Impact of 2050 tree shading strategies on building cooling demands

Q1 Engineering Buildings & cities Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.5334/bc.353
Agatha Czekajlo, Julieta Alva, Jeri Szeto, Cynthia Girling, Ron Kellett
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Abstract

As urban heatwaves become more severe, frequent and longer, cities seek adaptive building cooling measures. Although passive building design, energy-efficient materials and technologies and mechanical means are proven cooling methods, the potential of nature-based solutions (particularly trees as shading elements) has been understudied despite its significant opportunity. Using a new framework to explore this at the neighbourhood level, three future (2050) potential tree planting strategies are modelled for increasing tree volume and canopy cover and their impacts assessed for summer building-level solar radiation absorption (SRA) and building cooling energy demand (BCED) for a densifying neighbourhood in Vancouver, Canada. The boldest tree planting strategy, with 287% more trees than baseline and 16% canopy cover, reduced neighbourhood-scale total SRA (22%) and BCED (48%) over a no-trees scenario. BCED reductions of up to 64% for retrofitted/redeveloped buildings and 53–79% for low/medium-height buildings (mostly single-family residential) were associated with targeted south-side tree planting. Taller/larger buildings (predominantly mixed use) and buildings along north–south-oriented streets (mainly commercial and mixed use) encountered more tree shading challenges and would require more site-specific interventions. The methodology presented provides a framework to assess current and potential future shading and cooling energy benefits through various tree planting strategies. Practice relevance This research illustrates the tree shading and cooling potential to improve indoor liveability, reduce energy demand and reduce vulnerabilities amidst mounting extreme heat risks. This novel framework and method can be used by planners and urban designers to understand the potential cooling reduction and to develop tree planting and management strategies for effective shading and indoor cooling at the neighbourhood scale. Based on a case study neighbourhood in Vancouver for 2050 climate scenarios, this research shows increased tree volume and canopy cover can significantly reduce building SRA and BCED during the summer. The level of tree shading impact on buildings’ SRA and BCED was associated with the intensity and location of tree planting, but also the relative amount of lower height (and smaller) buildings. The boldest tree planting strategy yielded a 48% reduction in energy demand for cooling.
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2050年树木遮阳策略对建筑降温需求的影响
随着城市热浪变得更加严重、频繁和持续时间更长,城市寻求适应性建筑降温措施。虽然被动式建筑设计、节能材料和技术以及机械手段是经过验证的冷却方法,但基于自然的解决方案(特别是树木作为遮阳元素)的潜力尚未得到充分研究,尽管它有很大的机会。使用一个新的框架在社区层面探索这一问题,本文模拟了三种未来(2050年)潜在的植树策略,以增加树木体积和树冠覆盖,并评估了它们对加拿大温哥华一个致密社区夏季建筑水平太阳辐射吸收(SRA)和建筑冷却能源需求(BCED)的影响。最大胆的植树策略,比基线增加287%的树木和16%的树冠覆盖率,比无树情景减少了社区尺度的总SRA(22%)和BCED(48%)。在改造/重建的建筑物中,减少高达64%的BCED,在低/中高建筑物(主要是独户住宅)中,减少53.79%的BCED与南侧植树有关。较高/较大的建筑(主要是混合用途)和沿南北街道的建筑(主要是商业和混合用途)遇到了更多的树木遮阳挑战,需要更多的场地特定干预。提出的方法提供了一个框架,通过各种植树策略评估当前和潜在的未来遮阳和冷却能源效益。这项研究说明了树木遮阳和降温的潜力,以提高室内宜居性,减少能源需求,并减少在日益增加的极端高温风险中的脆弱性。这种新颖的框架和方法可以被规划师和城市设计师用来了解潜在的冷却减少,并在社区尺度上开发有效遮阳和室内冷却的植树和管理策略。基于对2050年气候情景的温哥华社区的案例研究,本研究表明,增加树木体积和树冠覆盖可以显着降低夏季建筑SRA和BCED。树木遮阳水平对建筑性能的影响;SRA和BCED与树木种植的强度和位置有关,但也与低高度(和较小)建筑物的相对数量有关。最大胆的植树策略减少了48%的制冷能源需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
25 weeks
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