国家绿色基础设施设施——一个专门的“生活实验室”,用于评估城市绿色基础设施的价值

Daniel Green, R. Stirling, C. Walsh, E. Starkey, Alethea Walker, A. Yildiz, Narryn Thaman, R. Dawson
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引用次数: 2

摘要

绿色基础设施(GI)为城市地区提供了多重综合效益,包括缓解城市的压力。通过在当地管理城市地表径流来减少城市洪水风险的基础设施系统。虽然地理标志的使用已被证明可以减轻洪水,但确定地理标志有效性的监测和可量化数据对于支持在城市中广泛采用地理标志至关重要,并为此类系统的设计和维护程序提供证据基础,并最终影响关键决策者。位于英国泰恩河畔纽卡斯尔的国家绿色基础设施(NGIF)是一个专门建造的、可公开访问的生活实验室。该项目于2017年由英国基础设施和城市研究合作博物馆资助。NGIF探索了树木、灌木和土壤等广泛的绿色特征如何帮助减少城市洪水,并使其对未来气候变化和城市压力更具弹性和可持续性。该设施拥有许多不同尺度的新型地理特征,通过密集的传感器网络进行监测,以便对关键的水文、气候和生物物理变量(例如降水、温度、土壤湿度、水深、径流和流出率)进行现场测量,这些变量能够提供可持续排水系统(SuDS)水文性能的量化证据。这些系统提供了关于如何使用SuDS和基于自然的解决方案来改善地表水管理,优化建筑供暖/制冷地热能以及如何将系统用于城市水处理的详细见解。横跨NGIF的地理特征包括一个实验性的 和功能齐全的沼泽,为该特征所在的泰恩河畔纽卡斯尔地区提供保护,10个渗滤仪生物保留细胞,一系列雨花园‘还有一个绿色屋顶监控系统。所有的实验特征都受到普遍的环境条件的影响,并作为功能齐全的GI系统,但条件也可以增强和模拟,以确保GI特征作为半受控的实验系统,以确定自然仪器记录之外的响应。所有环境数据均以高时间(< 5分钟)和空间分辨率记录,并可通过NGIF API实时公开访问。本演讲提供了NGIF的概述,并讨论了该网站目前正在进行的研究活动。提供了来自每个GI系统的数据,以展示和讨论它们在自然和模拟事件(包括极端事件)期间的表现和响应,并评估它们在应对局部气候变化方面的有效性。展望了未来的研究方向和合作机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
National Green Infrastructure Facility – a specialised ‘living laboratory’ to assess the value of urban green infrastructure

Green Infrastructure (GI) offers multiple and integrated benefits to urban areas, including relieving pressure on ‘grey’ infrastructure systems by locally managing surface runoff within cities to reduce the risk of urban flooding. Although the use of GI has been shown to attenuate flooding, monitored and quantifiable data determining the effectiveness of GI is imperative for supporting widespread adoption of GI within cities and to provide an evidence-base to inform the design and maintenance procedures of such systems and ultimately influence key decision makers .

The National Green Infrastructure Facility (NGIF) based in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK, is a purpose-built, publicly accessible, ‘living laboratory’ and demonstration site established in 2017, funded by the UK Collaboratorium for Research on Infrastructure and Cities. The NGIF explores how a wide range of green features such as trees, shrubs and soils can help reduce flooding in cities and make them more resilient and sustainable to future changes in climate and urban pressures. The facility hosts a number of novel GI features of varying scale, monitored with dense sensor networks to allow the in-situ measurement of key hydrological, climatic and biophysical variables (e.g. precipitation, temperature, soil moisture, water depth, runoff and outflow rates) which are able to provide quantified evidence of the hydrological performance of sustainable drainage systems (SuDS). Such systems generate detailed insights into how SuDS and nature-based solutions can be used to improve surface water management, optimise geo-energy for building heating/cooling and how systems can be used for urban water treatment.

GI features across the NGIF include an experimental  and fully functional swale, providing protection to the area of Newcastle-upon-Tyne in which the feature is located, 10 lysimeter bioretention cells, a series of rain-garden ‘ensembles’ and a monitored green roof system. All experimental features are subjected to prevalent environmental conditions and act as fully functional GI systems, but conditions can also be augmented and simulated to ensure that the GI features act as semi-controlled experimental systems to determine responses outside of the natural instrumented record. All environmental data is recorded at high temporal (< 5 minutes) and spatial resolution and is publicly accessible in real-time via the NGIF API.

This presentation provides an overview of the NGIF and discusses the current research activities taking place across the site. Data is presented from each of the GI systems to demonstrate and discuss their performance and responses during natural and simulated events, including extremes, and to assess their effectiveness in responding to localised changes in climate. Future research directions and collaborative opportunities are also highlighted.

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