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Green Roofs and Walls Design Intended to Mitigate Climate Change in Urban Areas across All Continents

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Green roofs and walls can mitigate the environmental and climate change of a city. They can decrease the urban heat island (UHI), reduce greenhouse gas emissions, fix environmental pollutants, manage urban stormwater runoff, attenuate noise, and enhance biodiversity. This paper aims to analyse green roofs and walls in the possible mitigation of urban climate change and compare it by continent. Green roofs and walls might decrease the air temperature in a city up to 11.3 °C and lower the thermal transmittance into buildings up to 0.27 W/m2 K. Urban greening might sequester up to 375 g C·m−2 per two growing seasons and increase stormwater retention up to 100%. Urban greening might attenuate city noise up to 9.5 dB. The results found green roofs and walls of varied effectiveness in ameliorating climate extremes present in host continents. Results show urban planners might focus on green roofs and walls exposure to attenuate temperatures in hotter Asian cities and advise greening in cities in Africa and Asia. European and American designers might optimise runoff water capacity of green roofs and walls systems and use greening in old buildings to improve insulation. Recommendations are made based on the study to concentrate certain designs to have greater impact on priority climate challenges, whether UHI or stormwater related. This study provides information for decision and policymakers regarding design and exposure of green roofs and walls to mitigate urban environmental and climate change.
Title: Green Roofs and Walls Design Intended to Mitigate Climate Change in Urban Areas across All Continents
Description:
Green roofs and walls can mitigate the environmental and climate change of a city.
They can decrease the urban heat island (UHI), reduce greenhouse gas emissions, fix environmental pollutants, manage urban stormwater runoff, attenuate noise, and enhance biodiversity.
This paper aims to analyse green roofs and walls in the possible mitigation of urban climate change and compare it by continent.
Green roofs and walls might decrease the air temperature in a city up to 11.
3 °C and lower the thermal transmittance into buildings up to 0.
27 W/m2 K.
Urban greening might sequester up to 375 g C·m−2 per two growing seasons and increase stormwater retention up to 100%.
Urban greening might attenuate city noise up to 9.
5 dB.
The results found green roofs and walls of varied effectiveness in ameliorating climate extremes present in host continents.
Results show urban planners might focus on green roofs and walls exposure to attenuate temperatures in hotter Asian cities and advise greening in cities in Africa and Asia.
European and American designers might optimise runoff water capacity of green roofs and walls systems and use greening in old buildings to improve insulation.
Recommendations are made based on the study to concentrate certain designs to have greater impact on priority climate challenges, whether UHI or stormwater related.
This study provides information for decision and policymakers regarding design and exposure of green roofs and walls to mitigate urban environmental and climate change.

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