Atlanta is embracing a cheap, effective way to beat urban heat: 'cool roofs'
Atlanta is embracing a cheap, effective way to beat urban heat: 'cool roofs'

Atlanta is embracing a cheap, effective way to beat urban heat: 'cool roofs'

Walk outside into 100-degree heat wearing a black shirt, and you’ll feel a whole lot hotter than if you were wearing white. Now think about your roof: If it’s also dark, it’s soaking up more of the sun’s energy and radiating that heat indoors. If it were a lighter color, it’d be like your home was wearing a giant white shirt all the time.
This is the idea behind the “cool roof.” Last month, Atlanta joined a growing number of American cities requiring that new roofs be more reflective. That significantly reduces temperatures not just in a building, but in the surrounding urban environment. “I really wanted to be able to approach climate change in the city of Atlanta with a diversity of tactics,” said City Council member Liliana Bakhtiari, who authored the bill, “because it’s far easier to change a local climate than it is a global one.”
This has always been one of those, “why the fuck don’t we do this already?” things. Also, NighthawkInLight has a video on how we could make self cooling buildings with infrared cooling paint. https://youtu.be/N3bJnKmeNJY
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windcatcher
Because the black roof lobby has spent a ton of money to keep roofs black.
Not kidding.
"It isn't cheap" seems to be the biggest issue. Saw another video that showed it working, but he did say it was pretty expensive for paint.
sorry, I meant why aren't we using white paint. There's no way white paint is expensive compared to black paint.
The infrared cooling paint has other issues, like it doesn't withstand damage easily and the surface texture needs to be maintained very well. But like, white paint is the cheapest kind of paint, just due to commonality.
Alternatively, why aren't we growing plants on all the roofs, that would absorb even more heat without requiring air conditioning, and it would improve air quality, it could be used for farming, etc. Now that one I can understand being more expensive, but you might be able to offset it with sales of whatever you're growing up there, but that's really unlikely. So white paint really seems like a no-brainer.
This is the video i was looking for!
I don't get why we don't do it either. I live in a dark brown brick oven... the sun literally hits the entire house because neighbors didn't want a tree in their yard so they cut all the big ones down... even when outside it cools down, my house stays hot. Even when i leave all the windows open, as soon as i close them, it warms back up. The house itself just stays hot for a very very long time...