urban configurations
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Avisar ◽  
Ran Pelta ◽  
Alexandra Chudnovsky ◽  
Dorita Rostkier-Edelstein

<p>We implement and verify for the first time four Weather Research and Forecasting model urban configurations, focused on the coastal metropolitan area of Tel-Aviv (MTA) using updated land use and urban morphological maps. We analyze the mesoscale summertime flow and the urban canopy (UC) role in the occurrence of different hodograph dynamics observed within MTA at night. These events may be significant in air quality research. The four configurations – bulk (MM), single-layer (SLUCM), multi-layer (BEP), and BEP coupled with the building energy model (BEPBEM) – reproduce the observed diurnal temperature and wind cycles, with similar 10m wind direction bias and RMSE (15° and ~30°, respectively), with preference for MM and SLUCM at night. However, the SLUCM shows the lowest skill for the 10m wind speed (WS) (bias and RMSE 1ms<sup>-1</sup>), and the BEP shows the largest underestimation of the 2m temperature, ~-2.5°C. In the SLUCM, the WS increases over an UC and with increasing building heights. The simulations show that at night, a convergence line (CL) builds up with the urban heat island, downstream of the NW flow. West of the CL, the wind continues flowing from the sea, and rotates anti-clockwise to form a non-elliptical sea-breeze hodograph. Removing MTA UC restores an elliptical hodograph. East of the CL, the UC supports an elliptical hodograph with a clockwise rotation through the NE sector, previously reported as dynamically unstable. We expect such wind hodograph dynamics within similar coastal metropolitan areas.</p>


ICSDEMS 2019 ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 281-288
Author(s):  
Lin Yola ◽  
Ho Chin Siong ◽  
Komara Komara Djaja
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 189-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Agnieszka Leszczynski

‘Platform urbanism’ has recently gained traction as a designator for emergent dynamics and material configurations associated with the increasing presence of digital platform enterprises in cities. Initial scholarly engagements with platform urbanism have tended to coalesce around critiques of digital platforms as progenitors of inevitably dystopian urban futures. In this paper, I advance a counter-topographical minor theory of platform urbanism. I do so by drawing on Legacy Russell's notion of the glitch as a tendency toward both error and erratum (correction) in digital systems, mobilizing space/times where platforms appear ‘glitchy’—unexpectedly, otherwise than anticipated, or not at all—as the margins of platform urbanism. Through the narration of three specific platform/city interfaces from the minors of their glitchy margins, I capture the ways in which platform–urban configurations are demonstrably open to negotiations, reconfigurations, and diffractions through tactical maneuvers rooted in everyday digital practices of urban denizens. Theorized from the minor, platform urbanism is a phenomenon that may beget an array of possible outcomes that remain shapeable by mundane tactical interventions in the platform-mediated present. This ultimately underwrites possibilities for more hopeful digital urban politics, theory, and futures.


Urban Climate ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
pp. 100489 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ifeoluwa Adebowale Balogun ◽  
Mojolaoluwa Toluwalase Daramola

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