TY - JOUR
T1 - Exploring a Just and Diverse Urban Forests’ Capacity for Mitigating Future Mean Radiant Temperatures
AU - Flohr, Travis
AU - Garcia, Lara
AU - Figueiredo, Caio
AU - Heris, Mehdi
AU - Hoffman, Margaret
AU - Lindeman, Justine
AU - Wu, Hong
AU - Richardson, Lilliard
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Wichmann Verlag, VDE VERLAG GMBH.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - The Pittsburgh Metropolitan Region in Western Pennsylvania, U.S., like many cities globally, historically has an inequitably distributed urban forest and faced street tree biodiversity challenges. Additionally, Pittsburgh faces several barriers and threats to maintaining and expanding its urban tree cover, including pests, diseases, social acceptance, built environment obstacles, and climate change. To address these concerns, in 2012, Pittsburgh created an Urban Forest Master Plan setting equitable forest cover and biodiversity benchmarks. This paper documents the status of achieving these benchmarks and uses microclimate simulations to assess the capacity of these benchmarks in mitigating future mean radiant temperatures. Results demonstrate that the story of Pittsburgh’s urban forest cover, street tree biodiversity, and age diversity is complex, but inequities are primarily driven by income. However, if Pittsburgh can achieve its forest cover benchmarks, it can reduce its neighbourhoods’ 2050 mean radiant temperature below 2010 temperatures, even under climate change-fuelled extreme heat events. The process and results reported in this paper allow designers and decision-makers to calibrate localized urban forest benchmarks more effectively based on various future scenarios while ensuring the equitable distribution of heat mitigation.
AB - The Pittsburgh Metropolitan Region in Western Pennsylvania, U.S., like many cities globally, historically has an inequitably distributed urban forest and faced street tree biodiversity challenges. Additionally, Pittsburgh faces several barriers and threats to maintaining and expanding its urban tree cover, including pests, diseases, social acceptance, built environment obstacles, and climate change. To address these concerns, in 2012, Pittsburgh created an Urban Forest Master Plan setting equitable forest cover and biodiversity benchmarks. This paper documents the status of achieving these benchmarks and uses microclimate simulations to assess the capacity of these benchmarks in mitigating future mean radiant temperatures. Results demonstrate that the story of Pittsburgh’s urban forest cover, street tree biodiversity, and age diversity is complex, but inequities are primarily driven by income. However, if Pittsburgh can achieve its forest cover benchmarks, it can reduce its neighbourhoods’ 2050 mean radiant temperature below 2010 temperatures, even under climate change-fuelled extreme heat events. The process and results reported in this paper allow designers and decision-makers to calibrate localized urban forest benchmarks more effectively based on various future scenarios while ensuring the equitable distribution of heat mitigation.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85195672731&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - 10.14627/537752028
DO - 10.14627/537752028
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85195672731
SN - 2367-4253
VL - 2024
SP - 302
EP - 313
JO - Journal of Digital Landscape Architecture
JF - Journal of Digital Landscape Architecture
IS - 9
ER -