Evidence of the Climate Mitigation Effect of Green Roofs—A 20-Year Weather Study on an Extensive Green Roof (EGR) in Northeast Germany

Approximately 10 km<sup>2</sup> of new green roofs are built in Germany every year. About 85% of these are Extensive Green Roofs (EGR). An EGR with several research features was installed on new buildings belonging to the University of Applied Sciences Neubrandenburg in 1999. The results...

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Main Authors: Manfred Köhler, Daniel Kaiser
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-06-01
Series:Buildings
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/9/7/157
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spelling doaj-879abccab9b74108b926fb2af85e36bd2020-11-25T01:08:23ZengMDPI AGBuildings2075-53092019-06-019715710.3390/buildings9070157buildings9070157Evidence of the Climate Mitigation Effect of Green Roofs—A 20-Year Weather Study on an Extensive Green Roof (EGR) in Northeast GermanyManfred Köhler0Daniel Kaiser1Department of Landscape Ecology, Faculty of Landscape Sciences and Geomatics (LG), University of Applied Sciences, Neubrandenburg, 17033 Neubrandenburg, GermanyDepartment of Landscape Ecology, Faculty of Landscape Sciences and Geomatics (LG), University of Applied Sciences, Neubrandenburg, 17033 Neubrandenburg, GermanyApproximately 10 km<sup>2</sup> of new green roofs are built in Germany every year. About 85% of these are Extensive Green Roofs (EGR). An EGR with several research features was installed on new buildings belonging to the University of Applied Sciences Neubrandenburg in 1999. The results of the almost 20-year permanent survey of the climate effects of the green roof in contrast to gravel roofs are presented here. High-quality sensors, similar to those used by official weather stations, are in use, and data is collected every 10 s and aggregated to hourly values which enable comparisons to official measurements made by the DWD in Neubrandenburg and Berlin. The results show the typical urban heat island effect (UHI) and the mitigation effect of EGR. Whilst the temperature increased over the years due to the urban heat island effect, the temperature within the growing media in the green roof remained constant. The EGR has a stabilization effect of 1.5 K. This is good news for all those seeking a UHI mitigation solution for city centers. In a best-case scenario, the green roof potential of cities in Germany is between 3 and 8%. A value of 50% can be achieved for all buildings; roofs represent about ¼ of urban surfaces, and the cooling effect of 1.5 K in 20 years is a reasonable contribution to cooling cities and achieving environmental goals by greening urban surfaces.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/9/7/157extensive green roofsclimate mitigationsurface temperaturesurban heat island effectglobal warming
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Manfred Köhler
Daniel Kaiser
spellingShingle Manfred Köhler
Daniel Kaiser
Evidence of the Climate Mitigation Effect of Green Roofs—A 20-Year Weather Study on an Extensive Green Roof (EGR) in Northeast Germany
Buildings
extensive green roofs
climate mitigation
surface temperatures
urban heat island effect
global warming
author_facet Manfred Köhler
Daniel Kaiser
author_sort Manfred Köhler
title Evidence of the Climate Mitigation Effect of Green Roofs—A 20-Year Weather Study on an Extensive Green Roof (EGR) in Northeast Germany
title_short Evidence of the Climate Mitigation Effect of Green Roofs—A 20-Year Weather Study on an Extensive Green Roof (EGR) in Northeast Germany
title_full Evidence of the Climate Mitigation Effect of Green Roofs—A 20-Year Weather Study on an Extensive Green Roof (EGR) in Northeast Germany
title_fullStr Evidence of the Climate Mitigation Effect of Green Roofs—A 20-Year Weather Study on an Extensive Green Roof (EGR) in Northeast Germany
title_full_unstemmed Evidence of the Climate Mitigation Effect of Green Roofs—A 20-Year Weather Study on an Extensive Green Roof (EGR) in Northeast Germany
title_sort evidence of the climate mitigation effect of green roofs—a 20-year weather study on an extensive green roof (egr) in northeast germany
publisher MDPI AG
series Buildings
issn 2075-5309
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Approximately 10 km<sup>2</sup> of new green roofs are built in Germany every year. About 85% of these are Extensive Green Roofs (EGR). An EGR with several research features was installed on new buildings belonging to the University of Applied Sciences Neubrandenburg in 1999. The results of the almost 20-year permanent survey of the climate effects of the green roof in contrast to gravel roofs are presented here. High-quality sensors, similar to those used by official weather stations, are in use, and data is collected every 10 s and aggregated to hourly values which enable comparisons to official measurements made by the DWD in Neubrandenburg and Berlin. The results show the typical urban heat island effect (UHI) and the mitigation effect of EGR. Whilst the temperature increased over the years due to the urban heat island effect, the temperature within the growing media in the green roof remained constant. The EGR has a stabilization effect of 1.5 K. This is good news for all those seeking a UHI mitigation solution for city centers. In a best-case scenario, the green roof potential of cities in Germany is between 3 and 8%. A value of 50% can be achieved for all buildings; roofs represent about ¼ of urban surfaces, and the cooling effect of 1.5 K in 20 years is a reasonable contribution to cooling cities and achieving environmental goals by greening urban surfaces.
topic extensive green roofs
climate mitigation
surface temperatures
urban heat island effect
global warming
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/9/7/157
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AT danielkaiser evidenceoftheclimatemitigationeffectofgreenroofsa20yearweatherstudyonanextensivegreenroofegrinnortheastgermany
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