• Nightwatch Admin@feddit.nl
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    8 hours ago

    Goodness, painting rooftops white? They ‘ll be grey in a week or so.
    You could plant fucking trees for even less heat and an overall better climate! Also, add solar panels - albedo might not be as good, but you have clean energy for trams, trains and trolley buses - instead of all polluting traffic that also heat up the city.

    • pastermil
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      5 hours ago

      Mfs would do anything but plant trees and switch to green energy.

      • GenosseFlosse@feddit.org
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        1 hour ago

        Planting trees in cities is not trivial. Big trees need space for roots, but in the city they would damage power, water or gas pipes running underground. There is also not much open soil that would trap rainwater.

  • tal@lemmy.today
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    10 hours ago

    Painting London’s rooftops white could help reduce the outdoor temperature of the city by up to 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius), according to a new study that investigated the most effective ways to cool the U.K. capital.

    Problem is that I bet that they also don’t look great, as grime is gonna be a lot more visible.

    You can wash them, but then you’re gonna need to send someone up there with a pressure washer on a regular basis if you want it to be pristine.

    kagis

    This guy is talking more about the functional than the aesthetic, that you need more maintenance on a light roof:

    https://www.roofingcontractor.com/articles/91038-the-dirty-truth-about-white-roofs

    There is, however, another aspect to low-slope roof maintenance in the era of the cool roof. You must keep them clean if you expect to take advantage of the reflective properties of a white or lightly colored membrane.

    If the person expected to buy a new, bright-white reflective roof to last two of the expected 20 years of service life, then I haven’t much of a point to make.

    Maybe it’s possible to use some sort of light-but-not-white pattern that hides some of the grime and lichens and such. That won’t help the roof functionally, but it might make it more aesthetically appealing.

    Maybe smoother and steeper surfaces could be less-prone to long-term grime buildup, tend to be washed better by rain alone.