Climate change exerts growing pressure on the built environment, intensifying urban heat stress, altering microclimatic conditions, and increasing energy demand and health risks. Urban areas, characterized by dense construction and extensive soil sealing, are particularly susceptible to thermal anomalies such as Urban Heat Islands (UHIs), making thermal assessment a crucial element in adaptation and mitigation strategies. This research provides an updated and critical review of methodologies for the thermal evaluation of the built environment, with a focus on remote sensing as an emerging and integrative measurement paradigm. The study presents a comprehensive framework of detection systems, including satellite and aerial remote sensing, ground-based monitoring, and hybrid approaches, complemented by analytical and modeling techniques that combine physical and data-driven methods. A comparative assessment of open-access satellite sensors is carried out, analyzing spatial, spectral, and temporal resolutions and their relevance to urban-scale applications. The integration of remote sensing data with artificial intelligence, machine learning, and cloud-based processing is highlighted as a key advancement for improving interpretative, predictive, and decision-support capabilities. The findings indicate that such integration represents a new frontier for multiscale thermal analysis, supporting resilient urban planning, enhanced energy efficiency, and effective climate change mitigation policies.
Climate Change in Built Environment: Remote Sensing for Thermal Assessment Measurement Paradigms / Pani, Maria Michaela; Urbinati, Stefano; Mastellari, Chiara; Mariani, Lorenzo; Tucci, Fabrizio. - In: APPLIED SCIENCES. - ISSN 2076-3417. - 16:8(2026), pp. 1-28. [10.3390/app16083992]
Climate Change in Built Environment: Remote Sensing for Thermal Assessment Measurement Paradigms
Maria Michaela Pani
Primo
;Stefano UrbinatiSecondo
;Chiara Mastellari;Lorenzo Mariani;Fabrizio TucciUltimo
2026
Abstract
Climate change exerts growing pressure on the built environment, intensifying urban heat stress, altering microclimatic conditions, and increasing energy demand and health risks. Urban areas, characterized by dense construction and extensive soil sealing, are particularly susceptible to thermal anomalies such as Urban Heat Islands (UHIs), making thermal assessment a crucial element in adaptation and mitigation strategies. This research provides an updated and critical review of methodologies for the thermal evaluation of the built environment, with a focus on remote sensing as an emerging and integrative measurement paradigm. The study presents a comprehensive framework of detection systems, including satellite and aerial remote sensing, ground-based monitoring, and hybrid approaches, complemented by analytical and modeling techniques that combine physical and data-driven methods. A comparative assessment of open-access satellite sensors is carried out, analyzing spatial, spectral, and temporal resolutions and their relevance to urban-scale applications. The integration of remote sensing data with artificial intelligence, machine learning, and cloud-based processing is highlighted as a key advancement for improving interpretative, predictive, and decision-support capabilities. The findings indicate that such integration represents a new frontier for multiscale thermal analysis, supporting resilient urban planning, enhanced energy efficiency, and effective climate change mitigation policies.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Pani_Climate_2026.pdf
accesso aperto
Note: full paper applsci-16-03992
Tipologia:
Versione editoriale (versione pubblicata con il layout dell'editore)
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
1.17 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
1.17 MB | Adobe PDF |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


