The last Saturday in July brought a heatwave to the Twin Cities, with temperatures hovering above 90 degrees. But it felt much cooler on a shady block in south Minneapolis’ Kingfield neighborhood.
The leafy stretch on Pillsbury Avenue was where Anna Berglund and Seiko Shastri started collecting data to help Hennepin County officials understand which areas of the city are hotter than others, and the differences between blocks.
Berglund and Shastri were among more than 120 volunteers who spent July 27 driving across the Twin Cities using window-mounted sensors to collect street-level data on the urban heat island effect. As the temperature gauge in their Evie Carshare Nissan Leaf hovered in the low 90s, they drove through forested parkland near Lake Nokomis and past industrial parks off Hiawatha Avenue.
“This is the perfect day to do this,” Shastri said.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) selected Hennepin and Ramsey counties to participate in its urban heat island mapping project, which has studied the heat island effect in cities around the world for the past eight years. Urban areas experiencing a heat island effect can have a temperature difference of up to a 20 degrees, depending on the amount of shade.
Shadier sections, typically in predominantly white neighborhoods, are cooled by tree cover, while areas dominated by asphalt, concrete and industrial parks are more exposed to the sun. A 2020 study revealed that Minneapolis’ formerly redlined neighborhoods, areas where discriminatory housing practices took place from the 1930s through 1960s, were almost 11 degrees hotter than the city’s coolest neighborhoods.
The data will be used by the two counties to allocate climate investments aimed at reducing the disparities between wealthier, whiter neighborhoods and formerly redlined areas that are home to more immigrants and people of color.
“We see a strong correlation between areas that are hotter and areas that are formerly redlined,” said Cliff Mountjoy-Venning, a senior planning analyst on Hennepin County’s climate and resilience team.