Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7461422 | Landscape and Urban Planning | 2014 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
The tmrt of two green walls (Green Wall A and Green Wall B) was measured up to 2 m away at intervals of 0.5 m. Two datasets were obtained, one consisting of tmrt, surface and air temperature collected from the two green walls and the second for just green wall A and the exposed concrete wall after Green Wall B was removed. tmrt was measured using customised globe thermometers calibrated for local use. Data was analysed using a GIS, thus enabling convenient visual comparison between tmrt profiles at different times. The diurnal tmrt profile was altered significantly due to the installation of vertical greenery. When both green walls were present the peak tmrt occurred at 15:00 h, but with more concrete exposed when one wall was removed, the peak occurred at 17:00 h and was 10.9-12.9° higher at 0.5 m away from the wall. Vertical greenery thus helped to reduce tmrt both during the day and at night, to varying extents. The proposed methodology enables systematic quantification of the effects of vertical greenery on tmrt.
Keywords
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Authors
Tan Chun Liang, Wong Nyuk Hien, Steve Kardinal Jusuf,