlights

  • IntroductionOutdoor human thermal comfort in cities depends on air temperature but on the combined effect of air temperature, wind speed, air humidity, and radiation

  • This study aims to investigate the effects of urban greening on air temperature and thermal comfort in urban and suburban neighbourhoods of Lecce city (Italy)

  • This paper contributes to a better understanding of the ecosystem services related to microclimate and thermal comfort provided by urban greening

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Summary

Introduction

Outdoor human thermal comfort in cities depends on air temperature but on the combined effect of air temperature, wind speed, air humidity, and radiation. The improvement of thermal comfort has become one of the cornerstones of urban design and planning; in this perspective, urban greening, including forests, road trees, trees in parks, gardens, and trees in abandoned corners [2], plays an important role by providing a multitude of benefits to urban populations in reducing air, water, noise pollution, and the urban heat island, working as natural air conditioners, preventing solar radiation from heating the buildings and surfaces, cooling the air by evapotranspiration and reducing wind speed [3,4]. Validation of temperature-perturbation and CFD-based modelling for the prediction of the thermal urban environment: The Lecce (IT) case study.

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