4-9 September 2022, Bonn, Germany
EMS Annual Meeting Abstracts
Vol. 19, EMS2022-83, 2022
https://doi.org/10.5194/ems2022-83
EMS Annual Meeting 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

A global map of Local Climate Zones to support earth system modelling and urban scale environmental science

Matthias Demuzere1, Jonas Kittner1, Alberto Martilli2, Gerald Mills3, Christian Moede1, Iain D Stewart4, Jasper van Vliet5, and Benjamin Bechtel1
Matthias Demuzere et al.
  • 1Urban Climatology Group, Department of Geography, Ruhr-University Bochum, Bochum, Germany
  • 2Environmental Department, CIEMAT, Spain
  • 3School of Geography, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
  • 4Global Cities Institute, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • 5Institute for Environmental Studies, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

There is a scientific consensus on the need for spatially detailed information on urban landscapes at a global scale. This data can support a range of environmental services, as cities are acknowledged as places of intense resource consumption and waste generation and foci of population and infrastructure that are exposed to multiple hazards of natural and anthropogenic origin. In the face of climate change, urban data is also required to explore future urbanisation pathways and urban design strategies, in order to lock in long-term resilience and sustainability, protecting cities from future decisions that could undermine their adaptability.

To serve this purpose, we present a 100m resolution global map of Local Climate Zones (LCZs), an universal urban typology that can distinguish urban areas on a holistic basis, accounting for the typical combination of micro-scale land-covers and associated physical properties. The global LCZ map, composed of 10 built and 7 natural land cover types, is generated by feeding an unprecedented amount of labeled training areas and earth observation imagery into lightweight random forest models. Its quality is assessed using a bootstrap cross validation alongside a thematic benchmark for 150 selected functional urban areas using independent global and open-source data on surface cover, surface imperviousness, building height, and anthropogenic heat.

As each LCZ type is associated with generic numerical descriptions of key urban canopy parameters that regulate atmospheric responses to urbanisation, the availability of this globally consistent and climate-relevant urban description is an important prerequisite for supporting model development and creating evidence-based climate-sensitive urban planning policies.

How to cite: Demuzere, M., Kittner, J., Martilli, A., Mills, G., Moede, C., Stewart, I. D., van Vliet, J., and Bechtel, B.: A global map of Local Climate Zones to support earth system modelling and urban scale environmental science, EMS Annual Meeting 2022, Bonn, Germany, 5–9 Sep 2022, EMS2022-83, https://doi.org/10.5194/ems2022-83, 2022.

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