Hotterdam Vulnerability Cluster

Datacite citation style:
Wandl, Alexander; van der Hoeven, F. (Frank) (2015): Hotterdam Vulnerability Cluster. Version 1. 4TU.ResearchData. dataset. https://doi.org/10.4121/uuid:faf0c935-d7ea-4d93-b3b2-24c273835976
Other citation styles (APA, Harvard, MLA, Vancouver, Chicago, IEEE) available at Datacite
Dataset
Delft University of Technology logo
usage stats
1732
views
322
downloads
geolocation
Rotterdam - in-habitat areas: Rotterdam excluding the harbour
lat (N): 51.9156
lon (E): 4.4681
view on openstreetmap
time coverage
2014
licence
Method: The atlas identifies the social features that have been designated in previous research projects as possible causes of heat-related problems. Hierarchical multiple regression analyses were used to establish which of these are statistically significant in the case of Rotterdam: the number of those aged 75 and over per hectare, the average age of the buildings, the sum of sensible heat and ground heat flux. A cluster analysis was used to identify the links between these features. Results: This results in six clusters (or typologies) that are shown here on the map with different colours, together with a table explaining the underlying values. Parent item: Hotterdam: Urban heat in Rotterdam and health effects Heat waves will occur in Rotterdam with greater frequency in the future. Those affected most will be the elderly – a group that is growing in size. In the light of the Paris heat wave of August 2003 and the one in Rotterdam in July 2006, mortality rates among the elderly in particular are likely to rise in the summer. The aim of the Hotterdam research project was to gain a better understanding of urban heat. Heat was measured and the surface energy balance modelled from that perspective. Social and physical features of the city were identified in detail with the help of satellite images, GIS and 3D models. The links between urban heat/surface energy balance and the social/physical features of Rotterdam were determined on the basis of multivariable regression analysis. The decisive features of the heat problem were then clustered and illustrated on a social and a physical heat map. The research project produced two heat maps, an atlas of underlying data.
history
  • 2015-12-11 first online, published, posted
publisher
TU Delft
format
The data is in ESRI shape format. The values of every variable are available on 1 ha grid, which is the same as the CBS vierkanten 100m and can therefore be brought into relation to CBS data. media types: application/octet-stream, application/vnd.google-earth.kml+xml, application/zip, text/plain
organizations
TU Delft, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Department of Urbanism

DATA

files (2)