Maps Highlight Urgent Need to Cool Overheated Streets

We've just lived through the world's hottest year on record, as well as the hottest decade on record.

And yet, we keep building our cities out of materials that get incredibly hot during heatwaves - which also stay hot well into the night. For example, unshaded asphalt can reach temperatures of 75°C during a heatwave.

This is why cities experience the 'urban heat island effect' - a striking phenomenon which makes cities 4-10 degrees hotter than the countryside.

During a succession of recent heatwaves in Perth, the city experienced seven days above 40°C in February alone. At these temperatures, heat-related illnesses weigh on the economy and can be a deadly threat to vulnerable communities.

Energy demand goes through the roof, often crashing the grid and causing blackouts, while our streets become desolate.

So, what can cities do about heatwaves, and the urban heat island effect?

There's lots of excellent research that tells us that a crucial part of the response is planting trees - and a lot of them. A recent study found that more than 40 per cent canopy cover is required just to negate the heating effects of asphalt and concrete.

If planting trees is like installing natural air-conditioning, then laying asphalt is like doing star jumps while wearing a thick woolly jumper.

Currently the world is doing both.

We're planting trees and building whole new suburbs with vast expanses of unshaded asphalt, plus black, heat-absorbing roofs on our houses. The development of apartment buildings follows a similar pattern: inner city areas might be becoming more pedestrian friendly and 'buzzy', but our streets are mostly car-oriented, which means we keep all the asphalt and concrete.

With tree planting efforts barely keeping pace with tree losses, we're going to want to not only up our urban forestry budgets, but also look at the other side of the equation: all that asphalt.

Heat score by building

Our latest Map of the Month focuses on this issue. Using detailed data from Geoscape Australia, for every building in Metropolitan Melbourne, we've calculated the area around each structure that is made of asphalt and concrete.

We've the assigned a colour to each building to indicate whether it's getting natural air-conditioning or wearing that metaphorical woolly jumper.

If your house is mostly surrounded by asphalt and concrete, it'll show up as dark red. At the other end of the scale, if you're lucky enough to be surrounded by trees and vegetation, you'll see a lot of blue in your neighbourhood.

We also mapped neutral materials (grass and bare soil) and factored these into our scoring. Because we are looking at the impact of different kinds of open space around buildings, we haven't included the heat impact of the buildings themselves, which can also add to the urban heat island effect.

The results are striking.

In total, we have surrounded our homes and workplaces with 271 square kilometres of asphalt and concrete, an area the size of central Paris and central Brussels put together.

More than half of all the buildings in Melbourne - over 1.5 million structures - are surrounded with land that's at least a third concrete and asphalt.

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