The impact of urban form on U.S. residential energy use
University of Maryland, College Park · Milken Institute
Abstract
Abstract While the impact of urban form on transportation energy use has been studied extensively, its impact on residential energy use has not. This article presents a conceptual framework linking urban form to residential energy use via three causal pathways: electric transmission and distribution losses, energy requirements of different housing stocks, and space heating and cooling requirements associated with urban heat islands. Two of the three can be analyzed with available national data. After we control for other influences, residents of sprawling counties are more likely to live in single‐family detached houses than otherwise comparable residents of compact counties and also more likely to live in big…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 37.95
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 74
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Energy (signal processing)
- Geography
- Distribution (mathematics)
- Energy planning
- Business
- Urban planning
- Environmental planning
- Civil engineering
- Sustainable cities and communities