Dokumen

Strategies for cooling Singapore

Strategies for Cooling Singapore: A Catalogue of 80+ Measures to Mitigate Urban Heat Island and Improve Outdoor Thermal Comfort,” is a foundational report from the Cooling Singapore research project (initiated in 2017).

Led by Lea A. Ruefenacht and Juan A. Acero, this catalogue serves as a comprehensive toolkit for policymakers, urban planners, and architects. It identifies 86 specific measures tailored for tropical, high-density environments like Singapore.

The 7 Strategic Clusters

The measures are organized into seven distinct categories, balancing “passive” design (preventing heat) with “active” interventions (removing heat).

ClusterKey Focus Areas
VegetationGreen roofs/walls, vertical greenery, sky gardens, and “green corridors” to facilitate air movement and provide evapotranspiration.
Urban GeometryOptimizing building height variation, orientation, and “breezeways” to enhance wind flow and reduce heat trapping in street canyons.
Water FeaturesUsing lakes, ponds, wetlands, and fountains as “cool sinks” that absorb heat and lower ambient temperatures through evaporation.
Materials & SurfacesCool paints/coatings with high solar reflectance (albedo), permeable pavements, and specialized building materials that resist heat retention.
ShadingFixed and movable shading structures, building overhangs, and prioritized shaded pathways for pedestrians and cyclists.
TransportReducing “anthropogenic heat” by transitioning to electric vehicles, improving public transit, and promoting active mobility (walking/cycling).
EnergyReducing heat exhaust from air conditioning units, implementing district cooling systems, and improving building energy efficiency.

Key Concepts in the Catalogue

The report evaluates each measure based on two primary metrics:

  1. Urban Heat Island (UHI) Mitigation: Its ability to reduce the temperature difference between the city and its rural surroundings.
  2. Outdoor Thermal Comfort (OTC): How the measure improves the actual sensation of heat for a person walking on the street (often measured via the Universal Thermal Climate Index or PET).

Practical Impact

This research led to the development of the Digital Urban Climate Twin (DUCT), a sophisticated simulation tool that allows planners to “test” these 86 measures in a virtual version of Singapore before implementing them in the real world.

source:

https://files.fm/f/9qky6yd2bg

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