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- All Subjects: Cosanti Foundation (Scottsdale, Ariz.)
During the mid-part of the last decade, when the population growth rate was at its highest, the Phoenix area experienced rapid development and urban sprawl. The result has been an intensification of the Urban Heat Island effect. In this edition of Decades, author Sally Wittlinger discusses this uncomfortable consequence of urbanization.
In a desert city such as Phoenix, summertime heat is a way of life, but how much does the built environment contribute to the intensity of the heat on a summer night? In urbanized Phoenix, nights don’t cool down as much as in the surrounding rural areas and on more and more summer nights, the official Phoenix temperature fails to drop below 90 degrees. Climate plays a huge role in the comfort and quality of life of residents, with numerous implications for tourism, energy demand, water use, and the vulnerability of low-income families.
Photograph of Bell Tree in an antechamber off the North Apse at Cosanti in Paradise Valley, Arizona
Photograph showing unidentified person and the poles supporting the concrete canopy above the swimming pool at Cosanti in Paradise Valley, Arizona
Photograph showing unidentified person and the poles supporting the concrete canopy above the swimming pool at Cosanti in Paradise Valley, Arizona
Photograph of bronze bell windchimes hanging from South Apse at Cosanti in Paradise Valley, Arizona
Photograph of an unidentified person sitting on roof of Student Apse at Cosanti in Paradise Valley, Arizona
Photograph showing unidentified person sitting on roof of Student Apse with view of the swimming pool at Cosanti in Paradise Valley, Arizona
Photograph of an unidentified person sitting on roof of Student Apse at Cosanti in Paradise Valley, Arizona
Photograph showing roof structure of South Apse at Cosanti in Paradise Valley, Arizona