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Urban development and pedestrian thermal comfort in Melbourne

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 03:48 authored by Elmira Jamei, Priyadarsini RajagopalanPriyadarsini Rajagopalan
In October 2013, 'Plan Melbourne" was released by the Victorian government to outline the vision for Melbourne's growth to the year 2050. The City of Melbourne's draft municipal strategic statement identified 'City North" as a great urban renewal area that can accommodate a significant part of the growth. Structure plans provide guidance to the community, planners, business, government and developers about the appropriate directions and opportunities for future changes in City North. Proposing street hierarchy, increasing the building heights, expanding the urban forest by increasing tree canopy coverage, implementing green roofs and overall transition from a low-rise to medium rise urban area are some of the strategies presented in structural plans. This study investigates the effect of future structural plans presented in 'Plan Melbourne" on pedestrian thermal comfort in City North for extreme hot summer days. A three-dimensional microclimatic modelling tool ENVI-met 3.1 was used to evaluate the outdoor human thermal environment for the existing and future scenarios proposed by the Victorian government. Field measurements were carried out to validate ENVI-met and examine its ability in addressing the research objectives. Structural plans were modelled t in three stages; increased building height, adding tree canopy coverage and adding green roofs. The study showed that deeper canyons, higher aspect ratios and lower sky view factors in future scenario contribute to lower level of mean radiant temperatures (42 C-64 C), compared to the existing scenario (49 C-60 C). Physiological equivalent temperature (PET) was improved by 1 C-4 C as a result of 'Increased building height" scenario. Increasing the tree canopy coverage caused 1 C-2 C reduction on PET level and adding a green roof did not show any improvement on PET at pedestrian level. Although the study showed a slight improvement in PET after implementing future structural plans, it was necessary to further imp

History

Journal

Solar Energy

Volume

144

Start page

681

End page

698

Total pages

18

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006070987

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-02-28

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