A typical city: row upon row of houses built almost on top of each other, with asphalted roads between them and with very few green areas to be found. Urban areas built on this pattern warm up more strongly than their rural surroundings, creating islands of warmth. The waste heat emitted by vehicles and machinery (such as air conditioning equipment) causes yet more heating, and even during the night the city hardly cools down to any noticeable extent. Megacities such as Mexico City and urban conurbations such as Athens are more and more frequently covered by a visible dome of pollution because the air cannot properly circulate. This kind of this urban climate can damage the health of the city's inhabitants because the concentration of trapped pollutants may reach dangerous levels.
Built-up areas in cities do not automatically lead to still air conditions. An example of this is Chicago, which is nicknamed "the Windy City" because, being located on the shores of Lake Michigan, it is cooled even during the hottest summers by a pleasant breeze. This only happened, however, when the streets were laid out in a grid pattern as the city was rebuilt after the great fire of 1871, allowing the onshore breeze from the lake to blow freely through the street "canyons" between skyscrapers.
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