skyscraper in Leeds, UK The advent of high-rise
tower blocks led to concerns regarding the wind nuisance caused by these buildings to pedestrians in their vicinity. A number of wind comfort and wind danger criteria were developed from 1971, based on different pedestrian activities, such as: • Sitting for a long period of time • Sitting for a short period of time • Strolling • Walking fast Other criteria classified a wind environment as completely unacceptable or dangerous. Building geometries consisting of one and two rectangular buildings have a number of well-known effects: • Corner streams, also known as corner jets, around the corners of buildings • Through-flow, also known as a passage jet, in any passage through a building or small gap between two buildings due to pressure short-circuiting • Vortex shedding in the wake of buildings For more complex geometries, pedestrian wind comfort studies are required. These can use an appropriately scaled model in a boundary-layer
wind tunnel, or more recently, use of
computational fluid dynamics techniques has increased. The pedestrian level wind speeds for a given exceedance probability are calculated to allow for regional wind speeds statistics. The vertical wind profile used in these studies varies according to the terrain in the vicinity of the buildings (which may differ by wind direction), and is often grouped in categories, such as: • Exposed open terrain with few or no obstructions and water surfaces at serviceability wind speeds • Water surfaces, open terrain, grassland with few, well-scattered obstructions having heights generally from 1.5 to 10 m • Terrain with numerous closely spaced obstructions 3 to 5 m high, such as areas of suburban housing • Terrain with numerous large, high (10 to 30 m high) and closely spaced obstructions, such as large city centres and well-developed industrial complexes ==Wind turbines==