Urban Infrastructure Design and Heat Vulnerability: Rethinking Infrastructure in Mesa, Arizona
As the number of heat waves are expected to increase significantly into the future in the U.S. Southwest, new insight is needed into how urban infrastructure can be repositioned to protect people. In the Phoenix metro area infrastructure have largely been deployed over the past half century, during a time when climate change was not a concern. Now, as the county struggles to protect people from heat, there is a need to reassess how existing and new infrastructure can be positioned to reduce health impacts while improving sustainability. Using a neighborhood in Mesa, Arizona as a case study, we assess how changes to transportation infrastructure, building infrastructure, and landscaping can reduce heat exposure. A number of strategies are considered including the optimal deployment of heat refuges, deploying less convective surface materials, and deploying more thermally preferable building materials. The suite of strategies could be considered by cities throughout the Phoenix metro area.
- Author (aut): Al Hashemi, Mawdah
- Author (aut): Beckley, Michelle
- Author (aut): Begiebing, Lyle
- Author (aut): Buonacurio, Daniel
- Author (aut): Burson, Ariane
- Author (aut): Carothers, William
- Author (aut): Hawkes, Trevor
- Author (aut): Hutchins, Maya
- Author (aut): Khaire, Abhay
- Author (aut): Kosko, Christopher
- Author (aut): McClellan, Hayden
- Author (aut): Meisenheimer, Jospeh
- Author (aut): Messina, Matthew
- Author (aut): Rai, Ankitha
- Author (aut): Rayes, Kevin
- Author (aut): Robinson, Christopher
- Author (aut): Strait, John
- Author (aut): Syed, Furquan
- Author (aut): Thwaini, Talal
- Author (aut): Wilson, Matthew
- Contributor (ctb): Arizona State University. School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment
- Contributor (ctb): Arizona State University. Center for Earth Systems Engineering and Management