Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem:https://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/80185
Título
Mapping temperature, humidity, air quality, and noise-related comfort conditions to identify urban planning issues: a case study of Ljubljana, Slovenia
Año del Documento
2025
Editorial
Frontiers Media SA.
Descripción
Producción Científica
Documento Fuente
Frontiers in Sustainable Cities, 2025, vol. 7
Résumé
This study advances urban planning and climate adaptation science by
employing Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) for a detailed
assessment of urban microclimate and user comfort in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
The research addresses a significant gap in urban environmental assessments
by providing real time, finegranularity data to support urban planners in
tackling comfort related issues at the street level. Using a previously developed
microclimate and user comfort street assessment protocol, the study conducts
anindepthcaseanalysisoffivedistinctstreetsinLjubljana.Dataontemperature,
noise, humidity, and air quality were collected using ICT tools and analyzed
with GeographicInformation System(GIS) technologyto mapandidentifyzones
withvaryingcomfortlevels.Themethodologysystematicallyanalysesthesedata,
allowing fordescriptive andcumulativemappingofcomfortable,uncomfortable,
andextremeuncomfortablezonesacrossdiverseurbanmorphologies,including
historic, contemporary, highdensity, and lowdensity areas. By identifying
microclimate and user comfort issues, the study provides insights into site
specific conditions and reveals di erences in conditions based on the type of
urban pattern. On all five streets, we identified the presence of uncomfortable
temperature and noise conditions. Street , Zone I is the most critical area,
with extremely uncomfortable conditions for
%− % of the time and
uncomfortable conditions for %− % of the time. The findings demonstrate
that environmental conditions can vary considerably between individual streets,
within compact urban areas of Ljubljana. This underlines the value of spatially
distributed data collection as a necessary complement to traditional monitoring
systems, which are typically limited to only a few fixed locations used by the
city. The confirmationofthehypothesis“Detailedmicroclimateandusercomfort
related data gathered by the ICT and GIS based protocol for street assessment
can significantly assist urban planners in better recognition and interpretation of
microclimateanduser comfortrelatedissuesinurbanenvironments”establishes
the primary contribution of this research. This study o ers a transparent,
replicable method that urban planners can use to assess environmental
conditions and make informed decisions for improving urban quality.
Palabras Clave
Urban planning
comfort
ICT
noise
air quality
humidity
temperature
mapping issues
ISSN
2624-9634
Revisión por pares
SI
Patrocinador
European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme bajo el proyecto Marie Skłodowska-Curie Nº 847624
Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency (proyecto Nº P5-0100)
AGINPLACE (ref. PID2023-146254OB-C41) financiado por MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 y FEDER, UE
Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency (proyecto Nº P5-0100)
AGINPLACE (ref. PID2023-146254OB-C41) financiado por MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 y FEDER, UE
Version del Editor
Idioma
eng
Tipo de versión
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Derechos
openAccess
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Tamaño:
8.818Mo
Formato:
Adobe PDF
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