Today’s Solutions: April 10, 2025

As is happening all over the planet, the number of sweltering days affecting people each year in Vietnam has grown significantly in recent years as a result of climate change. Using air conditioning may help reduce people’s exposure to life-threatening hot temperatures. The problem is, always keeping the A/C running not only leads to exorbitant energy costs, but also further exacerbates the effects of global warming.

Natural cooling system

In a bid to find a solution, multidisciplinary architecture agency AREP came up with an alternative cooling system in the form of a low-tech bamboo prototype. The system uses what’s known as an adiabatic process to provide a sustainable and affordable solution to cooling down urban areas. Adiabatic cooling uses an evaporative cooling process where air flows across water, which absorbs heat from the air, cooling it off as it continues on by.

“For centuries, ancient civilizations cooled down their buildings by using the natural freshness of water through the adiabatic principle. To evaporate, water needs energy which is ‘absorbed’ from the heat of the ambient air, thus generating the cooling effect,” explains AREP.

Essentially, the system uses only three main components to provide a cooling effect, namely water, hot air, and bamboo — all of which are found in abundance in Vietnam. As for the creation of the actual structure, the agency approached local artisans who helped build the system according to local crafting traditions.

To prove the system’s efficiency, the team put it to the test in Hanoi. According to the designers, the bamboo cooling tower succeeded in dropping the surrounding temperature by 6°C (from 30°C to 24°C), proving the system’s potential as a viable cooling solution for cities. AREP now plans to expand the solution to regionally as well as to other parts of the world affected by frequent heatwaves.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Super small dissolvable pacemaker offers safer, simpler heart treatment

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In a brilliant medical innovation, researchers developed the smallest known pacemaker—smaller than a grain of rice—that dissolves in ...

Read More

Tiny sparks, massive implications: how water droplets may have ignited life o...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Could the origin of life have begun not with a bolt from the blue but with something far ...

Read More

Listen to this fascinating piece of ambient music composed by stars

Though we can’t hear them, stars propagate some incredibly soothing soundscapes through the vacuum of space. And for the first time, music composed from ...

Read More

Cracking the case: Is joint cracking harmful or simply satisfying?

Many of us have been warned about cracking our knuckles due to stories of arthritis and joint problems. Is there any truth to this ...

Read More