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OverviewTo remain comfortable in a world of evermore extreme weather events and climate trends, we need a building revolution. Building designers, owners, managers, and occupants must prepare now for future climates with new ways to stay comfortable indoors. This book is a compendium of information on comfort that provides an overview of the complexity of the many ways that comfort is achieved in buildings. It outlines the impacts and implications of current design practices on greenhouse gas emissions from buildings and the health and well-being of people in them. In reality, many modern buildings, and particularly homes, are already failing in various ways. During extreme weather events, they overheat. During power outages, many buildings do not even remain habitable. During the COVID pandemic, cross-infections between occupants were rife in buildings like hospitals and hotels without opening windows. As energy prices soared and globally economies flatlined, many found themselves unable to pay for high-cost comfort solutions and so either had to change their lifestyles and expectations or learn to live with discomfort. Underlying many of the growing global problems is the trend towards an overdependence on mechanical systems to produce comfort, coupled with a decrease in the passive climatic performance of the buildings themselves. Both factors are resulting in a generation of increasingly un-resilient buildings. The theory of adaptive thermal comfort states that people adapt to those temperatures they normally occupy, and if they become uncomfortable, they tend to change themselves or their surroundings to return to comfort, if they are able or can afford to. This is the third of three volumes, which builds on the practical and theoretical foundations of the subject laid out in the first two volumes. It builds on their premises to shape a new and better roadmap going forward for imagining, designing, and constructing adaptable buildings, and for the behavioural lifestyle changes needed to prepare humanity to survive and thrive comfortably in the very different weather and climates ahead. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Susan Roaf , Fergus Nicol , Michael HumphreysPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9780415691635ISBN 10: 041569163 Pages: 442 Publication Date: 19 March 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsDEDICATION PREFACE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS COMFORT IN BUILDINGS Chapter 1. Designing for Comfort at the Extremes Chapter 2. Dangerous Curves: The Over-Heating Buildings Problem PEOPLE AND COMFORT Chapter 3. How Bodies Adapt Chapter 4. How People Adapt BUILDINGS AND COMFORT Chapter 5. How People Adapt in Buildings Chapter 6. Comfort Clouds COMFORT AND CULTURES Chapter 7. Comfort, Cultures and Customs Chapter 8. Comfort Colonialism THERMAL HEARTBEATS OF BUILDINGS Chapter 9. Thermal Heartbeats of Buildings Chapter 10. Killer Buildings: Heatwaves Chapter 11. Killer Buildings: Hypothermia ECOLOGY AND COMFORT Chapter 12. The Ecology of Comfort Chapter 13. Heat Flows and Ecological Engineering Chapter 14. Harvesting Comfort from Landscapes Chapter 15. Mining Comfort from the Earth Chapter 16. Thermal Mass Chapter 17. Harvesting Comfort from Sky Cycles Chapter 18. Air and Comfort Chapter 19. Thermal Landscaping of Buildings DESIGNING FOR A HOTTER CLIMATE Chapter 20. Reconnecting Designers to Climates Chapter 21. Firmness, Commodity and Delight Chapter 22. Designing Thermally Well-Behaved Buildings Chapter 23. Thermal Delight in Design COMFORT AND WELLBEING Chapter 24. Comfort and Well-being Chapter 25. Mental Well-Being, Health and Comfort Chapter 26. Emotions and Well-Being Chapter 27. Spiritual Comfort and Beliefs Chapter 28. Adaptable Buildings = Adaptive Comfort APPENDICESReviews“Even as the climate warms, so too does the debate about thermal comfort in buildings. ‘At the Extremes’ is appropriately hard-hitting and insightful – a true guide for hotter times ahead”. Jonathon Porritt, writer and campaigner, President of The Conservation Volunteers and Population Matters “We can’t air-condition our way out of the climate crisis—this book is an essential manifesto for designing a resilient future, showing how our bodies, buildings, and cultures must adapt to a heating world.” Prashant Kapoor, Chief Industry Specialist, Green Buildings and Cities, Climate Business Department, IFC ""This is a truly stupendous piece of work covering all dimensions of the question of thermal comfort in buildings –historical time, location, built space and the challenge of Climate Change. A must read for designers and researchers for an urgently needed 'reset' for theory and practice."" Ashok Lall, Principal of Ashok B Lall Architects, Delhi, India ""How wonderful to read a book on science that is written so clearly: for in a time of adjustment we need plain speaking… As Sue Roaf says: 'the first step to escaping from an echo chamber is to realise that you are in one.' May this book assist you to thrust the window of your enclosed space wide open and brave this world which created you – if you can find one that opens!"" Phil Harris, Troppo Architects “Even as the climate warms, so too does the debate about thermal comfort in buildings. ‘At the Extremes’ is appropriately hard-hitting and insightful – a true guide for hotter times ahead”. Jonathon Porritt, writer and campaigner, President of The Conservation Volunteers and Population Matters “We can’t air-condition our way out of the climate crisis—this book is an essential manifesto for designing a resilient future, showing how our bodies, buildings, and cultures must adapt to a heating world.” Prashant Kapoor, Chief Industry Specialist, Green Buildings and Cities, Climate Business Department, IFC ""This is a truly stupendous piece of work covering all dimensions of the question of thermal comfort in buildings –historical time, location, built space and the challenge of Climate Change. A must read for designers and researchers for an urgently needed 'reset' for theory and practice."" Ashok Lall, Principal of Ashok B Lall Architects, Delhi, India “Even as the climate warms, so too does the debate about thermal comfort in buildings. ‘At the Extremes’ is appropriately hard-hitting and insightful – a true guide for hotter times ahead”. Jonathon Porritt, writer and campaigner, President of The Conservation Volunteers and Population Matters “We can’t air-condition our way out of the climate crisis—this book is an essential manifesto for designing a resilient future, showing how our bodies, buildings, and cultures must adapt to a heating world.” Prashant Kapoor, Chief Industry Specialist, Green Buildings and Cities, Climate Business Department, IFC Author InformationSusan Roaf is Emeritus Professor of Architectural Engineering at Heriot Watt University. Raised in Malaysia and the Australian bush and educated in Britain, she has lived and worked as an architect, anthropologist, and archaeologist in Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, California, and Antarctica, experiences that colour her unique understanding of buildings and comfort in different climates and cultures and that inspired her work on adapting buildings and cities to a heating world. She pioneered UK building–integrated solar technologies and eco-design and, with Nicol and Humphreys, has promoted adaptive thermal comfort globally. Her expertise in ancient technologies informed some of her 23 books and other publications, all aimed at better understanding performance in the past, present, and future. Fergus Nicol is an award-winning leader in the field of adaptive thermal comfort, having started as a physicist at the Building Research Establishment in the 1960s. He moved on to work with the UK Medical Research Council and into teaching before leaving both to start the radical book shop Bookmarks. Returning to research in 1992, he is now Emeritus Professor in a number of universities and a top cited scholar across his many publications. He led influential pan-European and Pakistan studies on comfort, and he leads NCEUB, the Network for Comfort and Energy Use in Buildings. He co-founded and ran the Windsor Conferences on Comfort and is internationally respected for his support of fellow researchers and students. Michael Humphreys is known for his pioneering work on the adaptive approach to comfort. He was Head of Human Factors at the Building Research Establishment and has been a Research Professor at Oxford Brookes University. His scientific interests are the methodology of field studies of environmental comfort, the structure and statistical modelling of human adaptive behaviour, and the interactions between the several aspects of the indoor environment. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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