Cool Suburbs NSW Help Designers Beat Heat

Written by: The Hawkesbury Phoenix

WSROC Heat 2021 1 - landscape

Cool Suburbs NSW is now available online, free of charge, providing a star-rating for urban design.

The Western Sydney Regional Organisation of Councils (WSROC) has released Australia’s first heat resilience assessment tool - Cool Suburbs NSW; helping architects, developers and town planners build heat resilience into the homes, workplaces, towns and cities of the future.

WSROC President, Councillor Barry Calvert said Cool Suburbs NSW was a practical science-backed tool to help industry and government make informed decisions about managing heat impacts - both today and the future - through state-of-the-art urban design.

“Cool Suburbs NSW is available online, free-of-charge and can provide a star-rating for urban design and can be used for a range of scales from single buildings to large-scale masterplans,” Mr Calvert said.

“As heat risks grow with climate change, cities around the world are looking for solutions to improve, to manage heat through urban design.

“Urban heat has been a major challenge for Western Sydney and we are proud to be leading the way for heat resilient design across our state.”

Cool Suburbs NSW launched on Thursday, September 26 by the WSROC.

The tool was developed in collaboration with a panel of leading scientists, and experts from government and the development industry.

“Connecting science with practice, this innovative tool shows you how to maximise urban cooling including orientation, airflow, permeability, shading, open space, and water; providing developers, planners, architects and builders with guidance for how each measure can be achieved,” Councillor Calvert said.

“Cool Suburbs NSW also outlines measures to support community heat resilience including provision of drinking water, backup power for community hubs, and community information and signage.”

Developments are awarded ‘credits’ for the ‘cooling’ measures they incorporate, culminating in a ‘Cool Suburbs Score’ that shows how well designers have delivered heat-resilient urban design.

Credits are awarded for:

  • Urban Design - to ensure urban layout supports passive cooling;

  • Cool Streets - that contribute to creating ‘cool lines’ in urban landscapes;

  • Cool Parks - that create cool outdoor spaces;

  • Cool Homes - that promote passive design principles for great resilience to high temperatures;

  • Cool Buildings - including workplaces, community hubs and places of worship, and

  • Innovative Technologies - that advance urban heat performance.

“Make no mistake, our cities and towns are getting hotter,” Councillor Calvert said.

“Consequently, urban design and development has an increasingly important role to play in enabling heat resilience for our communities and landscapes.

“The new design tool supports real-world decision-making drawing on a wide range of research data to inform the management of heat through design.”

Go to https://coolsuburbs.com.au/ to try Cool Suburbs.

Cool Suburbs NSW is funded through the Disaster Risk Reduction Fund (DRFF), jointly funded by the Australian and NSW governments.

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