Dresden: smart cooled

Building design
Through various projects and measures, Dresden has made a name for itself as a city that boldly stands up to the heat. Credit: Michael Treu via pixabay

Through various projects and measures, Dresden has made a name for itself as a city that boldly stands up to the heat. Credit: Michael Treu via pixabay

Since reunification, the demand for living space in Dresden has risen by a third. Accordingly, the Saxon state capital has built a great deal – with negative consequences for brownfield sites and urban greenery. Increasing density and sealing as well as decreasing green and open spaces are creating new heat islands. For a few years now, however, Dresden has been relying on the help of AI in addition to conventional measures such as unsealing.

The city council of Dresden has been dealing with climate change and the necessary changes for many years. For example, similar to Frankfurt am Main, green facades are to become mandatory in future – but only for new buildings and for large, windowless facades with an area of over 25 square meters. However, this is not enough for the very hot summers, the extreme groundwater drought and the high fire risk in eastern Saxony, the Elbe Valley and Dresden. The heatwaves that now occur every year are already causing health problems for many people and damage to the green infrastructure.

Nevertheless, Dresden has made a name for itself as a city that courageously stands up to the heat: As a model city, it is in demand nationwide due to its expertise. This is due to major completed studies such as the “Regklam” on regional climate adaptation, the current research network “HeatResilientCity”, which received the German Sustainability Award in 2022, and awards such as the prize for “Dresden baut Grün” as a climate-active municipality in 2020.

According to Environment Mayor Eva Jähnigen, Dresden is technically well positioned when it comes to adapting to the heat. What is still missing is implementation in the city’s everyday life, as many measures do not receive sufficient resources to be put into practice across the board. “Climate adaptation tasks must become part of our public services and a mandatory task. Everything that is newly built must be designed according to these criteria,” said Jähnigen.

One practical adaptation measure in Dresden is heat protection as part of the renaturation of river courses and streams in the city. According to Lord Mayor Dirk Hilbert (FDP), Dresden has invested several million euros in these projects in recent years. However, more detailed information is hard to find – and the prolonged drought is causing problems even for renaturalized rivers. As a result, they cannot help to alleviate heat islands in the city during hot spells as desired.

Dresden also wants to position itself as a sponge city and reorganize rain runoff. The city should not only be prepared for heat, but also for heavy rainfall. Measures such as the unsealing of sealed surfaces, retention basins, ditches and cisterns will enable the city to absorb rainwater locally instead of draining it away. Additional green spaces can also help to cool the city.

A pilot project in Dresden’s Südpark is already testing how rainwater can be optimally infiltrated. For the city’s new Technical City Hall, built by Ed. Züblin and Dressler Bau, a cistern with a capacity of ten square meters is planned, which will be used to water green spaces and trees. And the city’s parking space regulations already stipulate that parking spaces must be built with grass pavers so that they are permeable to water. One tree must be planted in the parking area for every five parking spaces. In future, bus stops are also to be equipped with green roofs.

An innovative urban and traffic planning project is also taking place in Dresden: KLIPS is an AI-based information platform for the localization and simulation of heat islands. This platform should make it possible to localize heat islands in real time with the help of a local sensor network and artificial intelligence. It should also be possible to make forecasts in order to identify and avert the risk of heat islands in good time.

KLIPS draws largely on existing data, such as data from pilot cities and satellite data from the Sentinel fleet of the Copernicus earth observation program. New sensor networks in Dresden and Langenfeld are intended to increase the spatial resolution of this data so that locally reliable measurement data can be obtained. These permanently measure the temperatures at particularly temperature-sensitive points in the urban area.

The data from KLIPS will also be used to train the AI algorithms as part of machine learning. This makes it possible to assess the consequences of construction and traffic planning for heat islands as well as the effect of planned measures to reduce heat islands.

KLIPS is due to start in spring 2023. By then, the city of Dresden plans to distribute 300 temperature sensors throughout the city. The system will run until at least 2026 and provide important information on heat islands in the city. The federal government is funding the project until 2024 with 2.3 million euros from the Ministry for Digital Affairs and Transport. The participating project partners are also making their own contributions.

The hope of KLIPS is to become an integral tool for construction and traffic planning. The project aims to create a data basis for forecasting the local heat situation. In addition to the 300 sensors, satellite, cadastral, weather and climate data will also supplement the data picture. Various applications can be derived from this digital modeling. These could include, for example, a heat warning system to provide the public with more targeted information in the event of extreme temperatures.

Based on the database, the city should also be able to estimate how watercourses, shading, façade greening, trees and surface design affect the local microclimate. Accordingly, KLIPS would inform the design of public streets, squares and parks as well as local public transport stops and the question of possible greening of railroad tracks.

In addition to the city of Dresden, various other players are involved in KLIPS: Software AG, the ERGO Environmental Institute, the German Aerospace Center, the Fraunhofer Heinrich Hertz Institute, the Institute for Information Systems at Hof University of Applied Sciences, the Leibniz Institute of Ecological Urban and Regional Development and the companies Pikobytes, terrestris and meggsimum. The city of Langenfeld in the Rhineland is also a pilot municipality within the research project.

As a pilot city and leading German city in heat measures, Dresden is also participating in the EU’s MAtchUP program. This model program for sustainable urban development is investigating how smart city applications can provide intelligent solutions for urban transformation. Valencia and Antalya are also involved in this program.

The initial results of KLIPS are eagerly awaited. After all, the data in combination with artificial intelligence could make a significant contribution to adapting to the warmer temperatures of the future and, among other things, protect the health of Dresden’s residents as well as the city’s flora and fauna.

In addition, however, it is necessary to take measures to mitigate the consequences of climate change as quickly as possible. Projects with a broader vision for climate protection, such as significantly improved energy efficiency in the building sector or the consistent greening of roofs in the city, are still lacking in Dresden – as in almost all other major cities.

More on this topic in G+L 06/23.

Published as part of the international Beat the Heat initiative.

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

Net zero and high building culture? But yes!

Building design

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The Swiss planning associations’ “Baukultur climate campaign” aims to show that net zero can go hand in hand with high-quality Baukultur.

Switzerland is particularly affected by climate change. This is not the only reason why it has set itself the goal of reducing its greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2050. An initiative has now set itself the goal of communicating that net zero can go hand in hand with high-quality building culture. Swiss planning associations founded the “Baukultur climate campaign”. The BSA, BSLA, SIA, EspaceSuisse, the Swiss Heritage Society and the Monument Preservation Society have taken a clear stance on nine points in the initiative.

As an Alpine country, Switzerland is particularly affected by climate change. This is shown by temperature measurements that have been carried out since 1864: The average temperature in the country has risen by 1.9 degrees Celsius since measurements began a good 150 years ago. This is twice as fast as the global increase over the same period, which is 0.9 degrees Celsius.

Why is Switzerland affected more than average? On the one hand, it is because Switzerland is already characterized by a continental climate. As a landlocked country without access to the sea, there is no large body of water to cool Switzerland. On the other hand, the country is located in the mid-latitudes of the northern hemisphere. The areas north of the equator warm up more than those to the south. For Switzerland, this means dry summers, severe weather events, winters with little snow and significantly more hot days, especially in urban areas. The extent cannot be predicted exactly, but one thing is clear – it depends on the amount of greenhouse gas emissions in the coming decades.

This is where Swiss politics came in when Environment Minister and Federal Councillor Simonetta Sommaruga presented Switzerland’s new climate strategy. The aim of the strategy was to show how the country can reduceCO2 emissions and greenhouse gas pollution to net zero by 2050. Net zero means that a company or country eliminates all emissions as far as possible. The last few percent can ultimately be offset by carbon capture and storage (instead of emittingCO2 into the atmosphere, it is stored and permanently sequestered) and negative emissions technologies (the retrieval of greenhouse gases from the atmosphere). The bottom line is that Switzerland no longer emits any greenhouse gases – it comes out of the equation with a net zero.

Baukultur climate campaign supports net zero target

The Federal Council believes that achieving net zero by 2050 is feasible. Although the building sector currently accounts for a quarter of Switzerland’s greenhouse gas emissions, it is also responsible for 40 percent of the country’s energy budget. However, emissions in the transport, industry and building sectors in particular could be reduced by 90 percent by 2050. To this end, the federal government and cantons are promoting the energy-efficient renovation of buildings as well as investments in renewable energies, the use of waste heat and the optimization of building technology.

To support the goal of net zero by 2050, numerous players in Swiss building culture have now joined forces, from cultural heritage to architecture, landscape architecture and spatial planning. To be more precise: the associations BSA, BSLA, SIA, EspaceSuisse, Heimatschutz and Denkmalpflege. Together, they founded the “Building Culture Climate Initiative”, which aims to show how net zero can be achieved while preserving Swiss building culture. On its website, the initiative writes that “climate measures must be implemented with a high level of Baukultur. Investments and transformations must be future-proof, sustainable and of high Baukultur quality.”

Protected properties can also be renovated according to net zero points

This is how the Baukultur climate campaign describes the starting position. It also clearly defines its position, which it breaks down into nine points:

First and foremost is building culture. This should be high, i.e. holistically high quality in terms of design, sustainability and social aspects. Because, as the initiative makes clear in point two, net zero can also become a reality with a high level of building culture. The combination of consistency, sufficiency and efficiency should ensure this. Thirdly, the requirement for high Baukultur quality also applies to energy measures on existing buildings. Architectural quality can be achieved without reducing, complicating or increasing the cost of energy-efficient refurbishment.

The fourth point relates to reconciling the preservation of cultural heritage with climate goals. Energy efficiency measures are also possible on properties worthy of protection and can be aligned with climate targets. Protected objects are also net-zero capable. According to the initiative, “protected buildings are an inspiration for sustainability in practice. They deserve respect and tailor-made solutions. There is a lot of potential in the careful integration of new and existing architectural quality.” Fifthly, the Baukultur climate campaign also aims to ban fossil fuels from the building sector. However, the balance sheet also includes gray energy and resource conservation. This goes hand in hand with point six: the principle of the circular economy should become the rule and be based on the five Rs (refuse, reduce, reuse, repair, recycle). This also includes implementing fewer and smaller projects, using more durable products, planning more durable constructions and reusing building components.

Building culture climate campaign to network and position Switzerland

The seventh point is aimed at open spaces: Climate-adapted settlement development with sufficient open spaces and trees should go hand in hand with ventilation, cold air flows and intelligent water use. In short: green and blue infrastructure should be coordinated. For this to work, the initiative also calls for existing funding instruments to integrate a high level of building culture as an element for climate protection and biodiversity. Positive incentives would promote the achievement of climate targets with a high level of Baukultur. Last but not least, the Baukultur Climate Initiative has set itself the task of collecting scientific work and findings as well as relevant initiatives and making them tangible. It sees itself as a platform that networks and positions Switzerland within an international framework. At the same time, it aims to promote the development of expertise and advice, communicate good solutions and take economic requirements into account.

The core team of the Baukultur Climate Campaign consists of Stefan Kunz (Managing Director of the Swiss Heritage Society), Claudia Schwalfenberg (Head of Policy, responsible for Baukultur at the Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects SIA), Peter Wullschleger (Managing Director of the Swiss Association of Landscape Architects BSLA), Barbara Franzen (Managing Director of the Conference of Swiss Heritage Conservators KSD), Claudia Moll (Co-President BSLA) and Adrian Altenburger (Vice President SIA).

You can join the Baukultur climate campaign as a supporter here.

Online series: The future of building culture – Statement by Ralph-Uwe Johann

Building design
Ralph-Uwe Johann, owner and managing director of Deffner & Johann, Röthlein

Ralph-Uwe Johann, owner and managing director of Deffner & Johann, Röthlein

What contribution can heritage conservation and restoration science make in view of the worsening climate situation, the scarcity of resources and the energy crisis? We asked experts from various disciplines to comment on this. Read the statement by Ralph-Uwe Johann, owner and managing director of Deffner & Johann, Röthlein, here

What contribution can heritage conservation and restoration science make in view of the worsening climate situation, the scarcity of resources and the energy crisis? We asked experts from various disciplines to comment on this. Read the statement by Ralph-Uwe Johann, owner and managing director of Deffner & Johann, Röthlein, here

Multiple crises are currently forcing us to rethink. There are pandemics, floods, forest fires and war. How do we want to live and build in the future? We are facing many new challenges that require complex considerations and solutions. And it is precisely here that the knowledge and skills of the diverse and interdisciplinary field of heritage conservation are in demand. What contribution can heritage conservation and restoration science make in view of the worsening climate situation, the scarcity of resources and the energy crisis? We asked experts from various disciplines about this. You can read the answers in our new online series Zukunft Baukultur. Every week, we publish a specialist statement on www.restauro.de. Here isthe statement from Ralph-Uwe Johann, owner and managing director of Deffner & Johann, Röthlein

In view of the worsening climate situation, scarcity of resources and energy crisis, both specialist retailers and manufacturers are increasingly responsible for selling ecologically compatible products and providing information on correct and resource-saving processing. Deffner & Johann also sets this standard for itself and, with a view to environmental protection, tries to offer environmentally conscious solutions whenever possible. Conservation and restoration can make a significant contribution to the sustainable use of resources. The preservation and conversion of existing monuments offer enormous potential for saving building materials and energy as well as reducing CO2 emissions.

Furthermore, materials in their traditional use are often significantly more sustainable when the entire life cycle is considered. Traditional binder systems, such as lime or linseed oil, not only offer an advantageous eco-balance, but are also often more resource-efficient in terms of production and maintenance. A few years ago, these were still considered complicated to work with compared to “convenience products” from the building materials industry and were removed from the curricula of technical colleges. Today, they are often regarded as modern or innovative in Europe and presented by leading planners and architects as a solution for sustainable construction. Specialist companies in the preservation and restoration of historical monuments could even contribute their knowledge advantage in the processing of corresponding products. As an internationally active specialist wholesaler for materials, tools and equipment in the field of restoration and monument conservation, we also always ensure that transport is optimized for the supply chain and that resources are used in an environmentally conscious manner.