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Ancient Rome had Ways to Counter the Urban Heat Island Effect

Trees are one way to cool down a city. Architects in ancient Rome also designed buildings with porticos for shade and air flow.

Credit: Laszlo Szirtesi/Getty Images

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As intense heat breaks records around the world, a little-reported fact offers some hope for cooling down cities: Under even the most intense periods of extreme heat, some city blocks never experience heat wave temperatures.

How is this possible?

Civilizations have recognized the power of cities to heat themselves up and cool themselves for centuries. City architects in ancient Rome called for narrowing streets to lessen late afternoon temperatures. Narrow streets were found to cool the air by limiting the area exposed to direct sunlight.

The whitewashed architecture of the Greek Isles demonstrates another long-practiced strategy. Light-colored walls and roofs can help cool cities by reflecting incoming sunlight.

Whitewashed buildings on the Greek island of Folegandros help deflect the heat rather than absorbing it. Etienne O. Dallaire via Wikimedia, CC BY

In hot and humid regions of the southern U.S., Thomas Jefferson proposed another approach to cooling: Have all new ...

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