Adapting
to the heat: four ideas from European cities
From
checking on older neighbours to greening spaces, some cities are stepping up
efforts to keep people safe
Ajit
Niranjan
Ajit
Niranjan Europe environment correspondent
Fri 26
Jun 2026 15.35 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/jun/26/adapting-heat-ideas-from-european-cities
Extreme
heat has seared Europe this week, with the UK smashing its top heat record for
June for three days in a row, and France sweltering through its hottest day and
night on record.
As fossil
fuel pollution bakes the planet, making heatwaves hotter and longer, some
places are adapting better than others. What have European cities done to stay
safe when it gets too hot?
Check-ins
on older neighbours
Older
people are vastly overrepresented in the death tolls from heat, and doctors say
one of the most effective things you can do in a heatwave is check on those
around you. A handful of cities including Paris have organised this as an
official service, in which people with health problems or over the age of 60
can sign up to be contacted by the authorities during a heatwave.
In
Denmark, the DaneAge Association offers safety check-in calls in 170 out of 215
local branches. The scheme started more than three decades ago as a telephone
chain, where one person called the next, who called the next – and relatives
were informed if someone did not pick up.
Because
some people felt uncomfortable passing the call forward, the association said,
most groups today are organised into “telephone stars”. Across Denmark, about
1,700 volunteers take turns phoning older people living alone for a brief
welfare check in a confidential phone call.
Heat
safety is just one part of the scheme but also where some of the health
benefits may be greatest. And as temperatures have risen this week, the
association has also encouraged the public to check in on neighbours and
relatives, offer to help them with shopping and remind them to stay hydrated.
Climate
shelters
Before
heat gets unbearable, finding a place to cool down can spell the difference
between life and death. The US and Australia are fond of huge air-conditioned
sports facilities in which people can seek refuge when the weather gets hot,
but these are often hard to reach for those without cars. Parts of Europe have
instead sought to repurpose public buildings such as schools, museums and
libraries, and turn them into cooling centres.
Climate
shelters became popular in Barcelona, a pioneer of urban design that is famous
for its “superblocks”, and the shelters have swelled in number to more than 400
since 2020. They have spread across Spain and farther afield, with cooling
zones popping up from Paris to Amsterdam and Vienna.
More than
90% of vulnerable older residents of Barcelona live within a 10-minute walk of
a climate shelter, a study found in September, though summer closures mean this
drops to 75% in August, when they are needed most. Supporters say repurposing
spaces to make them heatwave-safe requires only minor investments, such as
changing opening hours and training staff, and can unlock a potentially
life-saving refuge that keeps temperatures low and lets people drink water and
use the toilet.
Making
shade
While air
conditioning can be crucial for keeping temperatures down in hospitals and care
homes, health experts want to stop the heat from getting inside before trying
to take it out.
Across
southern Europe, buildings have long been designed to offer shade that northern
Europe lacks. These include painting walls and roofs white to reflect sunlight,
and adding external shutters, screens and awnings. Parts of northern Europe are
taking note, with Amsterdam’s heat officer this week advising local people to
drape curtains outside their windows.
“Is it
always architecturally chic? No,” she said in a viral social media post that
advised clamping an extendable rod between window frames and hanging sheets
outside. “Does it work? Yes.”
The gap
between northern and southern European heat management extends to behaviour –
with shops and businesses closing during the hottest part of the day and
reopening when it cools – and the design of urban space. Narrow streets,
thick-walled courtyards, plentiful trees and widespread fountains help keep the
heat from building up. So-called “shading sails” that form fabric canopies
above streets can further reduce exposure to scorching heat.
Greening
urban spaces
Cities
are uncomfortably hotter than their surroundings because concrete and tarmac
trap heat. Add to that the heat-generating bustle of people and machines, from
cars to datacentres, and urban temperatures can rise by a potentially fatal
2-3C. It is a particular problem for Paris, which has zinc roofs that get
jarringly hot, turning top-floor attic apartments into deadly heat traps.
But Paris
has led the way in recent efforts to green itself, planting more than 150,000
trees and creating 63,000 hectares of green space under the previous mayor,
Anne Hidalgo. These cool the city and provide shade that can keep people out of
direct sunlight. Paris has also encouraged people to cycle instead of drive,
building bike lanes, pedestrianising streets and removing car parking spots,
which reduces the heat generated in the first place.
Experts
say the health benefits of such solutions during a heatwave extend beyond the
reduction in temperature. Active travel and green space leaves people
healthier, including by reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease and
obesity, which in turn leaves their bodies better prepared to withstand the
stress that hot weather places on their organs. And by cutting emissions of
planet-heating pollution, future heatwaves will not get so hot.
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