Thermal Resilience of Buildings and Communities: A Multistakeholder Review of Metrics and Approaches

Date Published
10/06/2025
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authors
DOI
10.1146/annurev-environ-013125-111914
Abstract

Increasing temperature-related hazards require a collective effort to assess and enhance the thermal resilience of buildings and communities to protect occupants’ safety and minimize property or infrastructure damage. However, limited coordination across stakeholders and lack of standardized procedures for resilience assessment undermine the effectiveness of extreme temperature mitigation and adaptation strategies across the building life cycle. This review examines the current literature on resilience metrics to address thermal stress and risk due to extreme indoor environments. Stakeholders of thermal resilience include architects and engineers, occupants, property owners, real estate developers, urban planners, and policymakers. Additionally, motivations for measuring thermal resilience are emphasized, such as safeguarding occupant health and survivability, protecting property, and ensuring business continuity during extreme weather events. This review provides actionable insights and identifies future research needs for enhancing resilience through tailored metrics for stakeholders during the planning, design, construction, operation, and retrofitting phases of buildings and communities.

Journal
Annual Review of Environment and Resources
Volume
50
Year of Publication
2025
Issue
1
Pagination
681-708
Publisher
Annual Reviews
ISSN Number
1543-5938, 1545-2050
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