Installation of 10 black globe temperature sensors in Basel

meteoblue continues its research in the city climate area and now investigates apparent temperature in the city of Basel.

In 2019, meteoblue installed a dense network of temperature and precipitation sensors to monitor the climate within the city. The project started in Zurich and Basel and was extended to many more cities. The network in Basel is now used as a living lab and is continuously expanding. In July 2023, we installed 10 black globe temperature sensors in the city centre to assess the heat vulnerability on a small scale.

The black globe temperature sensors measure the mean radiant temperature that reflects the apparent temperature of human bodies, which is the perceived temperature that people experience, considering the influence of shading effects from trees or buildings.

As a first sample test area, two different locations were selected. One location (second screenshot) is a park where one sensor is installed under a tree, and another sensor is exposed to the sun. The second location (third screenshot) is a street in which one sensor is set up on the street's southern side (shaded from high buildings) and one sensor on the northern side of the street (fewer shading effects).

The first results indicate high differences between shaded (green line) and non-shaded (black line) locations and underline the importance of planting trees and ensuring enough shaded areas in cities. The mean radiant temperatures of the sensor on the sunny footwalk reached up to 49°C (2023-07-11). In contrast, the shaded footwalk on the other side of the street reached a maximum 36°C in the analysed time period.

The described differences in apparent temperatures on a small scale influence the level of thermal stress for individual locations. Thermal stress describes the effect on material or human bodies caused by temperatures. Scientists typically use 9 different levels to categorize thermal stress, as listed in the table (the second column shows the temperature ranges of each heat stress level).

The table demonstrates that on the sunny side of the Horburgstrasse, strong or extreme heat stress was measured in more than 20 % (70 hours) of the analysed period. This can be reduced by shading the street (e.g. planting trees), which is done on the other side of the street. There, strong and extreme heat stress was only measured in 3.2 % (10 hours) of the analysed time. Similar results were found for the Erlenmatt area (last 2 columns).

Since thermal stress directly impacts human comfort, it needs to be considered when planning adaptation measures in urban environments. These first results are now considered for the project's next steps.

Comments

Posted on 2023-08-18 20:56:26 by afrieuro

This is highly interesting.. I've had relatives and friends that lived in concrete jungles in the US/Germany and thought of a sad wow.. But going to Paris was a different beast, its climate varied.. spontaneously.. However, overall its generally hotter being around tall/larger buildings.. More condensed buildings/structures without trees/greenery in the near is terribly hot.. Lots of people died in Paris a few years ago from heat related issues.. So, with your globe experiment, the shade temperature varies and without they become basically the same +-.. I wonder how the measurements work with insulated concrete structures vs non insulated ones..

Posted on 2023-10-25 13:21:58 by Bici

I am surprised that shading by a tree does not reduce the temperature more. Was it a small, isolated tree only? Please run the same experiment also at a site that is shaded by an ordinary parasol. I bet that shading by a parasol is much less effective than shading by a (large) tree.

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