Exploring heat in the open space or reimagining the open space through the heat lens?
- Date & time
- –
- Speaker
- Shreya BanerjeeAssistant Professor at IIT Jodhpur
- Host
- UCL Institute for Environmental Design and Engineering
- Location
- Organisation
- UCL
Topics
About this talk
Urban warming and heatwaves are challenging the resilience of urban systems. Income inequality and uneven distribution of development and infrastructure further exacerbate this complexity in the Global South. In this context, most Asian cities face high-density urbanisation and often haphazardly placed outdoor spaces, although these cities are the most vulnerable to heat-related mortality and morbidity. Dr Shreya Banerjee navigates this duality using a mixed-method approach to explore sustainable heat scape in the outdoor spaces and streets of Asian megacities. Employing a combination of lived experiences, sensor-based data collection, observational meteorology, and exploratory analysis, she seeks to explore how we can inform heat justice and ensure access to heat-resilient outdoor spaces and streets for vulnerable demographics such as the elderly, street vendors and marginalised women. Drawing evidence from her fieldwork conducted in Kolkata, Mumbai, for street vendors; pedestrians and everyday commuters in Singapore; elderly public transit riders in Jodhpur; and women pedestrians in Jodhpur and Kathmandu; she identifies the drivers, barriers, and mechanisms of heat resilience corresponding to spatial, social, economic, physiological and microclimatic factors for varying cities and demographics. Her research can further inform open space, and street design guidelines for comfortable walking, bicycling, and outdoor activities during extreme heat.
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