UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — A new NASA-funded project will support the development of an internet-based design and planning-decision support platform that will help equitably address urban heat management at the building, neighborhood and city scales.
Travis Flohr, assistant professor of landscape architecture in the Penn State College of Arts and Architecture’s Stuckeman School, is a co-principal investigator on the two-year, $250,000 project that seeks to establish processes that incorporate the science of urban heat – its causes, solutions and impacts on vulnerable communities – into community planning solutions and policymaking.
Flohr’s role in the research focuses on devising scenario planning tools to develop tree planting programs as part of heat mitigation strategies. He’ll be looking at what it takes to get trees to grow, survive and thrive in urban areas and how the street environment, or streetscape, should be constructed to mitigate heat.
“What we are trying to do is to move from analysis-ready data to decision-ready data. That way it’s ready for people to make decisions about the best steps to take to mitigate heat without needing the expertise or the skills to produce the analysis and then interpret it themselves,” said Flohr.
The hope for the research team is to develop a data-driven tool that urban developers can use to make decisions about where to invest and where to guide resources to strategically reduce and offset the effects of urban heat islands, where temperatures are much higher than outlying areas. The tool would also be used by planners writing policy, zoning codes or building code requirements so they could apply the strategies in broader, systemic ways.
“Our hope is that we can move from unit scale to the building scale to the parcel scale and so landowners, building owners and renters that come into an area prone to heat island effect would have access to be able to see what they could do themselves to cool things down, such as put a cool roof in or plant trees or install a green wall. They would know what the best bang for their buck would be in terms of investing in their space,” added Flohr.
Flohr, who has done extensive research into how trees help cool the urban landscape, joins urban climatologists, policymakers, social scientists and community advocacy groups that are looking at the neighboring cities of New York and Jersey City, New Jersey, where policies have been implemented to mitigate extreme heat and can be tracked over time.