Subsurface Urban Heat Islands (Below-Ground Warming): A Comprehensive Scientific Review of the Hidden Thermal Transformation Beneath Cities
Cities are commonly recognized as warmer than their surrounding rural landscapes. This phenomenon, known as the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect, has traditionally been studied through elevated air temperatures, overheated roads, and heat-retaining buildings. Yet this familiar picture captures only the visible portion of a much larger thermal system. Beneath streets, towers, transport corridors, utility networks, and groundwater aquifers, another form of urban warming is developing, slower, less visible, but potentially more persistent. This phenomenon is known as the Subsurface Urban Heat Island (SSUHI) . Subsurface urban warming refers to the increase in temperature of soils, sediments, bedrock, groundwater, basements, tunnels, and buried infrastructure beneath urbanized areas relative to surrounding non-urban land. Unlike atmospheric warming, which changes rapidly with weather and season, subsurface warming evolves gradually because soil and rock store heat efficiently. Once heat en...