2 research outputs found
Thermal Comfort Study in Post Disaster Housing in the Southern Coast of Sri Lanka
The Indian Ocean Tsunami in 2004 had a great impact on the local land formation, vegetation and settlement patterns in Sri Lanka. The re-housing developed to settle the displaced people were carried out in mass scale over a period of two to three years. By and large the criteria for re-settlement had little or no consideration for thermal comfort and climate change. This study was conducted with the aim of identifying the features in the building that causes overheating and features that has the potential to mitigate overheating.A thermal comfort field survey was conducted in selected house types in Boosa and Dadella in Galle, Madihe in Matara and Kirinda in Tissamaharama during the months that presented the most extreme climate conditions during the year. The physical characteristics of thirteen houses were explored; indoor thermal conditions were monitored with the aim of assessing the overall thermal performance of the houses.Findings showed the need to start at the neighbourhood level and the importance of the building envelope in achieving thermal comfort. Implications for design focus on guidelines for controlling the negative effects of the microclimate into the interior habitable spaces, together with the need for prescriptive thresholds for the building envelope
The role of socio-spatial relationships in sustaining communities case study of low income settlements in Colombo
LoI}) income settlements in Colombo represent communities that have high interdependence and social ties. Such
communities are observed to be significantfy linked and dependents on their public and semi public spaces tuhere
social activities and ties are reinforced and sustained. But it is observed that when such communities are resettled in
other vertical or horizontal neighbourhoods such socio-spatial relationships are ignored and hence results in
disruption of communities and loss of social ties. Therefore the existing socio-spatial relationships in such
settlements can be considered as an asset to the settlement that urban designers and Architects must recognize in
future resettlement programmes