Publication Details |
| Category | Text Publication |
| Reference Category | Journals |
| DOI | 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2026.181690 |
Licence ![]() |
|
| Title (Primary) | Weather forecast driven irrigation of green roofs improves their thermal and hydrological performance |
| Author | Wollschläger, N.; Schlink, U.
|
| Source Titel | Science of the Total Environment |
| Year | 2026 |
| Department | SUSOZ; SUBT |
| Volume | 1028 |
| Page From | art. 181690 |
| Language | englisch |
| Topic | T5 Future Landscapes T7 Bioeconomy |
| Supplements | Supplement 1 |
| Keywords | Green roof; Urban climate; Climate adaptation; Urban stormwater management; Retention effect; Evapotranspiration; Smart irrigation |
| Abstract | Green roofs
play a vital role in urban climate adaptation by reducing heat stress
and stormwater runoff. However, their effectiveness is highly dependent
on substrate moisture. During dry periods, extensive green roofs rapidly
dry out, significantly diminishing their cooling capacity. This
restricts plant selection to drought-tolerant species such as
succulents, which offer only limited evaporative cooling potential and
biodiversity benefits. Supplemental irrigation can enhance green roof
cooling performance and may allow the cultivation of more diverse and
transpiring vegetation. However, excessive or poorly timed irrigation
may reduce the system’s capacity to retain stormwater. In this study, a
novel smart irrigation system was developed, which is based on the
assimilation of weather forecast data into a hydrological model to allow
for demand-driven water supply. The aim of the smart irrigation
management is to avoid water stress for plants and provide cooling only
on warm days, while targeting to maximize the retention capacity before
rainfall events to achieve the effective interaction of multiple
ecosystem services. The performance of the smart irrigation system is
compared to conventional irrigation approaches relying on fixed
intervals or simple soil-moisture threshold controls. Irrigation
substantially enhanced daytime surface cooling, reducing surface
temperatures by up to 6.85 K compared to the non-irrigated roof. While
irrigated green roofs offered thermal regulation on warm days, the
non-irrigated green roof tended to exhibit even higher surface
temperatures than a conventional gravel roof. Hydrologically, the smart
irrigation system required lower amounts of irrigation compared to timer
and sensor-based irrigation regimes (reduction by 46.3% and 23.5%,
respectively) without negatively affecting plant vitality and showed
notably better average runoff reduction performance for heavy
precipitation events (86.3% vs. 68.4% and 79.5%) This study demonstrates
that novel smart irrigation routines for extensive green roofs have the
potential to enhance the contribution to urban microclimate regulation
and sustainable water management. |
| Wollschläger, N., Schlink, U., Graß, R., Moeller, L. (2026): Weather forecast driven irrigation of green roofs improves their thermal and hydrological performance Sci. Total Environ. 1028 , art. 181690 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2026.181690 |
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