Abstract

This study examines the daily and seasonal climatic behavior of various urban parks with different vegetation cover and its impact on human thermal sensation in the summer and winter in Tel Aviv, Israel. The study draws a comparison between the climatic conditions developed in various types of urban green open spaces, exposed open urban squares and street canyons near such sites. The results showed that an urban park with a dense canopy of trees has maximum cooling effect during summer and winter in daytime. In summer it reduces temperatures by up to 3.8 °C and thermal comfort values by up to 18 °C PET (Physiological Equivalent Temperature), while in winter it reduces temperatures by up to 2 °C and thermal comfort by up to 10 °C PET. The climatic variable that mostly affects human thermal comfort conditions is the Mean Radiant Temperature ( T mrt ) which is more dominant at exposed urban sites as compared to shady urban parks. These results emphasize the importance of treed open spaces as an effective tool for heat mitigation. The benefit of the cooling effect achieved by treed urban spaces is much stronger than the comparative disadvantage they create in winter. ► Most studies on the climatic effect of urban green areas focused on cooling effect. ► The cooling effect caused by urban vegetation is higher in summer than in winter. ► Treed open spaces are effective tool for the mitigation of heat stress. ► The benefit of park cooling effect in summer outweighs its disadvantages in winter.

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