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| Autore: |
Ulpiani Giulia
|
| Titolo: |
The Built Environment in a Changing Climate : Interactions, Challenges and Perspectives
|
| Pubblicazione: | Basel, Switzerland, : MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2021 |
| Descrizione fisica: | 1 online resource (234 p.) |
| Soggetto topico: | Research & information: general |
| Soggetto non controllato: | adaptive comfort |
| Australia | |
| barriers | |
| building energy performance | |
| building envelope | |
| buildings | |
| built environment | |
| bushfire smoke | |
| cities | |
| climate | |
| climate change | |
| climate change adaptation | |
| coastal cities | |
| decarbonization | |
| densification | |
| dynamical downscaling of climate models | |
| energy | |
| energy efficiency | |
| extreme heat | |
| filtration | |
| focus group discussion | |
| future scenarios | |
| future weather data | |
| heat stress from outside | |
| heat-related mortality | |
| indoor air quality | |
| indoor environments | |
| long-term performance | |
| Mediterranean climate | |
| mitigation | |
| multi-level office buildings | |
| n/a | |
| near-zero energy buildings | |
| outdoor space | |
| population | |
| radiation environment | |
| sample year | |
| statistical downscaling of climate models | |
| structural equation modeling | |
| Tehran | |
| temperature | |
| thermal comfort | |
| thermal environment | |
| tropics | |
| UHI effect | |
| urban heat | |
| urban heat island | |
| urban heat island intensity | |
| urban management | |
| urban modelling | |
| urban resilience | |
| urbanisation | |
| wind environment | |
| Persona (resp. second.): | ZinziMichele |
| UlpianiGiulia | |
| Sommario/riassunto: | The papers included in this Special Issue tackle multiple aspects of how cities, districts, and buildings could evolve along with climate change and how this would impact our way of conceiving and applying design criteria, policies, and urban plans. Despite the multidisciplinary nature of the collection, some transversal take-home messages emerge: • Today's energy-efficient paradigms may lose their virtuosity in the future unless accurate estimates of future scenarios are used to design modelling platforms and to inform legislative frameworks; • Acting at the local scale is key. Future climate change adaptation will be implemented at the local level. Overlooking regional and local specificities will contribute to inaccurate and inefficient action plans. As such, the smaller scale will become vital in predicting future urban metabolic rates and corresponding comfort-driven strategies; • Energy poverty, heat vulnerability, and social injustice are emerging as critical factors for planning and acting for future-proof cities on par of micro- and meso-climatological factors; • Given that the impacts of climate change will persist for many years, adaptation to this phenomenon should be prioritized by removing any prominent barrier and by enabling combinations of different mitigation technologies. These topics will receive a global reach in few decades, since also developing and underdeveloped countries are starting their fight against local climate change, with cities at the forefront. |
| Altri titoli varianti: | Built Environment in a Changing Climate |
| Titolo autorizzato: | The Built Environment in a Changing Climate ![]() |
| Formato: | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione: | Inglese |
| Record Nr.: | 9910557350103321 |
| Lo trovi qui: | Univ. Federico II |
| Opac: | Controlla la disponibilità qui |