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Amsterdam Experiment: 'fake trees' against heat stress

Amsterdam Experiment: 'fake trees' against heat stress
Shade deficiency
By Bette de Koning Modified :
© Bette de Koning Amsterdam Experiment: 'fake trees' against heat stress
RTL

Temperature records are being broken more and more often, leading to growing heat problems in Dutch cities. To cool the city, the municipality of Amsterdam launched the Shadow Makers project last Tuesday, which uses 'fake trees' to create shade.

Shade makers can look different: from a large sun sail to a steel frame with climbing plants in the shape of a tree, which also generates shade. It is not about plastic fake trees, but about 'sustainable, easy to move objects that contribute to the liveability of the environment.'

Another example is the modular tree from urban developer The Urban Jungle Project, which is part of the two-year trial. This elm is real, and is in an above-ground, movable container that allows the tree to collect water, grow well and requires little maintenance.

Growth space

Simply planting trees is not possible everywhere. Many city soils are full of cables, pipes or underground parking garages, which means there is no room for the roots of trees.

Municipalities must give trees enough space to grow, for this root bunkers are needed: underground structures that provide space for the root system. But in many places there is no space for these bunkers, and therefore no space for the tree.

This modular elm needs to grow taller to provide more shade © Bette de Koning
This modular elm needs to grow taller to provide more shade

In Amsterdam alone, there are over eighty places where it can get dangerously hot during a heat wave. The Oosterdokskade near Amsterdam Central Station is even called a 'heat street', a stone quay where the sun shines all day and where there is hardly any shade. The perceived temperature there can rise to more than 40 degrees in the summer.

Heat complaints

These extreme temperatures lead to heat stress: health complaints caused by high temperatures. Think of heart problems, headaches and other physical discomfort.

According to research institute TNO, an average of forty extra people die per day during heat waves, resulting in a 12 percent increase in the mortality rate.

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