Via Anthropocene Magazine, a look at an innovative paint that replenishes its water supply by absorbing rain and water vapor. Its porous structure holds the water and then slowly releases it much like sweat. Ultra-bright white paints are the go-to when it comes to cooling buildings. Those paints work by reflecting as much of the sun as […]
Read more »Via Wired, a look at how remote-sensing data and artificial intelligence are mapping the most heat-vulnerable buildings in cities like Delhi, in an effort to target relief from extreme temperatures at a granular level. Zubaida starts her day at eight in the morning, sorting discarded plastics, glass, and chemicals with her bare hands, to collect items […]
Read more »Via Yale Alumni Magazine, a look at how the Urban Resources Initiative is planting thousands of trees to make New Haven a cooler city: At first, planting street trees in New Haven was nothing more than a job for William “The Muscle” Tisdale. “I never paid too much attention to trees,” he says. He appreciated steady […]
Read more »Via NPR, a look at how Copenhagen is adapting to a warmer world with rain tunnels and ‘sponge parks’ Copenhagen, Denmark, is expected to receive 30% more rainfall by the end of the century. The city is responding with a massive long-term adaptation plan. Enghaveparken, pictured here, is part of that plan. The park was […]
Read more »Courtesy of the Los Angeles Times, a report on an innovative new museum in Los Angeles that features a number of innovative elements of green design: The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, under construction in Los Angeles’ Exposition Park, is set to open next year. The Lucas Museum’s futuristic design turns heads, but the massive […]
Read more »Via Inside Climate News, a look at how – as another punishing summer edges into Karachi – a Stanford researcher and a former climate minister confront the same crisis—extreme heat—from opposite ends of Pakistan’s most populous city: Inside a sprawling estate in Karachi’s elite Defense neighborhood, air conditioning hummed in a low-frequency buzz. Sherry Rehman, […]
Read more »