Abstract

Summer 2022 is officially the 2nd hottest summer in France since 1900. It resulted in three episodes of heat waves over a total of thirty-three days. Heat waves are characterized by very high temperatures (exceeding seasonal averages) during the day and night for at least three consecutive days. According to initial estimates, it caused a surplus of more than 11,000 deaths in 2022 in France. In France, despite new thermal standards, the thermal comfort of new housing in hot weather remains very inadequate. Thanks to these empirical developments vernacular architecture has demonstrated its adaptation in particularly harsh climates. The objective of this research is to understand the design strategies of four vernacular houses located in four deserts (Algerian Sahara, Arizona, Libyan desert, and Yemen) to ensure summer comfort in hot environments. The thermal behavior of these four vernacular houses has been studied through dynamic thermal simulations performed with the software ‘ArchiWIZARD’, using the same climate conditions. The results are interpreted in terms of operative temperature and related to building compacity. They show how vernacular architecture, located in desert climates, considered summer thermal comfort with design strategies. The thermal inertia of the four case studies is characterized by the daily thermal damping. The results also show the contribution of natural night ventilation on the energy performance of these four vernacular architectures in hot and arid climates.

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