Green-wall building skins could cool aging city buildings in hot climates
Urban Ecology
The climbing plants and moss panels being tested on building facades in this research are the same systems you see installed on apartment walls and parking structures, so this work tells you whether those living walls actually regulate heat or are mostly decorative.
Scientists designed virtual versions of buildings covered in living biological materials, like plants and moss, and ran computer simulations to see how well they keep buildings cooler in hot southern European cities. The focus was on retrofitting older buildings that weren't built with modern heat in mind. Because the study is simulation-based, the findings are theoretical blueprints rather than proven real-world results.
Key Findings
Bio-integrated facades are proposed as a retrofit strategy for existing buildings in Mediterranean and Balkan urban climates rather than new construction only
The approach is theoretical and simulation-based, meaning outcomes reflect modeled performance under controlled conditions rather than measured field data
The research targets cities in two distinct but climatically related regions, suggesting the facade designs are intended to generalize across a range of summer-dry and transitional climates
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers modeled how building facades embedded with living biological systems could help older buildings in Mediterranean and Balkan cities cope with heat and changing climate. The study uses computer simulation rather than field trials to test whether these bio-integrated designs can meaningfully reduce indoor temperatures and energy loads during retrofits.
Was this useful?
Want to tell us more? (optional)
Thanks for the note!
Something went wrong — please try again.
Too many submissions. Try again in an hour.
Street trees cut heat deaths by 39 percent in European cities
Trees in your local park or street aren't just pretty — they are literally keeping people alive during heatwaves, and planting even a modest number of the ri...
Climate adaptation in plants refers to the physiological and evolutionary mechanisms through which plants adjust to changing environmental conditions, including temperature shifts, altered precipitation patterns, and seasonal variations. Understanding these processes is essential for plant science
arrow_forward Explore topic