School students find relief from summer heat under new 'fractal' sunshade
KYOTO -- Students at a Kyoto area high school have a new place to find shelter from the hot summer sun after their school teamed up with Kyoto University and Sekisui Chemical Co. to build a bower-like shady spot dubbed the "Fractal Sunshade."
Kyoto Prefectural Kyotoyawata High School worked with Professor Satoshi Sakai of Kyoto University's Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies and Sekisui on the sunshade. The shade is made of vinyl chloride sheets cut into triangles, and allows sunlight through triangular spaces to dapple the ground below, hence the "fractal" name.
The group experimented with a number of different shapes for the sunshade material, measuring the ground temperature beneath, and discovered that the triangle fractal was most effective on a number of fronts. Not only did the fractal design lower the ground temperature more than a design with no holes, but also reduced radiative cooling during the winter, thereby moderating the cold.
"It's cooler than being under a regular roof," said one third-year Kyotoyawata student. "It's got good air circulation and feels great."
"If built on a regular rooftop, the internal temperature of the building would drop, too," says Sakai. "It's a cheaper option compared to building a green roof."