The rapid urbanization of the UAE, including medium sized cities like Al Ain City, has a significant relationship to local micro-climatic change. Al-Ain city in the southeast of the UAE and was originally an oasis. It has a hot and arid climate with a very dry and hot summer. The climate of the city is affected by the desert areas of red sand and the eastern Rocky Mountains. The local micro-climatic evolution can be studied and tracked using the local climate zone (LCZ) classification map. The districts of Al Ain are classified based on different factors, including surface cover and surface temperature, which were analysed using WUDAPT (World Urban Database and Access Portal Tools) software. The LCZ map is based on highresolution satellite images, which were used to classify regions based on building morphology and district pattern. The LCZ map results were compared with CFD (computational fluid dynamic) models that were simulated using ENVI-met software tool. The CFD models were optimized and validated based on on-site surveys and information taken from the local authorities, while the boundary conditions were validated using site measurements. Both models were analysed over the spring and summer seasons. Based on the results provided from WUDAPT and ENVI-met, a higher temperature was observed in the densest areas (downtown) and lower temperatures in the green zones (park, city date farms) and the result precision was higher in the colder season (autumn in this case).
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has witnessed fast growth in urban development in the past four decades. A plan to build 7270 houses by 2021 has been initiated by the local authorities. Different local sustainability guidelines are being implemented, including the Public Realm Manual in Abu Dhabi. These local guidelines are tailored to consider the hot and arid climate of the UAE as well as the applied materials, the inclusion of greenery, shading devices, etc. Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Al Ain are cities that have imposed the application of such guidelines. Additionally, the newly developed housing programs match the governmental plan. To understand the effect of these design programs on the outdoor thermal comfort (OTC), further investigations are necessary for each city. The most widely built prototype is detached villas, which result in untreated waste areas without shading or greenery. In the old local neighborhoods, Arabic houses were built next to each other to maximize the shading and to ease pedestrians’ walkability. This study aims to examine the districts where the housing programs are applied and to determine the most effective strategy to minimize the outdoor air temperatures and enhance walkability. The methodology implements the following processes in order: district analyses of the buildings as well as the externally applied materials, microclimate site measurements, ENVI-met (main software used) models of the current and future scenarios, results and recommendations. The strategies have different impacts in both cites due to the microclimate and other conditions.
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