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Urban Spatial Patterns and Heat Exposure in the Mediterranean City of Tel Aviv

Moshe Mandelmilch, Michal Ferenz, Noa Mandelmilch, Oded Potchter

2020Atmosphere41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study aims to examine the effect of urban spatial patterns on heat exposure in the city of Tel Aviv using multiple methodologies, Local Climate Zones (LCZ), meteorological measurements, and remote sensing. A Local Climate Zone map of Tel Aviv was created using Geographic Information System (GIS), and satellite images were used to identify the spatial patterns of the urban heat island (UHI). Climatic variables were measured by fixed meteorological stations and by mobile cross-section. Surface and wall temperatures were obtained by satellite images and a hand-held infrared camera. Meteorological measurements at a height of 2 m showed that during midday the city is ~3.6 °C warmer than the surrounding rural area. The cooling effect of parks was evident only during the hot hours of the day (9:00–17:00). Land Surface Temperature in the southern part of the city was hotter by ~7–9 °C compared to the northern part due to lack of urban vegetation. Hot spots were found in compact midrise forms (LCZ 2) that are not ideal from the climatological perspective. Whereas compact low-rise forms (LCZ 3) were less heat vulnerable. The results of this study suggest that climatologists can provide planners and architects with scientific insight into the causes of and solutions for urban climatic heat exposure.

Topics & Concepts

Urban heat islandUrban climatologyClimatologyEnvironmental scienceSatelliteTel avivMediterranean climateMeteorologyUrban climatePhysical geographyClimate changeVegetation (pathology)GeographyRemote sensingUrban planningGeologyAerospace engineeringPathologyEcologyBiologyArchaeologyEngineeringLibrary scienceOceanographyComputer scienceMedicineUrban Heat Island MitigationUrban Green Space and HealthNoise Effects and Management
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