The article explores the role of adaptive building envelopes as an innovative strategy to mitigate the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect and enhance environmental sustainability in cities. While adaptive envelopes are traditionally studied for energy efficiency and indoor comfort, this research evaluates their potential at the urban scale by analysing their ability to dynamically interact with the microclimate through solutions such as evaporative cooling, vegetative integration, and high solar reflectance materials. Through a comparative analysis of 50 case studies (25 traditional versus 25 adaptive envelopes), the study highlights how ceramic materials, due to their high Solar Reflectance Index (0.75) and Thermal Emittance (0.90), are among the most effective in reducing surface temperatures. Additionally, the integration of active cooling systems and bioreceptive surfaces demonstrates significant potential in improving air quality and urban resilience. The findings emphasize the need to move beyond static building envelope approaches, proposing instead a model of adaptive urbanism in which architecture becomes an active agent in managing urban climate. The study concludes that, despite current limitations in quantitative data availability, adaptive envelopes represent a promising solution for addressing the climatic and social challenges faced by urban areas

From Adaptive Skins to Adaptive Cities / Gasparini, Katia; Moro, Sara. - In: ATHENS JOURNAL OF ARCHITECTURE. - ISSN 2407-9472. - 12:(2026), pp. 1-21.

From Adaptive Skins to Adaptive Cities

Katia Gasparini
Writing – Review & Editing
;
Sara Moro
Writing – Review & Editing
2026-01-01

Abstract

The article explores the role of adaptive building envelopes as an innovative strategy to mitigate the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect and enhance environmental sustainability in cities. While adaptive envelopes are traditionally studied for energy efficiency and indoor comfort, this research evaluates their potential at the urban scale by analysing their ability to dynamically interact with the microclimate through solutions such as evaporative cooling, vegetative integration, and high solar reflectance materials. Through a comparative analysis of 50 case studies (25 traditional versus 25 adaptive envelopes), the study highlights how ceramic materials, due to their high Solar Reflectance Index (0.75) and Thermal Emittance (0.90), are among the most effective in reducing surface temperatures. Additionally, the integration of active cooling systems and bioreceptive surfaces demonstrates significant potential in improving air quality and urban resilience. The findings emphasize the need to move beyond static building envelope approaches, proposing instead a model of adaptive urbanism in which architecture becomes an active agent in managing urban climate. The study concludes that, despite current limitations in quantitative data availability, adaptive envelopes represent a promising solution for addressing the climatic and social challenges faced by urban areas
2026
From Adaptive Skins to Adaptive Cities / Gasparini, Katia; Moro, Sara. - In: ATHENS JOURNAL OF ARCHITECTURE. - ISSN 2407-9472. - 12:(2026), pp. 1-21.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11388/383874
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