4.5 Article

Influence of sky view factor on outdoor thermal environment and physiological equivalent temperature

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOMETEOROLOGY
Volume 59, Issue 3, Pages 285-297

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00484-014-0841-5

Keywords

Urban planning; Local-scale; Sky view factor; Outdoor thermal environment; Physiological equivalent temperature

Funding

  1. College Graduate Research & Innovation Projects of Jiangsu Province [CXLX12_0514]
  2. Ministry of Science & Technology of China [2010CB428506, 2012BAC23B01]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41175015]

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Sky view factor (SVF), which is an indicator of urban canyon geometry, affects the surface energy balance, local air circulation, and outdoor thermal comfort. This study focused on a continuous and long-term meteorological observation system to investigate the effects of SVF on outdoor thermal conditions and physiological equivalent temperature (PET) in the central business district (CBD) of Beijing (which is located within Chaoyang District), specifically addressed current knowledge gaps for SVF-PET relationships in cities with typical continental/microthermal climates. An urban sub-domain scale model and the RayMan model were used to diagnose wind fields and to calculate SVF and long-term PET, respectively. Analytical results show that the extent of shading contributes to variations in thermal perception distribution. Highly shaded areas (SVF < 0.3) typically exhibit less frequent hot conditions during summer, while enduring longer periods of cold discomfort in winter than moderately shaded areas (0.3 < SVF < 0.5) and slightly shaded areas (SVF > 0.5), and vice versa. Because Beijing has a monsoon-influenced humid continental climate with hot summers and long, cold, windy, and dry winters, a design project that ideally provides moderate shading should be planned to balance hot discomfort in summer and cold discomfort in winter, which effectively prolongs the comfort periods in outdoor spaces throughout the entire year. This research indicate that climate zone characteristics, urban environmental conditions, and thermal comfort requirements of residents must be accounted for in local-scale scientific planning and design, i.e., for urban canyon streets and residential estates.

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