ICUC12-865, updated on 21 May 2025
https://doi.org/10.5194/icuc12-865
12th International Conference on Urban Climate
© Author(s) 2025. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Upgrading the Urban Fabric: Novel Technologies for Mitigating Extreme Heat in Cities
Elie Bou-Zeid1, Xinjie Huang1, Erfan Hosseini1, Claudia Fabiani2, Chiara Chiatti2, Jyotirmoy Mandal1, Jiyun Song3,4, Anna Laura Pisello2, and Zhihua Wang5
Elie Bou-Zeid et al.
  • 1Civil and Environmental Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, United States of America
  • 2EAPLAB at CIRIAF – Interuniversity Research Center on Pollution and Environment, University of Perugia, Perugia, Italy.
  • 3Department of Mechanical Engineering, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China
  • 4State Key Laboratory of Water Resources Engineering and Management, Wuhan University, Wuhan, China
  • 5Civil and Environmental Engineering, Arizona State University, Princeton, United States of America

Urban population density, and its associated infrastructure and resource needs, create an environment unlike any other on Earth. Understanding and managing this “PoliSphere” has never been more urgent as cities become the central stage for confronting global challenges and the changing climate. As global warming alters our weather extremes, exacerbating heat waves, mitigating the urban heat islands that emerge in cities due to their form, function, and fabric is becoming ever more pressing. Fabric, it can be argued, is easier to modify and upgrade than form or function, and as such it has been the main target of heat mitigation efforts. Cool and green solutions have been studied widely and are clearly needed, but they cannot deliver all the cooling cities will require as the planet warms up and heat waves exacerbate. In this talk, we overview the design, modeling, and evaluation of cooling portfolios that include innovative materials and water-based measures for cooling cities. These include retroreflective façades, photovoltaic roofs, phosphorescent pigments, thermochromic roofs, phase change materials, misting, and water-retaining wet walls. We show how these emerging technologies can be effective in developed and developing, or wet and dry cities, making our urban environments more sustainable, resilient, livable, and equitable.

How to cite: Bou-Zeid, E., Huang, X., Hosseini, E., Fabiani, C., Chiatti, C., Mandal, J., Song, J., Pisello, A. L., and Wang, Z.: Upgrading the Urban Fabric: Novel Technologies for Mitigating Extreme Heat in Cities, 12th International Conference on Urban Climate, Rotterdam, The Netherlands, 7–11 Jul 2025, ICUC12-865, https://doi.org/10.5194/icuc12-865, 2025.

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