i don't see us making much headway on overheating in cities when we effectively have no solar protection industry outside of 'street trees'

businessinsider.com/heatwave-miami…
there's a whole ecosystem of solar protection in the EU that starts with first keeping solar gain from entering your window.

#FabricFirst

🧵 on how pathetic our options are here in the US, comparatively:
know what else exacerbates the urban heat island effect?

cars.

removing them from city centers is critical to not just reduce urban heat island effect - but also improve livability.
on top of removing space for cars in cities, we also need to invest heavily in blue-green streets. #SpongeCity

sieker.de/fileadmin/siek…
and of course this is very much related to the *massive* open space/green space disparity that exists in multifamily areas v. single family zoned areas

seattle evening temperatures v. zoning map (blue and orange is where multifamily housing is legal. green are parks)
building design also plays a large part of this.

some local developers have stated we don't need to design for extreme temps because the 'puget sound drops down to the 50s at night'

this is no longer true for most of summer. certainly wasn't true during the heat dome.
the layouts of most multifamily buildings in seattle - on top of being in warmer areas due to urban heat island effect - are double loaded corridor buildings (like left) with no ability to get a cross breeze w/ windows on multiple sides (like plan on right).
also you can tell the city takes this issue seriously because the rebate for heat pumps the city used to offer, no longer exists.

wheeee

kuow.org/stories/enviro…
does seattle even have a urban heat island strategy plan to mitigate urban heating?

vienna does. it even includes sections on climate sensitive urban planning.

we don't even have urban planning in this city - let alone climate sensitivity.

wien.gv.at/umweltschutz/r…
does your city take climate sensible urban planning seriously?

if they did, you might see things like this...

you might see subsidies for climate protection against overheating (like vienna's shading subsidy)

seattle's a city hellbent on ignoring realities of climate change
when was the last time any US city looked at urban morphology and effect on reducing urban heat island effect, for a project in planning?

i'll wait...
what about analyzing wind flows at night for a better climate analysis to start to inform mitigation...
or where daytime and nighttime overheating vulnerabilities lie - both today, and in a warmer future? freiburg.de/pb/site/Freibu…
from those analyses you could start to build a toolbox for further mitigating heat - and layer in water management as well. sh*t's all related.
geil. so so geil

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More from @holz_bau

26 Aug
i write a lot about housing options & various housing forms. it's something i've been meaning to do a thread on for a while.

we don't have many options when it comes to housing in the US - our stock is largely detached houses or small apartments, and almost no social housing
our land use here is really spiky. most of seattle outside of the downtown core looks like this: car-dependent neighborhoods with detached houses as far as the eye can see. many of these neighborhoods don't even have sidewalks.
and then we slam apartment buildings in poorly planned/designed urban villages - and on loud, dangerous, polluted arterials. there is very little unit diversity in these buildings - most of them are small 1 BRs or studios.
Read 52 tweets
26 Aug
will note that none of the co-chairs of durkan's 'Seattle Affordable Middle-Income Housing Advisory Council' are middle class residents.

and at least half don't live in seattle.
missed this when it came out, this was just before we moved back from bayern...

but holy cow these recommendations are *pathetic*

@RayDubicki absolutely nailed the critique in the @UrbanistOrg

theurbanist.org/2020/01/30/the…
will note the basis for home prices in this table are the KC assessor - which runs well behind market rate. will also note how out of date these numbers already are in just two years

today, a single family home in seattle is over $1 million.
Read 14 tweets
26 Aug
i think someone passed this along to me the other day...

but florian nagler's *second* mass timber passivhaus social housing project over parking in munich appears to be finished.

geil.

sueddeutsche.de/muenchen/muenc…
the basic rent for a 270 sf unit is 240EUR.

1,025 sf 4 bedroom unit, 1045EUR
here's a 5 minute video (in german, sorry!) on construction of nagler's first project for the developer. also a mass timber passivhaus social housing project.

Read 4 tweets
24 Aug
the *entire* altstadt in landshut, where we lived in bayern, fits in this suburban parking hellscape in federal way

what in the f*ck are we even doing in this country
the town square of federal way v. car-free center of landshut
oh man. it gets better.

US urban planning (left) v. EU urban planning (right)

left is federal way town center, where light rail is going in

right is vienna's seestadt aspern

which one looks more livable?

which one has more open space?
Read 5 tweets
24 Aug
it is so unsafe on seattle's streets for people who get around by bike (thanks, @seattledot) that i know a number of folks who have given up riding for fear of being killed. i know people who have decided to move to live in cities w/ safe bike networks. broken down & bought cars
hell even my wife has stated she isn't opposed to moving back to europe because it's obvious that SDOT and mayor don't care about anyone but motorists.

there's no safe bike network

SDOT thinks plastic bollards save lives

and we're spending billions on car-only infrastructure
we're not building car-free neighborhoods near transit.

TOD is a complete joke in this city.

no streets are being redesigned to drastically drive down VMTs.

no consequences for motorists constantly breaking laws and endangering pedestrians and cyclists.

it's utter madness.
Read 6 tweets
24 Aug
the proliferation of this detail on seattle townhouses is... 🤢 Image
this is wrapping up right around corner from it. also - check out that sweet sweet vent stack Image
stepped townhomes - an opp to actually do something rather interesting in this city like this project in innsbruck: inspiration.detail.de/reihenhaus-in-…

instead it's a big, wet <fart noise> Image
Read 6 tweets

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