[Article] Climate-driven transformations: A framework for the sustainable urban landscape system to enhance heat resilience.
Urban heat is no longer just a comfort problem. It is a systems failure problem, and our landscape frameworks have not caught up.
Heat waves are intensifying in frequency, duration, and geographic reach. The Middle East, North Africa, Mediterranean, and South Asian cities already record sustained periods above 45ยฐC. Tropical and subtropical regions are seeing heat stress hours rise sharply across all climate zones. At the same time, the green infrastructure we rely on to cool our cities, parks, street trees, green roofs, and wetlands is itself vulnerable to the very heat it is meant to mitigate. Vegetation wilts. Water bodies dry out. Materials crack and deform. When that happens, cooling performance collapses precisely when it is needed most.
Our new framework, published in Sustainable Cities and Society (Huang et al., 2025) confronts this directly, and it is one of the most operationally complete treatments of landscape heat resilience I have read. The core argument:
Existing research treats landscapes as passive, static cooling tools. This framework redefines them as dynamic adaptive systems with two interdependent capacities:
โ Heat resistance: the capacity to withstand thermal stress through design: optimized vegetation layouts, heat-tolerant species selection, high-albedo surfaces, and spatial configurations that reduce exposure and vulnerability.
โ Self-organizing capacity: the capacity to autonomously recover after extreme heat events, quantified by two measurable indicators: recovery level (fraction of pre-event vegetation canopy regained) and recovery cycle (time to stabilization). The paper introduces an SVI-based remote sensing index, outperforming standard NDVI/EVI by suppressing soil and asphalt background noise, with assessment checkpoints at 30, 90, and 180 days post-event.
This distinction matters enormously in practice. A park that cools well but cannot recover from a two-week heatwave is not a resilient asset. It is a liability that worsens the next event. The five-step implementation pathway:
1. Heat vulnerability identification: Satellite LST for city-scale hotspots, drone thermal imaging for district microclimates, meteorological monitoring at site scale, and ENVI-met/WRF for future scenarios.
2. Heat-resilient landscape planning: Dynamic parameters (water connectivity, leaf area index, building curvature) replace static indices to generate GIS-based thermal risk maps.
3. Typology-specific design: Parks, residential neighborhoods, green-blue corridors, and peri-urban concerns like fire and water budgets.
4. Operations and maintenance: Mulching, soil aeration, and trunk whitewashing shorten recovery cycles. Sensor networks enable proactive intervention. Misting and temporary shading cover what natural recovery cannot.
5. Post-evaluation: Drone monitoring, user surveys, and structural inspections feed back into planning, closing the adaptive loop.
Two dimensions the framework gets right that most do not:
Social equity. The neighborhoods with the least green canopy are consistently those with the least adaptive capacity, low-income residents, elderly populations, and children. The framework explicitly prioritizes resilience interventions in these areas: community gardens, shaded playgrounds, accessible cooling centers, and barrier-free seating. Resilience planning that ignores this is not resilience. It is risk transfer.
Green-grey integration. Green and grey infrastructure are framed as synergistic partners. Tree canopies protect pavements and building facades from solar radiation. Grey systems, smart irrigation, and stormwater harvesting sustain the water supply that keeps vegetation functional under drought. Neither works optimally without the other.
What this means for practitioners:
If you are designing, planning, or managing urban landscapes, the question is no longer only "how much does this cost and cool at the same time?" It is "how much does this cool, how well does it survive an extreme event, and how quickly does it recover?" Those are measurable, designable outcomes, and this framework gives you the tools to pursue them.
The gap between research and application remains real. Accessible decision-support platforms and digital tools that translate WRF and ENVI-met outputs into planning guidance are urgently needed. That is the next frontier.
๐ Huang, B. et al. (2025). Climate-driven transformations: A framework for the sustainable urban landscape system to enhance heat resilience. Sustainable Cities and Society, 131, 106684. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scs.2025.106684
This framework aligns closely with the work we are advancing through IEA EBC Annex 97 โ Sustainable Cooling in Cities, where SBD Lab is contributing to experimental monitoring methods, resilient cooling system integration, and national governance case studies for Belgium. The tools exist. What cities still lack is the governance capacity and financing structures to deploy them at scale. @Peter Holzer @Philipp Stern @Mattheos Santamouris @Anna Laura Pisello @Mattheos Santamouris @Jesus Lizana @Abhishek Gaur @Theofanis Psomas @Rohan Agrawal. Learn more: https://annex97.iea-ebc.org/
Thank you, Prof. Baojie He and Boze Huang, for inviting me to this valuable contribution. I am also glad to work with @Jinda Qi @Minal Pathak @Ayyoob Sharifi @Ali Cheshmehzangi @Andreas Matzarakis @Amirhosein Ghaffarianhoseini @Geun Young Yun @Amos Darko @Xiao Liu @Bao-Jie He
๐ Download and read the paper: https://hdl.handle.net/2268/334830
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