Evaluating urban microclimate temperature using Envi-Met Simulation Model: A case study conducted in two city areas, Pudu and Wangsa Maju

Urban areas usually experience the urban heat island effect, where the area is significantly warmer than surrounding rural areas. This is due to the urban character and microclimate change. This study assesses the temperature of urban microclimate characteristics that influence typical urban commerc...

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Published in:GEOGRAFIA-MALAYSIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIETY & SPACE
Main Authors: Asmadi, Anis Batrisyia; Misni, Alamah; Brahimi, Mohamed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UNIV KEBANGSAAN MALAYSIA, FAC SOCIAL SCIENCES & HUMANITIES 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001408727200003
author Asmadi
Anis Batrisyia; Misni
Alamah; Brahimi
Mohamed
spellingShingle Asmadi
Anis Batrisyia; Misni
Alamah; Brahimi
Mohamed
Evaluating urban microclimate temperature using Envi-Met Simulation Model: A case study conducted in two city areas, Pudu and Wangsa Maju
Social Sciences - Other Topics
author_facet Asmadi
Anis Batrisyia; Misni
Alamah; Brahimi
Mohamed
author_sort Asmadi
spelling Asmadi, Anis Batrisyia; Misni, Alamah; Brahimi, Mohamed
Evaluating urban microclimate temperature using Envi-Met Simulation Model: A case study conducted in two city areas, Pudu and Wangsa Maju
GEOGRAFIA-MALAYSIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIETY & SPACE
English
Article
Urban areas usually experience the urban heat island effect, where the area is significantly warmer than surrounding rural areas. This is due to the urban character and microclimate change. This study assesses the temperature of urban microclimate characteristics that influence typical urban commercial. The method study uses the ENVI-met numerical simulation software to compare differences in temperature of two urban commercial districts in Pudu and Wangsa Maju. A similar scale was used to simulate these sites with the same climatic conditions. Urban layout, building heights and densities, human movement, landcover, greening, and pavements were discovered to impact temperature change significantly. The variations of simulated and measured temperatures were parabolic in shape, and the variation trends of both were similar. The relative humidity in a residential district declined with increased temperature. The highest temperature is 32.5 degrees C during peak time at 14.00 pm in Pudu, while at Wangsa Maju, peak time is at 13.00 pm with 31.2 degrees C. The results were significantly influenced by the landcover (building, vegetation, and pavement), human movement and urban layout. The height of taller high-rise buildings contributed to the increase in temperature, and densely vegetated areas proved to reduce the temperature in urban areas. The findings of this study will contribute to the future microclimate planning of the cities as well as retrofitting landscaping programs and urban settings, especially in the city's area of Kuala Lumpur.
UNIV KEBANGSAAN MALAYSIA, FAC SOCIAL SCIENCES & HUMANITIES
2180-2491
2682-7727
2024
20
4
10.17576/geo-2024-2004-03
Social Sciences - Other Topics
Bronze
WOS:001408727200003
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001408727200003
title Evaluating urban microclimate temperature using Envi-Met Simulation Model: A case study conducted in two city areas, Pudu and Wangsa Maju
title_short Evaluating urban microclimate temperature using Envi-Met Simulation Model: A case study conducted in two city areas, Pudu and Wangsa Maju
title_full Evaluating urban microclimate temperature using Envi-Met Simulation Model: A case study conducted in two city areas, Pudu and Wangsa Maju
title_fullStr Evaluating urban microclimate temperature using Envi-Met Simulation Model: A case study conducted in two city areas, Pudu and Wangsa Maju
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating urban microclimate temperature using Envi-Met Simulation Model: A case study conducted in two city areas, Pudu and Wangsa Maju
title_sort Evaluating urban microclimate temperature using Envi-Met Simulation Model: A case study conducted in two city areas, Pudu and Wangsa Maju
container_title GEOGRAFIA-MALAYSIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIETY & SPACE
language English
format Article
description Urban areas usually experience the urban heat island effect, where the area is significantly warmer than surrounding rural areas. This is due to the urban character and microclimate change. This study assesses the temperature of urban microclimate characteristics that influence typical urban commercial. The method study uses the ENVI-met numerical simulation software to compare differences in temperature of two urban commercial districts in Pudu and Wangsa Maju. A similar scale was used to simulate these sites with the same climatic conditions. Urban layout, building heights and densities, human movement, landcover, greening, and pavements were discovered to impact temperature change significantly. The variations of simulated and measured temperatures were parabolic in shape, and the variation trends of both were similar. The relative humidity in a residential district declined with increased temperature. The highest temperature is 32.5 degrees C during peak time at 14.00 pm in Pudu, while at Wangsa Maju, peak time is at 13.00 pm with 31.2 degrees C. The results were significantly influenced by the landcover (building, vegetation, and pavement), human movement and urban layout. The height of taller high-rise buildings contributed to the increase in temperature, and densely vegetated areas proved to reduce the temperature in urban areas. The findings of this study will contribute to the future microclimate planning of the cities as well as retrofitting landscaping programs and urban settings, especially in the city's area of Kuala Lumpur.
publisher UNIV KEBANGSAAN MALAYSIA, FAC SOCIAL SCIENCES & HUMANITIES
issn 2180-2491
2682-7727
publishDate 2024
container_volume 20
container_issue 4
doi_str_mv 10.17576/geo-2024-2004-03
topic Social Sciences - Other Topics
topic_facet Social Sciences - Other Topics
accesstype Bronze
id WOS:001408727200003
url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001408727200003
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