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Research | Impact of roofing materials on school temperatures in tropical Africa

  • Writer: Leti Kleyn
    Leti Kleyn
  • Apr 1
  • 2 min read

Increasing extreme heat events in the tropics are creating dangerous environments in

schools. There are limited data, however, on the extent of extreme heat in such classrooms and effective heat-mitigation strategies. This study presents the first long-term analysis of classroom temperatures in Ghanaian schools, measuring conditions in 16 classrooms in Accra over 389 days. It highlights the conditions experienced by schoolchildren and examines how roof type influences classroom temperatures. Children in metal-roofed classrooms were exposed to extremely high temperatures of up to 39.8°C, exceeding outdoor temperatures by up to 5.9°C, and being overheated for 72.5% of occupied hours, posing risks to children’s health and learning. Concrete-roofed classrooms were significantly cooler than those with metal roofs (by up to 5.8°C) and were on average 1.2°C cooler than the outdoor temperature, thus exposing children to fewer hours of uncomfortably hot temperatures. Adding a plywood ceiling under a metal roof halved overheating-hours, compared with a bare metal roof. These findings highlight the need for heat-resistant design principles when constructing or retrofitting schools to create safer, healthier classroom environments that are more conducive to supporting learning and the health of children in tropical climates.


POLICY RELEVANCE

The findings of the first long-term monitoring of temperatures in 16 school classrooms

in tropical Africa allow for evidence-based policymaking. This research highlights the

urgent need to build and retrofit schools so they are heat-resistant to improve children’s

learning ability and health. Using this new evidence of extreme heat in classrooms in

Ghana, policymakers should revise the School Establishment and Inspection Policy and

the Ghana Building Code to include climate-resilient design principles, prioritising heat-resistant roofing materials. This model can be replicated across tropical Africa to create heat-resistant schools and help address United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 4 to ensure quality education in a changing climate.


Keywords: extreme heat; adaptation; thermal comfort; building materials; school;

schoolchildren; wellbeing; Africa; Ghana


Citation: Amankwaa, E. F., Roberts, B. M., Mensah, P., & Gough, K. V. (2025). Impact of roofing materials on school temperatures in tropical Africa. Buildings and Cities, 6(1),

pp. 139–157. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/bc.581


Image by Justin Hu

FUTURE AFRICA

RESEARCH LEADERSHIP FELLOWSHIP

The Future Africa Research Leadership Fellowship (FAR-LeaF) is an early career research fellowship program focused on developing transdisciplinary research and leadership skills.

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The programme seeks to build a network of emerging African scientists who have the skills to apply transdisciplinary approaches and to collaborate to address complex challenges in the human well-being and environment nexus in Africa.

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