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

Seville Weather: Heat Wave 2023 Measures Include a Very Old Cooling Technique

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@DoomsdaysCW We could use something like this here in Texas, too!

@hosford42 @DoomsdaysCW

Similar but not nearly so efficient: in the desert of southern California, there was a population that lived in corrugated metal structures, and they would drape burlap over them and then dribble water slowly over the burlap. The evaporative effect lowered interior temperatures dramatically.

@VulcanTourist @DoomsdaysCW I was thinking the other day, upon observing a food truck parked under a former gas station canopy, that this probably helped reduce the temperature a *lot* in the truck. And then I wondered if a second, air-gapped roof over a house might be worth the expense. Let the canopy catch the sun, and the breeze flows between it and the actual roof of the house, siphoning off the heat instead of it soaking through the attic and down into the house proper.
@hosford42 @VulcanTourist @DoomsdaysCW Solar panels on a roof usually create this second air gapped roof effect, and it works absolute wonders.

@vxo @hosford42 @DoomsdaysCW

They would. I wouldn't have considered them at the time because the cost would have been substantially more than what I considered instead for passive cooling.

@VulcanTourist @hosford42 @DoomsdaysCW if high winds aren't a concern where you are, a shade cloth canopy would be easy

@vxo @hosford42 @DoomsdaysCW

High - and dangerously gusty - winds are indeed an issue here. I had one permanent welded iron canopy rendered impermanent by them.