The Impacts of Redlining on Urban Heat in New York’s Capital District

Author

Rosa Kirk-Davidoff, Lucia Wiggers

Keyword

Urban Heat Island Effect, Redlining, New York, Housing Policy, Green Space, Urban Tree cover.

Collections

World Sustainability Conference 2021 Papers

Format:

PDF

URL

https://greeninstitute.ng/the-impacts-of-redlining-on-urban-heat-in-new-yorks-capital-district

Abstract

The impacts of green space (or lack thereof) on the surface temperature of cities has long been studied through the Urban Heat Island effect. However, the extent to which the historic discriminatory housing policy of redlining influences the temperatures of different neighbourhoods in the same city is still being revealed. Here, the researchers investigated how Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) maps correspond to land surface temperatures through uneven distribution of tree canopy and impervious surfaces in New York’s Capital District. Using HOLC maps for Albany, Troy, and Schenectady, the researchers calculated the percentage of tree cover and imperviousness for each of the map’s graded blocks, and calculated the land surface temperature for each block using Landsat 8 imagery. Results showed that neighbourhoods rated “hazardous” were generally hotter, more impervious, and less tree-covered than those rated “best” in Albany and Schenectady, but not in Troy. The difference between blocks rated “hazardous” and blocks rated “best” was +2.67°C in Albany, +4.18° in Schenectady, and -1.18° in Troy. These results support the claim that discriminatory housing policies are tied to unequal distribution of urban heat. Affected communities, like those in the Capital District, should be identified to increase resilience to the environmental, physiological, and social impacts of climate change.

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  • Creative Commons