Singapore's hottest and coolest locations
While the cluster of hot spots included obvious locations with hard, impermeable surfaces or tall, closely packed buildings like Raffles Place, Shenton Way and Lau Pa Sat, other surprising locations included historical low-rise streets like Telok Ayer and Amoy Street. Despite these streets having low-rise development, green spaces and close proximity to Marina Bay, crucial elements are intensifying heat. The once coastal roads are now surrounded by high-rise urban developments that block the cooling effect from the nearby coast. The adjoining shophouses on the streets also have dark terracotta roofs that reach very high temperatures due to solar radiation. This heat is transferred to the air around the buildings, which is more impactful for low-rise areas close to pedestrian height.
Other neighbourhoods experiencing a temperature difference of above 5°C compared to their rural surroundings, included industrial zones like Kampong Ubi, areas with high population density in Rochor and Marine Parade, and areas within Orchard as well as Sembawang.
The coolest spot identified within Singapore’s 150km2 snapshot was Upper Peirce Reservoir Park with 88% water and 12% vegetation absorbing heat and making the area significantly cooler (6.5°C cooler) than Singapore’s most severe UHI hot spot.
Tony Chan, Associate Principal, Cities and Planning at Arup said that against global urban environments, designers and decision makers should not be complacent about the urban heat island effect.
Survey contributor, Dr Ting Sun, UCL, Institute for Risk and Disaster Reduction, said: “Singapore is warming at twice the global average rate, according to the Meteorological Service Singapore, which warrants urgent action to devise innovative cooling strategies. Digital solutions like UHeat can help a city like Singapore think about how to implement its advanced cooling strategies on a case-by-case basis, by bridging the gap between advanced modelling and the practical tools urban designers need.”
Arup’s report recommends essential urban design solutions to cool cities including increasing tree canopy cover, creating more permeable surfaces, and using every space possible like white or reflective roofs to passively cool the buildings themselves and reduce the need for air conditioning.
These are all design strategies Arup has proposed in a master plan called “The Intersection” that reimagines Yishun Industrial Park as a future-ready industrial estate within nature. The design embeds a range of water, landscape and blue-green infrastructure strategies across the site including extensive urban greening, shade, and natural ventilation to provide a host of social, economic, nature focused, and environmental benefits. The master plan can currently be viewed in an exhibition called “Shaping a Heat Resilient City” at the Urban Redevelopment Authority Centre in Singapore until 1 March 2024.