logo
Keeping cool with colours - Vienna museum paints asphalt to fight heat

Keeping cool with colours - Vienna museum paints asphalt to fight heat

The Stara day ago
To fight extreme heat attributable to climate change, an artist collective, featuring Griessler (pic), has covered the asphalt with reflective paints to lower the temperature, as part of an innovative project in Europe combining art, science, and urban development. Photo: AFP
Equipped with an infrared thermometer, Austrian artist Jonas Griessler measures the sweltering heat in an inner courtyard in the centre of Vienna.
Thanks to his collective's art work covering the black asphalt with a multitude of bright colours, the ground temperature has dropped from 31C to 20C.
Initiated by the museum showing the private collection of late Austrian billionaire Heidi Horten, the project combines creativity, science and urban planning as Europe suffocates under the latest heatwave.
"The childish tones reflect the lightness and inconsistency with which our society addresses this issue" of climate change, said Griessler, 25, an artist with the Holla Hoop collective.
With more intense, longer and more frequent heatwaves a direct consequence of climate change according to scientists, European cities are trying to change their urban planning.
Griessler, a member of artist group Holla Hoop, and Prof Hans-Peter Hutter (right) sit on the ground over the colourfully painted courtyard of the Heidi Horten museum in Vienna, Austria. Photo: AFP
Many have been opting for more greenery and also lighter paint that reflects solar rays, trying to avoid dark material, which retains heat.
"We wanted to slightly improve the quality" of visitors' stays and "promote awareness," said curator Veronique Abpurg, happy that tourists are "attracted by this visually pleasing palette".
While each coloured surface represents a year, they each contain small dots. Each dot represents a billion tons of CO2 emissions, and the number of dots on each surface are equivalent to the worldwide emissions of that year.
This way one can visualise the increase in emissions due to human activity between 1960 and 2000.
"The blocks gradually fill up," lamented the artist, whose background is in graffiti art.
"It starts with nine dots, and at the end, there are three times more," he said.
"It's a piece of the mosaic for adapting to urban heatwaves," said Hans-Peter Hutter, an environmental health specialist at the Medical University of Vienna, who supports the initiative.
A lower temperature on the asphalt means that buildings surrounding the courtyard will need less cooling, reducing air conditioning usage, Hutter said.
"We need to communicate better on the subject (of climate change) so that people don't lose hope" and see adaptation measures as a fun activity, he added. - AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Godzilla's scars: How the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings continue to influence Japanese art
Godzilla's scars: How the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings continue to influence Japanese art

Sinar Daily

time5 hours ago

  • Sinar Daily

Godzilla's scars: How the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings continue to influence Japanese art

TOKYO - From Godzilla's fiery atomic breath to post-apocalyptic anime and harrowing depictions of radiation sickness, the influence of the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki runs deep in Japanese popular culture. In the 80 years since the World War II attacks, stories of destruction and mutation have been fused with fears around natural disasters and, more recently, the Fukushima crisis. A volunteer pushes paper lanterns out onto the Motoyasu River after they were released by visitors to mark the 80th anniversary of the world's first atomic bomb attack, in the city of Hiroshima on August 6, 2025. (Photo by Richard A. Brooks / AFP) Classic manga and anime series "Astro Boy" is called "Mighty Atom" in Japanese, while city-levelling explosions loom large in other titles such as "Akira", "Neon Genesis Evangelion" and "Attack on Titan". "Living through tremendous pain" and overcoming trauma is a recurrent theme in Japan's cultural output "that global audiences have found fascinating", said William Tsutsui, a history professor at Ottawa University. The US nuclear bombing of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945 left around 140,000 people dead. It was followed days later by the bombing of Nagasaki that killed around 74,000 people. Some poetry "portrays the sheer terror of the atomic bomb at the moment it was dropped", but many novels and artworks address the topic indirectly, said author Yoko Tawada. "It's very difficult for the experience of the atomic bomb, which had never existed in history before, to find a place in the human heart as a memory," she told AFP. Tawada's 2014 book "The Emissary" focuses on the aftermath of an unspecified terrible event. She was inspired by connections between the atomic bombs, the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster and "Minamata disease" -- mass mercury poisoning caused by industrial pollution in southwest Japan from the 1950s. The story "is less of a warning, and more a message to say: things may get bad, but we'll find a way to survive", Tawada said. Godzilla's skin Narratives reflecting Japan's complex relationship with nuclear technologies abound, but the most famous example is Godzilla, a prehistoric creature awakened by US hydrogen bomb testing in the Pacific. "We need monsters to give a face and form to abstract fears," said professor Tsutsui, author of the book "Godzilla on My Mind". "In the 1950s, Godzilla fulfilled that role for the Japanese -- with atomic energy, with radiation, with memories of the A-bombs." Many people who watched Godzilla rampage through Tokyo in the original 1954 film left theatres in tears, he said. And "it's said that the special effects people working on Godzilla modelled the monster's heavily furrowed skin after the keloid scars on the survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki." In the nearly 40 Godzilla movies released since, nuclear themes are present but often given less prominence, partly to appease American audiences, Tsutsui said. Even so, the series remains hugely popular, with 2016 megahit "Shin Godzilla" seen as a critique of Japan's response to the tsunami-triggered Fukushima disaster. 'Black Rain' "Black Rain", a 1965 novel by Masuji Ibuse about radiation sickness and discrimination, is one of Japan's best-known novels about the Hiroshima bombing. But the fact Ibuse was not an A-bomb survivor is part of a "big debate about who is permitted to write these stories", said Victoria Young of the University of Cambridge. "How we talk about or create literature out of real life is always going to be difficult," she said. "Are you allowed to write about it if you didn't directly experience it?" Nobel-winning author Kenzaburo Oe collected survivor accounts in "Hiroshima Notes", essays written on visits to the city in the 1960s. "He's confronting reality, but tries to approach it from a personal angle" including his relationship with his disabled son, said Tawada, who has lived in Germany for four decades after growing up in Japan. "The anti-war education I received sometimes gave the impression that Japan was solely a victim" in World War II, she said. "When it comes to the bombings, Japan was a victim -- no doubt" but "it's important to look at the bigger picture" including Japan's wartime atrocities, she said. As a child, illustrations of the nuclear bombings in contemporary picture books reminded her of depictions of hell in historical Japanese art. This "made me consider whether human civilisation itself harboured inherent dangers", making atomic weapons feel less like "developments in technology, and more like something latent within humanity". - AFP

Heat extremes drive major declines in tropical birds
Heat extremes drive major declines in tropical birds

Sinar Daily

time6 hours ago

  • Sinar Daily

Heat extremes drive major declines in tropical birds

Climate change-driven heat extremes have wiped out 25-38 per cent of tropical bird populations since 1950. 17 Aug 2025 07:00pm This photograph shows fallen bird feathers at the Parc Floral in eastern Paris on July 29, 2025. (Photo by Martin LELIEVRE / AFP) SYDNEY - Climate change-driven heat extremes have wiped out 25-38 per cent of tropical bird populations since 1950, Xinhua reported, based on a study involving Australian scientists. The study found that while shifts in average temperature and rainfall have some influence, the biggest climate threat to birds, particularly in tropical regions, comes from exposure to extreme heat, according to an analysis released Tuesday on the University of Queensland website. A pelican flies past birds perched on dead cypress trees in coastal waters in lower Plaquemines Parish on August 05, 2025 in Venice, Louisiana. - AFP photo Australian and European researchers analysed over 3,000 bird populations from 1950-2020, using weather data to separate climate impacts from human pressures such as habitat loss, in a dataset of 90,000 observations from all continents, it said. The research, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, confirmed the work of other climate scientists showing extreme heat events have increased dramatically over the past 70 years, especially near the equator. Birds in tropical regions are now experiencing dangerously hot days about ten times more often than they did in the past, researchers have found. Surviving birds may suffer lasting damage, including organ failure and reduced breeding success, as extreme heat lowers body condition, limits foraging, stresses eggs and chicks, and can cause dehydration or nest abandonment, the study showed. Researchers warned that even remote, protected tropical forests untouched by humans are seeing heat-driven bird declines, with climate impacts outweighing direct human pressures. Given that nearly half of all bird species are found in tropical regions, the findings signal a major threat to global biodiversity and urge urgent emission cuts and habitat protection to conserve species. - BERNAMA-XINHUA More Like This

Study: Eating fries over boiled potatoes ups type 2 diabetes risk
Study: Eating fries over boiled potatoes ups type 2 diabetes risk

Sinar Daily

time17 hours ago

  • Sinar Daily

Study: Eating fries over boiled potatoes ups type 2 diabetes risk

Those who consume similar amounts of boiled, baked or mash potatoes do not have an increased risk. 17 Aug 2025 08:01am Fries are sorted in the grading room of the Clarebout factory a French producer of frozen potato products in Bourbourg, near Dunkirk, northern France, on February 25, 2025. (Photo by FRANCOIS LO PRESTI / AFP) LONDON - People who eat three portions of French fries a week have a higher risk of developing type 2 diabetes, a new study suggests, PA Media/dpa reported. Those who consume similar amounts of boiled, baked or mash potatoes do not have an increased risk, researchers found. An international team of researchers, including an expert from the University of Cambridge, wanted to investigate any links between potato consumption and the risk of type 2 diabetes. Academics analysed data on studies tracking the health of more than 205,000 health workers in the US. Repeated surveys about people's diets were performed over almost four decades. And during the study follow-up periods, some 22,000 cases of type 2 diabetes were documented. Overall the research team found that consumption of baked, boiled or mashed potatoes were not linked to an increased risk of type 2 diabetes (T2D). But people who had a higher consumption of French fries - at least three weekly servings - had a 20 per cent increased risk. And those who eat fries five times a week appeared to have a 27 per cent increased risk. "The risks associated with potato intake varied by cooking method," the authors wrote in The BMJ (a medical journal). "The association between higher potato intake and increased T2D risk is primarily driven by intake of French fries. "Higher intake of French fries, but not combined baked, boiled, or mashed potatoes, was associated with a higher risk of T2D." The research team also found that replacing three servings of potatoes each week with whole grains was found to lower the risk of type 2 diabetes by 8 per cent. "Replacing any form of potatoes, particularly French fries, with whole grains is estimated to lower the risk of T2D, reinforcing the importance of promoting whole grains as an essential part of a healthy diet," they wrote. But replacing potatoes with white rice was associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes, they found. The research team also performed a review of all of the other studies on the topic which had similar findings. In a linked editorial, also published in The BMJ, experts from the US and Denmark wrote: "This finding also corresponds to the observed associations between high intake of ultra-processed foods and high risk of type 2 diabetes - French fries are often ultra-processed, whereas baked, boiled, or mashed potatoes are often minimally processed." They added: "With their relatively low environmental impact and their health impact, potatoes can be part of a healthy and sustainable diet, though whole grains should remain a priority." Commenting on the study, Dr Faye Riley, research communications lead at Diabetes UK, said: "This research shows that the link between potatoes and type 2 diabetes isn't as clear-cut as it might seem. "Type 2 diabetes is a complex condition, with many factors influencing its development, including genetics, age and ethnicity. "Diet is just one part of the picture, but this study suggests that how food is prepared can make a difference and reinforces the advice to prioritise whole grains and cut back on fried or heavily processed foods as a way to support a balanced diet and reduce your risk." - BERNAMA-PA MEDIA/dpa More Like This

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store