Chicago: Underground climate change is ‘deforming’ land under buildings and ‘things are sinking’, says study

Downtown Chicago is “sinking” due to “subsurface heat islands” or underground climate change, US scientists have warned in a study.

For the first time, experts at Northwestern University in Illinois have linked the phenomenon to shifting land under urban areas.

As the ground heats up, layers of clay also deform and this causes the foundations of buildings and the surrounding land to move excessively and even crack, the scientists said.

This could affect the long-term durability of buildings, they claimed.

The problem is not confined to Chicago, as the experts state the “silent hazard” is lurking underneath other cities around the world.

In many urban areas, heat is released by buildings and underground transportation such as subway systems, causing the ground to “warm at an alarming rate”.

The team that carried out the study placed a wireless network of more than 150 temperature sensors across the Chicago Loop – the central business district of the city and the main section of downtown Chicago – both below and above ground.

Temperature data was collected using sensors that were installed in basements, subway tunnels, underground parking garages and in streets.

The study found underground temperatures below the Chicago Loop were often 10C warmer than those beneath Grant Park, a green space that is away from buildings and underground transportation systems.

The team also made a 3D computer model to look at how the ground changed between 1951 – when the city’s first subway opened – and present day.

The simulations matched the results collected in the field and they were then used to predict how things could change by 2051.

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