Assessing Cool Corridor Heat Resilience Strategies for Human-Scale Transportation
Road pavement is a known contributor to the urban heat island effect. Several vendors are providing engineered pavements coatings – known as “cool pavement” - to reflect light and therefore heat to reduce the thermal load of roads. The City of Tucson is planning a pilot application of a cool pavement in Fall 2021 as a part of its Parks and Connections Bond work; the team has been working with the city and vendor(s) to set up an evaluation framework of the cool pavement. Few of these cool pavements have been evaluated outside lab conditions, particularly in the desert southwest. Lab testing tends to rely heavily on surface temperature measurements with the assumption that lower surface temperatures result in the pavement being less of a heat sink and thus lowers ambient temperatures in real-world practice. Further, while heat is detrimental to the pedestrian and cyclist experience and health, almost no research exists documenting the experience of the cool pavement on active travelers including their perception of heat. The research team proposes a pre/post, case/control quasi-experimental design to evaluate the impacts of the cool pavement on the following heat metrics: (1) Surface temperatures of the pavement; (2) Ambient temperatures of the area; and (3) Thermal comfort as measured by wet bulb globe temperature (WBGT) - Governmental occupational guidance for exertion for heat is based on studies in industrial settings using wet-bulb globe temperature (WBGT), a heat index that incorporates ambient air temperature, humidity, airflow, and radiant solar heat. Known as “thermal comfort”, this index better mirrors the human – and thus pedestrian and cyclist - experience. The team anticipates four 12-hour days in the field. Each day will include seven Kestrel 5400 stations for ambient and WBGT temperatures at least every minute and surface temperatures every hour. Data will be managed and analyzed in R; outputs will include basic summary statistics, graphics, and regression analysis. The team has steadily increased capacity for such research over the past 2 years. In summer of 2019, Iroz-Elardo and Keith piloted a methodology to investigate how shade structures and surface materials in school gardens and play structures influenced thermal comfort as measured with a WBGT instrument and thermal heat guns. In late-spring 2020, Keith and Iroz-Elardo applied this knowledge to evaluate heat risk at COVID-19 vaccine point of distribution (POD) drive-in centers in Tucson. One of the more interesting preliminary findings from the vaccine POD evaluation was the extent to which idling vehicles appear to raise the WBGT in outdoor settings due to both mechanical and radiant heat.
- Record URL:
Language
- English
Project
- Status: Active
- Funding: $165000
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Contract Numbers:
NITC-1483
69A3551747112
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Sponsor Organizations:
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Research and Technology
University Transportation Centers Program
Department of Transportation
Washington, DC United States 20590 -
Managing Organizations:
TREC at Portland State University
1900 SW Fourth Ave, Suite 175
P.O. Box 751
Portland, Oregon United States 97201 -
Performing Organizations:
College of Architecture, Planning, and Landscape Architecture
PO Box 210075
Tucson, AZ United States 85721 -
Principal Investigators:
Keith, Ladd
Iroz-Elardo, Nicole
Currans, Kristina
- Start Date: 20211001
- Expected Completion Date: 20231231
- Actual Completion Date: 0
- USDOT Program: University Transportation Centers
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Cooling; Heat resistant materials; Pavements; Temperature; Thermal analysis
- Geographic Terms: Tucson (Arizona)
- Subject Areas: Highways; Pavements;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01781408
- Record Type: Research project
- Source Agency: National Institute for Transportation and Communities
- Contract Numbers: NITC-1483, 69A3551747112
- Files: UTC, RIP
- Created Date: Sep 7 2021 10:42PM