Policy Solution
Cool corridors
Commitment
Overview:
Summary: Green and blue infrastructure immediately adjacent and parallel to prevailing winds cools corridors. Incorporating addtional urban design principles in zoning can be used to optimize natural wind flow for cooling and prevent heat from radiating off of other buildings.
Implementation: Update design guidelines to encourage creation of cool corridors.
Considerations for Use: This is most applicable to new developments and is harder to implement in existing, highly dense areas. Natural landscape features like hills, valleys, or bodies of water can also function as ventilation corridors.
- Policy Levers:
CommitmentGovernments set ambitious goals or targets to guide prioritization and investment. - Trigger Points:
City planning processesIncludes city initiatives such as the development of climate action plan, pathway to zero-energy, master plan, transit plan, energy mapping etc.Evaluating or initiating major city infrastructure projectsIncludes projects such as city transit, street or utilities construction / re-construction etc.Introducing new or updated zoning/codesIncludes codes, zoning requirements or by-laws pertaining to urban planning and building construction activity. - Intervention Type:
Buildings and Built Form - Sectors:
Buildings, Informal Settlements
- Target Beneficiaries:
Property owners, Residents - Phase of Impact:
Risk reduction and mitigation - Metrics:
Decrease in surface temperature, Energy savings
Impact:
- Ljubljana (UNEP, Pg 96)
- Skysong in Scottsdale, AZ (UNEP, Pg 40)
- Medellin (UNEP, Pg 98)
Case Studies:
Implementation:
- Intervention Scale:
City, District, Neighborhood, Regional, Site - Authority and Governance:
City government, State/provincial government - Implementation Timeline:
Medium-term (3-9 Years) - Implementation Stakeholders:
City government, Private developers, State/provincial government - Funding Sources:
private investment, Public investment - Capacity to Act:
High
- Cost-Benefit:
High - Public Good:
High - GHG Reduction:
Low - Co-benefits (Climate/Environmental):
Improve stormwater management, Reduce greenhouse gas emissions - Co-benefits (Social):
Improve the public realm, Save on utilities