2022
DOI: 10.1029/2022ef002682
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Integrated Assessment of Urban Overheating Impacts on Human Life

Abstract: Urban overheating, driven by global climate change and urban development, is a major contemporary challenge that substantially impacts urban livability and sustainability. Overheating represents a multifaceted threat to the well‐being, performance, and health of individuals as well as the energy efficiency and economy of cities, and it is influenced by complex interactions between building, city, and global scale climates. In recent decades, extensive discipline‐specific research has characterized urban heat a… Show more

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Cited by 85 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…Building characteristics such as footprint area, country or number of floors, can be used to differentiate the value and the vulnerability per object, and hence improve current high-resolution risk modeling approaches 58 . Finally, urban overheating negatively impacts health and well-being 59 . Better understanding the relationship between indoor and outdoor temperature on a large scale is crucial to understand indoor-heat risk on a building and floor level and provide decision-makers with quantitative assessments of those risks.…”
Section: Usage Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Building characteristics such as footprint area, country or number of floors, can be used to differentiate the value and the vulnerability per object, and hence improve current high-resolution risk modeling approaches 58 . Finally, urban overheating negatively impacts health and well-being 59 . Better understanding the relationship between indoor and outdoor temperature on a large scale is crucial to understand indoor-heat risk on a building and floor level and provide decision-makers with quantitative assessments of those risks.…”
Section: Usage Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, conducting ground-level site visits to evaluate the quality and accessibility of green spaces identified using satellite imagery can provide a more comprehensive understanding of potential EJ disparities and health impact [162]. As for temperature usage, remotely-sensed measurements of surface skin temperature are limited in their usability at scales relevant to human health [163]. For example, they are not fully representative of exposure experienced at 1-2 meters in height [124], and measurements are oftentimes biased toward horizontal surfaces and are unable to illustrate canopy layer air temperature [125] factors that are important in characterizing environmental health.…”
Section: Strengths and Limitations Of Satellite Data For Ej And Publi...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Climate change is leading to elevated global average temperatures and increased frequency and severity of heatwave events [1]. London is already experiencing extreme heat (EH) episodes, for example in 2022 when heatwave temperatures exceeded a record 40 • C, an event estimated 160 times more likely because of climate change [2].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%