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Surface urban heat island in South Korea's new towns with different urban planning

Authors
Lee, KyungilKim, YoonjiSung, Hyun ChanKim, Seung HeeJeon, Seong Woo
Issue Date
May-2022
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Urban heat island; Land use land cover change; CA-Markov model; Remote sensing; Urban planning
Citation
ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT, v.194, no.5
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT
Volume
194
Number
5
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/141774
DOI
10.1007/s10661-022-09967-w
ISSN
0167-6369
Abstract
A new town is strategically built within a short period compared to naturally developed cities. It is considered an appropriate study area for analyzing the urban climate problems such as surface urban heat islands (SUHIs) that is differently generated according to urban planning and development. In this study, we suggest comprehensive method for determining and comparing changes in surface UHI distribution during 1989-2048 in two new towns with different urban planning. First, a substantial increase in built-up areas was observed from 1989 (< 5%) to 2018 (> 40%) in both new towns. However, SUHI phenomenon-increasing patterns were different of about 12.25% depending on urban planning and urban morphology. Results also showed the importance of vertical and horizontal structures which can have a great influence on SUHI intensity and accordingly, the difference in SUHI distribution between two new towns was confirmed. Moreover, without effective mitigation, the built-up area in both new towns is estimated to increase to approximately 60%, and the SUHI intensity in most areas to increase by 4 degrees C in 2048. In addition, the spread and intensification of the SUHI phenomenon are predicted to be greater due to the characteristics of the building structure and the active urban expansion. Thus, these results combined with architectural assessment models can improve the understanding of thermal environmental impacts of urbanization and provide directions for sustainable urban development and renovation.
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