Environmental Sensing & Monitoring

As the impacts from climate change worsen, scientific observation and monitoring of environmental hazards is essential to determine who is at risk and at what severity. The involvement of community in generating such evidence bases is integral to CAPA's approach to environmental sensing and monitoring. From personal exposure to parcel-level, city-wide, and regional assessments, CAPA's environmental monitoring solutions can be tailor fit to a variety of scenarios and purposes. Our abilities include urban heat island mapping, indoor and personal monitoring, air quality monitoring, and remote sensing, with wide applications of data from emergency preparedness and response to mitigation and adaptation planning.

Urban Heat Mapping

Engage with local partners and community members to develop a data collection campaign and map heat across a community, city or region. CAPA provides supporting materials for engagement, study design, sensor equipment, and training. We return interactive web maps of the data, machine learning models of area-wide heat distribution, and access to resources for data integration.

Indoor Heat Monitoring

Continuously monitor heat in indoor spaces like residences and work places to better understand personal exposure to heat (and air quality) while collating qualitative information from stakeholders about challenges and needs for comfort and health in indoor spaces. CAPA co-designs study with client, provides sensors, guides installation and delivers data, analytical products, and summary report with data conclusions and recommendations.

Air Quality Monitoring

Deploy a network of particulate matter (PM) sensors to better understand the distribution of PM1, PM2.5 and PM10 across a study area. Engage with local community members as sensor hosts and raise awareness on the prevalence of particulate matter pollution Map PM levels through a mobile and stationary combined mapping approach for spatially and temporally-rich descriptions.

Site Scale Assessments

Do you have your own sensor and community-based monitoring project in mind? Work with us to co-design a study, lease sensors, and develop a unique project. Monitor site-level changes through development; assess weatherization impacts on residences; monitor personal exposure at work places with wearable sensors. Utilize CAPA's expertise from dozens of community-based monitoring campaigns to co-design an effective scientific study.

Featured Projects

Tirana, Shkodra, & Vlora, Albania

Community Heat & Air Quality Mapping in Albania

CAPA conducted a multi-part hazard assessment on extreme heat and air quality in three cities across Albania (Tirana, Shkodra and Vlora) through the World Bank Group’s Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery (GFDRR). Teaming up with local researchers and university students, the teams collected mobile temperature and heat index data as well as particulate matter measurements across three hot campaign days over the summer of 2023. The data collection teams also visited several key places of interest across each using FLIR thermal imagery cameras and surveys to gather site-level impressions of heat, shade, and potential intervention activities. A StoryMap describing the effort and results is available here

Oklahoma City, OK

Heat Watch Oklahoma City 

As part of the 2023 CAPA/NIHHIS Urban Heat Island mapping campaign, the City of Oklahoma City conducted a heat and air quality monitoring campaign that engaged over 100 community volunteers as data collectors. The results indicated a nearly 15°F simultaneous disparity between warmest and coolest areas across the City. As part of the air quality activities, local partners installed AirBeam particulate matter sensors for a three-week period at fire department stations spread across the City as well as at local Department of Environmental Quality regulatory stations. CAPA’s analysis determined several areas that saw elevated and sustained levels of air pollution that are considered unhealthy for certain groups of people. The heat and air quality reports are available here; The project also entailed several policy analyses (more information and results soon available here)

Various Locations

2023 CAPA/NIHHIS Urban Heat Island Mapping Campaign 

In its sixth year of an ongoing public/private partnership with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Integrated Heat Health Information System (NOAA-NIHHIS), CAPA supported the implementation of its Heat Watch program across 16 domestic communities and one international city (Santiago, Chile) over the summer of 2023. In total, nearly 1,000 campaign volunteers collected 1.5 million unique measurements of temperature and relative humidity across over 2,000 square miles of study area. In 2024, the partnership continues for its seventh year of implementation. Learn more about the CAPA Heat Watch program here and NIHHIS here

Joey Williams

Manager

Joey directs operations of the CAPA Heat Watch program and assists with organizational growth of CAPA. He combines his process design skills with a passion for environmental human health.

Contact Joey
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