Czekajlo, A; Alva, J; Szeto, J; Girling, C and Kellett, R (2023) Impact of 2050 tree shading strategies on building cooling demands. Buildings and Cities, 4(1), pp. 817-837. ISSN 2632-6655
Abstract
As urban heatwaves become more severe, frequent and longer, cities seek adaptive building cooling measures. Although passive building design, energy-efficient materials and technologies and mechanical means are proven cooling methods, the potential of nature-based solutions (particularly trees as shading elements) has been understudied despite its significant opportunity. Using a new framework to explore this at the neighbourhood level, three future (2050) potential tree planting strategies are modelled for increasing tree volume and canopy cover and their impacts assessed for summer building-level solar radiation absorption (SRA) and building cooling energy demand (BCED) for a densifying neighbourhood in Vancouver, Canada. The boldest tree planting strategy, with 287% more trees than baseline and 16% canopy cover, reduced neighbourhood-scale total SRA (22%) and BCED (48%) over a no-trees scenario. BCED reductions of up to 64% for retrofitted/redeveloped buildings and 53–79% for low/medium-height buildings (mostly single-family residential) were associated with targeted south-side tree planting. Taller/ larger buildings (predominantly mixed use) and buildings along north–south-oriented streets (mainly commercial and mixed use) encountered more tree shading challenges and would require more site-specific interventions. The methodology presented provides a framework to assess current and potential future shading and cooling energy benefits through various tree planting strategies.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | Canada; cities; climate adaptation; cooling; energy demand; municipal policy; nature-based solutions; neighbourhood planning; trees; urban energy model |
Date Deposited: | 11 Apr 2025 12:43 |
Last Modified: | 11 Apr 2025 12:43 |