 |
Climate
and Building Design
Temperate Climate
Hot Dry Climate
Warm Humid Climate
World Meteorological Organisation Headquarters-
Design Innovation
 Hot,
Dry Climate
In
this climate, summers are hot and it seldom rains. Winter days may be
cool or warm, but the winter nights can be very cold. The air is dry,
there is little cloud and sunshine is intense. There is a big temperature
difference between day and night.
Design
Aims
Protection from the sun and moderation of the big day-to-night temperature
change.
The building block
- Does
it have summer shade?
Trees, or overshadowing from a nearby building will limit heating.
Your
house
- Can
your house cope with the intense sunshine typical of this climate?
Does
it have:
- Pale surfaces
(especially the roof) to reflect the sun?
In this climate, the summer sun is almost overhead, so the main
heat-path into your house is through the roof; a pale-coloured
roof really makes a difference. If water supply permits, a rooftop
garden would minimise heat transmission through the roof, as plants
keep themselves cool through transpiration. Because the winter
sun is lower in the sky, it shines more on the walls and windows
than on the roof, so the loss of winter solar heating via the
roof is not great.
- Double roof
(if the summer is very hot)?
- Reflective
foil insulation in the roof and walls?
This is essential. Use bulk insulation as well, where nights are
cold.
- Small windows,
shaded by eaves, on the north side of the house?
The hotter the summer, the smaller the windows and the wider the
eaves.
- Shading
for the walls and windows?
Use shutters, verandahs, canopies and/or eaves and fixed overhangs.
- Shading
for any south-facing windows, if house is north of 23.5 degrees
S?
- Vegetation
around the house, if water supply permits, to provide shade?
- Are
you taking advantage of this climates low humidity?
Evaporative coolers work well in the dry atmosphere, and use little
energy.
The natural evaporative cooling effect of plants is specially effective.
- Will
your house cope with the large day/night temperature swing?
Does
it have:
- Considerable
heat-storage capacity (bricks, stone, concrete) in living areas,
to keep daytime temperatures down?
- Bedrooms of
lighter construction, so they cool quickly at night ?
(the trade-off is that they will be cold on winter nights)
- Through ventilation
on summer nights? (check the prevailing wind direction on warm summer
nights).
- Roof-mounted
exhaust fans to extract hot air and replace it with cool night air
drawn in through open windows?
The
garden
- Do
you have plants around the house, for shade and to filter dust from
the air? Water features such as fountains and little garden
pools are beneficial, if water supply permits.
Extra
tips
Earth-sheltered and underground housing are ideally suited to this
climate.
This is the perfect climate for solar power.
|