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research article

A spatially explicit approach to simulate urban heat mitigation with InVEST (v3.8.0)

Bosch, Marti  
•
Locatelli, Maxence
•
Hamel, Perrine
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June 11, 2021
Geoscientific Model Development

Mitigating urban heat islands has become an important objective for many cities experiencing heat waves. Despite notable progress, the spatial relationship between land use and/or land cover patterns and the distribution of air temperature remains poorly understood. This article presents a reusable computational workflow to simulate the spatial distribution of air temperature in urban areas from their land use and/or land cover data. The approach employs the InVEST urban cooling model, which estimates the cooling capacity of the urban fabric based on three biophysical mechanisms: tree shade, evapotranspiration and albedo. An automated procedure is proposed to calibrate the parameters of the model to best fit air temperature observations from monitoring stations. In a case study in Lausanne, Switzerland, spatial estimates of air temperature obtained with the calibrated model show that the urban cooling model outperforms spatial regressions based on satellite data. This represents two major advances in urban heat island modeling. First, unlike in black-box approaches, the calibrated parameters of the urban cooling model can be interpreted in terms of the physical mechanisms that they represent; therefore, they can help promote an understanding of how urban heat islands emerge in a particular context. Second, the urban cooling model requires only land use and/or land cover and reference temperature data and can, therefore, be used to evaluate synthetic scenarios such as master plans, urbanization prospects and climate scenarios. The proposed approach provides valuable insights into the emergence of urban heat islands which can serve to inform urban planning and assist the design of heat mitigation policies.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.5194/gmd-14-3521-2021
Web of Science ID

WOS:000662116300001

Author(s)
Bosch, Marti  
•
Locatelli, Maxence
•
Hamel, Perrine
•
Remme, Roy P.
•
Chenal, Jerome  
•
Joost, Stephane  
Date Issued

2021-06-11

Published in
Geoscientific Model Development
Volume

14

Issue

6

Start page

3521

End page

3537

Subjects

Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

•

Geology

•

land-surface temperature

•

air-temperature

•

island

•

vegetation

•

satellite

•

water

•

city

Note

This is an Open Access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License

Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
CEAT  
Available on Infoscience
July 3, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/179666
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