Project Details
Carbon and water exchange of green building envelopes: Observation and process-based modelling with application at the urban scale
Applicant
Professor Dr. Stephan Weber
Subject Area
Atmospheric Science
Physical Geography
City Planning, Spatial Planning, Transportation and Infrastructure Planning, Landscape Planning
Physical Geography
City Planning, Spatial Planning, Transportation and Infrastructure Planning, Landscape Planning
Term
since 2022
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 505703010
Increasing the amount of urban vegetation is encouraged as an adaptation strategy to counter-measure climate change mainly due to (1) its potential to sequester CO2 from the atmosphere and to (2) enhance evaporative cooling and positively influence the water cycle in cities. The greening of buildings, that is the implementation of vegetated envelopes on roofs and walls, may contribute to an important part of the urban green infrastructure. However, the carbon sequestration potential of green building envelopes is one of the ecosystem services that has the least been studied due to complexity or lack of data. GREENVELOPES aims at filling this research gap by conducting an in-depth observation and process-based modelling study of building green envelopes to better understand their capacity to exchange carbon and water with the urban atmosphere.The research objectives will be addressed by state-of-the-art observations of micrometeorological fluxes and leaf-level measurements at a green roof and green wall site, covering different weather conditions during a two-year period. This is to be complemented by improving an established urban energy balance model so that it accounts for carbon and water exchanges of building green envelopes with the urban atmosphere. Upscaling these exchange processes to the urban scale by the numerical modelling of two application cities, Toulouse (France) and Berlin (Germany), will allow us to quantify and assess the impact of both types of green envelopes on carbon sequestration and evaporative cooling potential in relation to other types of urban vegetation.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
International Connection
France
Major Instrumentation
Portable photosynthesis measuring instrument
Instrumentation Group
1850 Spektralfluorometer, Lumineszenz-Spektrometer (außer Filterfluorometer
Partner Organisation
Agence Nationale de la Recherche / The French National Research Agency
Cooperation Partner
Dr. Cécile De Munck