Mapping the linkage between outdoor water footprint and social vulnerability in Phoenix, AZ (USA)
Abstract Code: 9191
Topics: Water Resources and Hydrology
, Urban and Regional Planning
, Arid Regions
Keywords: Surface water inequity, residential swimming pools, social vulnerability, urban heat island effect, redlined communities
Session Type: Virtual Poster Abstract
Authors:
Jacob Napieralski, University of Michigan - Dearborn
Audrey Taylor, University of Michigan - Dearborn
Catherine Sulich, University of Michigan - Dearborn
Paul Draus, University of Michigan - Dearborn
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Abstract
Surface water inequities are the disproportionate distribution of outdoor water for the management of blue and green space, including residential swimming pools and irrigated gardens, and contribute to thermal inequities that are particularly pervasive in arid climates. The purpose of this study was to map and assess social vulnerability to green space and blue space within two transects in Phoenix, Arizona, a socioeconomically diverse city that is water vulnerable and experiencing intense urban heating. The objectives were to (1) map distribution of residential swimming pools; (2) link blueness and greenness of communities to social vulnerability; (3) evaluate the blueness and greenness of formerly redlined neighborhoods; and (4) assess the severity of the urban heat island effect in redlined neighborhoods. The results show a strong relationship between social vulnerability and pool count and area, and overall green- and blueness. Redlined neighborhoods have fewer pools, surface water features, and vegetation and, as a result, exhibit a greater severity of urban heat island effect than communities that were graded as “safe”. In many cities like Phoenix, the legacy of segregative housing policies and the widening gap in socioeconomic vulnerability has amplified the disparate distribution and access to green and blue urbanscapes.
Mapping the linkage between outdoor water footprint and social vulnerability in Phoenix, AZ (USA)
Category
Virtual Poster Abstract
Description
Submitted By: Jacob Napieralski, University of Michigan - Dearborn
jnapiera@umich.edu
Abstract Code: 9191
Link to Session: Water Resources and Hydrology
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