This extreme urban heat has affected over 450 cities worldwide, leading to higher energy consumption and negatively impacting people's health, resulting in heat-related illnesses and fatalities.
However, a recent study published in the journal Nature Cities suggests that it is possible to significantly reduce temperatures in cities with hot desert climates like Riyadh, while also reducing energy costs.
The plan to cool Riyadh
The researchers of the study conducted large-scale simulations to reduce temperatures and energy consumption in the cooling process in the Al-Masif neighbourhood in Riyadh.
They developed eight scenarios to mitigate temperatures and determine the optimal strategies to achieve this goal.
UNSW Scientia Professor Mattheos Santamouris, Anita Lawrence Chair in High-Performance Architecture and senior author of the study, said, "The project demonstrates the tremendous impact advanced heat mitigation technologies and techniques can have to reduce urban overheating, decrease cooling needs, and improve lives."
The scientists developed a method that allows the city to cool down by approximately 4.5 degrees Celsius in the summer while saving 16% on cooling energy use. Part of the suggested strategy is to use ultra-cold-reflecting materials on building roofs, which are advanced construction materials intended to reflect a high percentage of sunlight and minimise heat absorption.
The strategy also includes using traffic vegetation to improve transpiration cooling, focusing on increasing the ability of outdoor surfaces to reflect sunlight, providing effective external shading devices, and designing windows.
Santamouris told The New Arab, "The city keeps getting hotter because there isn't much greenery, and big artificial surfaces made of traditional building materials like concrete and asphalt trap heat. The temperature of the city is further raised by additional heat from industrial activity and vehicle emissions."
The next generation of Gulf city-planning
Lotfy Azaz, Professor of Urbanism and Geographic Information Systems at Menoufia University, explained to The New Arab that after the discovery of oil in the Arabian Gulf, Western architects and engineers were invited to redesign and plan some Gulf cities again.
However, the engineers and planners brought with them Western models of housing and did not take into account the geographical nature of the place, its privacy, or its urban heritage.
As a result, traditional courtyard houses were replaced by Western-style dwellings that often lacked attention to energy or material efficiency.
But the question is, how did these people live before the arrival of cooling devices?
The answer lies in the building materials imported from the environment, which were made mainly of clay or sand and did not absorb heat as much as concrete blocks used today. The design of houses also differed, as new designs did not take into account traditional ventilation openings or old courtyards.
Sahin Akin, a researcher at the Industrial Environment Program at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, added that traditional dwellings were more flexible and environmentally friendly, as local materials such as clay and wood were used in their construction.
Read More: https://www.newarab.com
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