Walk outside into 100-degree heat wearing a black shirt, and you’ll feel a whole lot hotter than if you were wearing white. Now think about your roof: If it’s also dark, it’s soaking up more of the sun’s energy and radiating that heat indoors. If it were a lighter color, it’d be like your home was wearing a giant white shirt all the time.

This is the idea behind the “cool roof.” Last month, Atlanta joined a growing number of American cities requiring that new roofs be more reflective. That significantly reduces temperatures not just in a building, but in the surrounding urban environment. “I really wanted to be able to approach climate change in the city of Atlanta with a diversity of tactics,” said City Council member Liliana Bakhtiari, who authored the bill, “because it’s far easier to change a local climate than it is a global one.”

  • RageAgainstTheRich@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    This is the video i was looking for!

    I don’t get why we don’t do it either. I live in a dark brown brick oven… the sun literally hits the entire house because neighbors didn’t want a tree in their yard so they cut all the big ones down… even when outside it cools down, my house stays hot. Even when i leave all the windows open, as soon as i close them, it warms back up. The house itself just stays hot for a very very long time…