Litcius/Paper detail

Why and How Do Cities Plan for Extreme Heat?

C. J. Gabbe, Gregory Pierce, Emily Petermann, Ally Marecek

2021Journal of Planning Education and Research56 citationsDOI

Abstract

Heat is the deadliest weather-related hazard in the United States. This paper studies municipal heat adaptation using survey and planning data from California. We first analyze the characteristics of municipalities that innovate. Cities with heat-related policies have greater degrees of projected extreme heat, leadership support, environmental justice planning, and smaller Hispanic population shares. We then assess specific policy innovations of six large cities by plan type. Some strategies, including expanding tree canopies, have been widely adopted while others, such as cool walls, are rarely included. Findings suggest that planners can—and should—play a central role in heat adaptation planning.

Topics & Concepts

Plan (archaeology)Adaptation (eye)Extreme heatEnvironmental planningHazardGeographyLand-use planningEconomic JusticePopulationUrban planningClimate change adaptationClimate changeBusinessEnvironmental resource managementPolitical scienceEconomicsLand useSociologyEngineeringCivil engineeringPsychologyDemographyEcologyArchaeologyNeuroscienceLawBiologyClimate Change and Health ImpactsUrban Green Space and HealthUrban Heat Island Mitigation