Genyu Xu , Huihui Zhao , Jinglei Li , Chengfang Wang , Yurong Shi , Lingye Yao , Yaoning Yang , Jian Xu , Ruiqu Ma
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Urban heat island phenomenon significantly impacts urban thermal conditions, human well-being, and energy consumption, necessitating innovative urban thermal environment management approaches. This study introduces thermal environment control units (TECUs) to optimize urban thermal environments in territorial spatial planning, addressing the gap between current assessment tools and actionable, data-driven planning solutions. By leveraging the urban weather generator (UWG) model, we developed an optimization framework, dividing the central urban area of Guangzhou into 234 TECUs. The methodology involves UWG-based simulations and multi-objective parametric optimization. Analysis revealed significant spatial heterogeneity in thermal performance indicators: urban heat island intensity (0.87 °C-2.42 °C), universal thermal climate index (17.1 °C-27.0 °C), and cooling energy demand (5.32–28.76 W/m²). A case study optimization of a representative TECU demonstrated simultaneous improvements in all indicators through parameter tuning, including building height, density, and green coverage. The TECU approach bridges micro-scale thermal phenomena and macro-scale urban planning, providing a quantitative basis for incorporating thermal performance into the planning system. This methodology offers a pathway toward climate-resilient and thermally comfortable urban environments, addressing the challenges of rapid urbanization and climate change. The findings have significant implications for urban policy, design practices, and future research in creating sustainable and livable cities.
期刊介绍:
Sustainable Cities and Society (SCS) is an international journal that focuses on fundamental and applied research to promote environmentally sustainable and socially resilient cities. The journal welcomes cross-cutting, multi-disciplinary research in various areas, including:
1. Smart cities and resilient environments;
2. Alternative/clean energy sources, energy distribution, distributed energy generation, and energy demand reduction/management;
3. Monitoring and improving air quality in built environment and cities (e.g., healthy built environment and air quality management);
4. Energy efficient, low/zero carbon, and green buildings/communities;
5. Climate change mitigation and adaptation in urban environments;
6. Green infrastructure and BMPs;
7. Environmental Footprint accounting and management;
8. Urban agriculture and forestry;
9. ICT, smart grid and intelligent infrastructure;
10. Urban design/planning, regulations, legislation, certification, economics, and policy;
11. Social aspects, impacts and resiliency of cities;
12. Behavior monitoring, analysis and change within urban communities;
13. Health monitoring and improvement;
14. Nexus issues related to sustainable cities and societies;
15. Smart city governance;
16. Decision Support Systems for trade-off and uncertainty analysis for improved management of cities and society;
17. Big data, machine learning, and artificial intelligence applications and case studies;
18. Critical infrastructure protection, including security, privacy, forensics, and reliability issues of cyber-physical systems.
19. Water footprint reduction and urban water distribution, harvesting, treatment, reuse and management;
20. Waste reduction and recycling;
21. Wastewater collection, treatment and recycling;
22. Smart, clean and healthy transportation systems and infrastructure;