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Outdoor environmental comfort evaluation for retail planning in a tropical business district using Integrated Environmental Modeller

This research proposes a simulation-based assessment of outdoor thermal and acoustic comfort for a planned business urban district in Singapore for retail planning using a customized OpenFOAM-centric multi-physics environmental simulation platform called the Integrated Environmental Modeller (IEM)....

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Autores principales: Lai, Po-Yen, Koh, Wee Shing, Gopalan, Harish, Liu, Huizhe, Leong, Dias, Lee, Hyosoo, Goh, Johnathan, Lim, Jiun Yeu, Ang, Jacob, Peh, Gibert, Cher, Gilbert, Eng, Cheng Hui, Goh, Jia Li, Tan, Edmund, Tan, James
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9983900/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36867656
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282106
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author Lai, Po-Yen
Koh, Wee Shing
Gopalan, Harish
Liu, Huizhe
Leong, Dias
Lee, Hyosoo
Goh, Johnathan
Lim, Jiun Yeu
Ang, Jacob
Peh, Gibert
Cher, Gilbert
Eng, Cheng Hui
Goh, Jia Li
Tan, Edmund
Tan, James
author_facet Lai, Po-Yen
Koh, Wee Shing
Gopalan, Harish
Liu, Huizhe
Leong, Dias
Lee, Hyosoo
Goh, Johnathan
Lim, Jiun Yeu
Ang, Jacob
Peh, Gibert
Cher, Gilbert
Eng, Cheng Hui
Goh, Jia Li
Tan, Edmund
Tan, James
author_sort Lai, Po-Yen
collection PubMed
description This research proposes a simulation-based assessment of outdoor thermal and acoustic comfort for a planned business urban district in Singapore for retail planning using a customized OpenFOAM-centric multi-physics environmental simulation platform called the Integrated Environmental Modeller (IEM). IEM was employed to simulate the coupled impacts of solar radiation on wind and air temperature and wind and air temperature effects on traffic noise propagation in the district on the equinox and solstice day of the hottest period. Using IEM simulation results, we computed the thermal and acoustic comfort acceptability indicators derived from local field studies’ results. The spatial distribution of environmental comfort acceptability indicators in the worst-case scenario can be used to distinguish the zones exposed to thermal or noise influence. The noise-affected zones are near the main roads and overlap a part of the thermal-affected area. The thermal-affected area is almost everywhere in the studied sites in the worst-case scenario. Having outdoor retail spaces with both poor thermal and acoustic comfort is not recommended if the thermal and acoustic comfort cannot be improved simultaneously. For the high-level retail planning, a simplified parametric analysis considering solar irradiance blockage and wind speed enhancements, is provided. Considering the worst-case scenario, ≥50% thermal acceptability can be achieved by blocking 54%-68% solar irradiance among the pedestrian thoroughfares and the retail spaces. Coupled together, blocking the solar irradiance and enhancing the wind speed can further improve thermal comfort locally. These results can guide the retail mix (e.g., al fresco restaurants, pop-up kiosks etc.) near high footfall areas and provide reference for future plans combining landscape and infrastructure, (e.g., trees with shelter walkaways, green walls with outdoor ventilation fans etc.) taking into account the environmental acceptability of people working in or visiting the tropical urban district.
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spelling pubmed-99839002023-03-04 Outdoor environmental comfort evaluation for retail planning in a tropical business district using Integrated Environmental Modeller Lai, Po-Yen Koh, Wee Shing Gopalan, Harish Liu, Huizhe Leong, Dias Lee, Hyosoo Goh, Johnathan Lim, Jiun Yeu Ang, Jacob Peh, Gibert Cher, Gilbert Eng, Cheng Hui Goh, Jia Li Tan, Edmund Tan, James PLoS One Research Article This research proposes a simulation-based assessment of outdoor thermal and acoustic comfort for a planned business urban district in Singapore for retail planning using a customized OpenFOAM-centric multi-physics environmental simulation platform called the Integrated Environmental Modeller (IEM). IEM was employed to simulate the coupled impacts of solar radiation on wind and air temperature and wind and air temperature effects on traffic noise propagation in the district on the equinox and solstice day of the hottest period. Using IEM simulation results, we computed the thermal and acoustic comfort acceptability indicators derived from local field studies’ results. The spatial distribution of environmental comfort acceptability indicators in the worst-case scenario can be used to distinguish the zones exposed to thermal or noise influence. The noise-affected zones are near the main roads and overlap a part of the thermal-affected area. The thermal-affected area is almost everywhere in the studied sites in the worst-case scenario. Having outdoor retail spaces with both poor thermal and acoustic comfort is not recommended if the thermal and acoustic comfort cannot be improved simultaneously. For the high-level retail planning, a simplified parametric analysis considering solar irradiance blockage and wind speed enhancements, is provided. Considering the worst-case scenario, ≥50% thermal acceptability can be achieved by blocking 54%-68% solar irradiance among the pedestrian thoroughfares and the retail spaces. Coupled together, blocking the solar irradiance and enhancing the wind speed can further improve thermal comfort locally. These results can guide the retail mix (e.g., al fresco restaurants, pop-up kiosks etc.) near high footfall areas and provide reference for future plans combining landscape and infrastructure, (e.g., trees with shelter walkaways, green walls with outdoor ventilation fans etc.) taking into account the environmental acceptability of people working in or visiting the tropical urban district. Public Library of Science 2023-03-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9983900/ /pubmed/36867656 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282106 Text en © 2023 Lai et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lai, Po-Yen
Koh, Wee Shing
Gopalan, Harish
Liu, Huizhe
Leong, Dias
Lee, Hyosoo
Goh, Johnathan
Lim, Jiun Yeu
Ang, Jacob
Peh, Gibert
Cher, Gilbert
Eng, Cheng Hui
Goh, Jia Li
Tan, Edmund
Tan, James
Outdoor environmental comfort evaluation for retail planning in a tropical business district using Integrated Environmental Modeller
title Outdoor environmental comfort evaluation for retail planning in a tropical business district using Integrated Environmental Modeller
title_full Outdoor environmental comfort evaluation for retail planning in a tropical business district using Integrated Environmental Modeller
title_fullStr Outdoor environmental comfort evaluation for retail planning in a tropical business district using Integrated Environmental Modeller
title_full_unstemmed Outdoor environmental comfort evaluation for retail planning in a tropical business district using Integrated Environmental Modeller
title_short Outdoor environmental comfort evaluation for retail planning in a tropical business district using Integrated Environmental Modeller
title_sort outdoor environmental comfort evaluation for retail planning in a tropical business district using integrated environmental modeller
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9983900/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36867656
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282106
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