One of Europe’s Hottest Cities Rediscovers an Old Cooling Technique

By Laura Millan
August 8, 2023

"The streets of #Seville in southern #Spain were so hot that July afternoon that it felt almost impossible to walk outdoors. As temperatures approached 42C (108F), people scrambled to find shelter in air-conditioned homes, offices and public buildings. Yet, less than two miles from the city center, a cool breeze blew under a giant white roof.

"The structure is a part of CartujaQanat, an architectural experiment in cooling solutions that doesn’t rely on burning more planet-warming #FossilFuels. The site, about the size of two soccer fields, includes two auditoriums, green spaces, a promenade and a shaded area with benches. But its star performer remains hidden — the qanat, a network of underground pipes and tubes inspired by Persian-era canals.

"The grid of #aqueducts can lower surrounding temperatures by as much as 10C using just air, water and #solar power, according to Emasesa, the Seville public water company that helped to build it. The system is modeled on ancient tunnels dug to bring water to agricultural fields that were first documented in what is today #Iran. The Persians realized 1,000 years ago that the running water also cooled the air in the canals, so they fashioned vertical shafts to bring that air to the surface.

" 'This is not an air-conditioning system like the one you may have in your home,' says Juan Luis López, the project’s supervisor and an engineer at Emasesa. 'We use natural techniques and materials to reduce temperatures.' "

Read more:
https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2023-seville-spain-extreme-heat/

Archived version:
https://archive.ph/36fz1

#SolarPunkSunday #History #PersianTechnology #ClimateChange #KeepingCool #ExtremeHeat #AncientTechnology

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CartujaQanat – Recovering the Street Life in a Climate Changing World Journal 2: How is Sevilla moving the needle in the fight to urban climate transformation

Sevilla in Spain, will be the battleground of Europe for extreme urban heat. A pilot space containing an amphitheatre, an underground gallery and open-air facilities located on Avenida Thomas Alva Edison within the large Expo ’92 Park of Sevilla in Spain, is being reconverted into zero-energy consumption pubic space and delivered to citizens, as an innovative co-managed space for public events and leisure. Functioning as a test-bed for a diversity of solutions, the project CartujaQanat can be transferred to streets and other large public spaces offering a new model for urban street regeneration through infrastructure, jobs re-invention and place-making. Sevilla is the hottest city in Europe expecting to record temperatures of 50 degrees Celsius for consecutive days over the next five to ten years. How does a city safeguard its public life under conditions of extreme heat? And how is cooling under such temperatures achieved with zero-net energy consumption? CartujaQanat aims to provide an answer.

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