Publication date: 15 August 2017
Source:Building and Environment, Volume 121
Author(s): Yu-Hsuan Juan, An-Shik Yang, Chih-Yung Wen, Yee-Ting Lee, Po-Chun Wang
Concern of city breathability has increased in recent project planning activities. Most previous studies in the literature have demonstrated that it is possible to improve urban ventilation efficiency by manipulating the arrangement of buildings with the integration of half open spaces into building configurations. In considering the arcade design which is a conventional type of half open space, this paper first focuses on examining the ventilation performance in a realistic high-rise urban area and its associated city breathability in terms of the ACH* (defined as the ratio of the ACH to a characteristic frequency, determined by the reference velocity of the far upstream free flow divided by the reference building height) with or without incorporating an arcade into the object buildings. On-site measurements are conducted to validate the computational model. Then, the optimization procedures are presented, in which correlations from multivariable regression from our earlier study on generic urban street canyons are applied as the design guidelines for the arcade to maximize the ACH* . Computational fluid dynamics simulations are extended to take into consideration buildings with an arcade of optimum height and width in actual urban canyons to determine the effectiveness of the optimization procedures used to design arcade buildings for enhancing city breathability.
Source:Building and Environment, Volume 121
Author(s): Yu-Hsuan Juan, An-Shik Yang, Chih-Yung Wen, Yee-Ting Lee, Po-Chun Wang