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ASSURE: Across-Scale processeS in URban Environments

Lead Research Organisation: Imperial College London
Department Name: Civil & Environmental Engineering

Abstract

Local and global consequences of climate change (enhanced urban heat islands, worsening environmental conditions) affect most of the world's urban population, but only recently have cities been represented, albeit crudely, in weather forecast models. To manage and develop sustainable, resilient and healthy cities requires improved forecasting and observations that cross neighbourhood-influenced scales which the next generation weather forecast models need to resolve. ASSURE addresses the critical issue of which processes need to be parameterised, and which resolved, to capture urban heterogeneity in space and time.

We will advance understanding to develop new approaches and parameterisations for larger-scale urban meteorological and dispersion models by combining the results of field observations, high-resolution numerical simulations and wind tunnel experiments. Field work and modelling will focus on Bristol, as its physical geography provides suitably high levels of complexity and allows whole-city approaches. With mid-sized cities being large sources of greenhouse gases, and where large numbers of people live, it is critical agencies can provide predictions of weather and climate variability across cities of this scale as they need this information to manage and provide their services. ASSURE will include idealised simulations and theoretical analyses to ensure generic applicability.

The ASSURE objectives are:
* To understand how sources of urban heterogeneity (physical setting, layout of buildings and neighbourhoods, human activities) combine to influence the urban atmosphere in space and time.
* To quantify effects of urban heterogeneity at different scales (street to neighbourhood, to city and beyond) on flow, temperature, moisture and air quality controlling processes and to determine how these processes interact.* To develop a theoretical framework that captures key processes and feedbacks with reduced complexity to aid mesoscale and larger model parameterisations.
* To inform the development priorities of current weather and climate models that have meso-scale capabilities and are used in decision-making processes (e.g. integrated urban services).

The ASSURE high-fidelity simulations and carefully designed experiments will allow us to explore implications of urban heterogeneity in isolated and combined configurations; interpret and integrate field observations (e.g. 3D meteorological and city-scale tracer dispersion experiments); integrate different approaches to understand the magnitude, source, and geographical extent of uncertainties in process models at different scales; synthesize the new knowledge to conduct theoretical analyses; develop algorithms reflecting this analysis.

Novel in ASSURE are simulations resolving street to city-scale features that are linked to mesoscale models; field observations capturing vertical and horizontal variations in the urban boundary- and canopy-layers, including novel multi-source gas tracer experiments; and wind tunnel simulations across atmospheric stabilities and model resolution. New insights will be gained on the role of variations in the building morphology (or form), local topography, and human activities (e.g. waste heat, and AQ emissions).

ASSURE will produce detailed datasets; in-depth understanding across the scale of atmospheric processes involved; high-fidelity multiscale urban modelling tools; theoretical models taking account of multiscale effects; improved assessment of current meso-scale model skill and the data used by practitioners to explore future urban scenarios as city form and function change.

We will work with local and international organisations and companies to ensure the project benefits a broad range of society. They include: Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, CERC, COWI, ECMWF, Met Office, Delft University of Technology, Stanford University, University Hannover, RWDI, Surrey Sensors and UKCRIC.

Publications

10 25 50
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Wilson C (2025) Microscale to neighbourhood scale: Impact of shading on urban climate in Building and Environment

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Yu T (2022) Urban neighbourhood classification and multi-scale heterogeneity analysis of Greater London in Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science

 
Description One of the largest challenges in studying flows over urban areas is urban heterogeneity: urban areas rapidly change in form as you move from the suburbs to downtown, and even within a neighbourhood there are large variations in land use, e.g. parks, roads and buildings. We have developed tools that allow one to quantify heterogeneity of the urban surface and how this influences the atmospheric flow. Crucially, we developed tools that allow us to investigate urban flows observed at multiple lengthscales. This new methodology not only improves our understanding of urban flows, but also provides a systemic manner to investigate how the urban surface should be modelled in numerical weather prediction models such at the Met Office Unified model.
Exploitation Route The methodology is extremely versatile and can be used both for meteorological applications and for engineering applications (e.g. urban heat islands).
Sectors Environment

 
Description UrbanAIR: URBAN simulation for AIR quality and heat resilience strategies
Amount € 13,000,000 (EUR)
Organisation European Commission H2020 
Sector Public
Country Belgium
Start 02/2025 
 
Description Collaboration with the Met Office 
Organisation Meteorological Office UK
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We perform building-resolving large-eddy simulations in order to understand heterogeneity in urban areas. We then apply coarse-graining techniques to study how the urban surface needs to be parameterised for land-surface applications.
Collaborator Contribution The Met Office provides information about their models, opportunities for improving models, provides internships to PhD students, access to their models and performing high-resolution NWP simulations.
Impact 1. Wilson, C.E., Paschalis, A., Bohnenstengel, S.I., Shonk, J.K.P. & Van Reeuwijk, M. (2025). The impact of shading on the urban surface energy balance and microclimate. Build. Env. (in press) 2. Lean, Theeuwes et al. (2024) The Hectometric Modelling Challenge: Gaps in the current State of the Art and Ways Forward towards the Implementation of 100 m scale Weather and Climate models. Q. J. Roy. Met. Soc. 1-38 3. Nair V.S., Devenish, B.J. & Van Reeuwijk, M. (2023), Effect of gravity on spatial clustering and geometric collision of polydisperse droplets. Flow Turb. Combus. 110, 889-915 4. Suetzl, B.S., Rooney, G.G., Finnenkoeter, A., Bohnenstengel, S., Grimmond, C.S., Van Reeuwijk, M. (2021), Distributed urban drag parameterization for sub-kilometre scale numerical weather prediction, Q. J. Roy. Met. Soc. 147(741), 3940-3956. 5. Suetzl, B., Rooney, G.G., Van Reeuwijk, M. (2020), Drag distribution in idealised heterogeneous urban environments, Boundary-Lay. Met. 178, 225-248 6. Jordan, O.H., Rooney, G.G., Devenish, B.J., Van Reeuwijk, M. (2021), Under pressure: turbulent plumes in a uniform crosswind. J. Fluid Mech. 932, A47
Start Year 2019