Aerodynamic Roughness of
Urban Areas Derived from Wind Observations
Grimmond, C.S.B.,
King, T.S., Roth, M. and T.R. Oke
Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 89 (1): 1-24, October 1998
Abstract
This study contributes to
the sparse literature on anemometrically determined
roughness parameters in cities. Data were collected using both slow and fast
response anemometry in suburban areas of Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami and Vancouver. In all cases the instruments were mounted on tall
towers, data were sorted by stability condition, and zero-plane displacement (zd) was taken into account. Results indicate the most
reliable slow response estimates of surface roughness are based on the standard
deviation of the wind speed obtained from observations at one level. For
residential areas, winter roughness values (leaf-off) are 80–90% of summer (leaf-on) values. Direct
comparison of fast and slow response methods at one site give very similar
results. However, when compared to estimates using morphometric methods
at a wider range of sites, the fast response methods tend to give larger
roughness length values. A temperature variance method to determine zd from fast response sensors is found to be useful at only
one of the four sites. There is no clear best choice of anemometric method to
determine roughness parameters. There is a need for more high quality field
observations, especially using fast response sensors in urban settings.