2011
DOI: 10.1007/s00484-011-0452-3
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Predicting urban outdoor thermal comfort by the Universal Thermal Climate Index UTCI—a case study in Southern Brazil

Abstract: Recognising that modifications to the physical attributes of urban space are able to promote improved thermal outdoor conditions and thus positively influence the use of open spaces, a survey to define optimal thermal comfort ranges for passers-by in pedestrian streets was conducted in Curitiba, Brazil. We applied general additive models to study the impact of temperature, humidity, and wind, as well as long-wave and short-wave radiant heat fluxes as summarised by the recently developed Universal Thermal Clima… Show more

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Cited by 195 publications
(93 citation statements)
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“…These are characterised by non-moderate ambient temperatures, elevated wind speeds, and solar radiation conditions. A description of the COST 730 validation and inter-model comparison exercise is provided by Psikuta et al (2011), Bröde et al (2011b, and Kampmann et al (2010) in this special issue. the original 19-compartment, 342-node model is configured as a symmetric 12-compartment, 187-node model whose left and right extremities and spatial body sectors are merged to lumped entities.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These are characterised by non-moderate ambient temperatures, elevated wind speeds, and solar radiation conditions. A description of the COST 730 validation and inter-model comparison exercise is provided by Psikuta et al (2011), Bröde et al (2011b, and Kampmann et al (2010) in this special issue. the original 19-compartment, 342-node model is configured as a symmetric 12-compartment, 187-node model whose left and right extremities and spatial body sectors are merged to lumped entities.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The most important feature of this clothing behaviour is that people do not adjust their clothing to the climate requirements completely and seem to 'under-dress' in the cold. The approach followed here requires further validation, though first results presented in this issue indicate that it may also be applicable to a urban areas in other continents (Bröde et al 2011). The principles derived in this action allow the extension to e.g.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In order to evaluate the thermal comfort, the Universal Thermal Climate Index (UTCI) (Jendritzky et al 2012, Bröde et al 2012b, Bröde et al 2012a, Fiala et al 2012) has been used. The UTCI is developed by the research activities compiled by COST Action 730, with the main objective of developing one internationally recognized model.…”
Section: Discussion Of Case Studies Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The index allows the calculation of comfort conditions using climate values obtained from in situ measurements or analytical calculation. The UTCI 7 follows the Equivalent Temperature (ET) concept, which involves an environment reference at 50% relative humidity (vapour pressure is capped at 20 hPa), in addition, air and radiant temperature equal air temperature (Bröde et al 2012b). The physiological response has been calculated for a single person, considering clothing insulation after 30 and 120 min of exposition.…”
Section: Discussion Of Case Studies Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
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