Stories

Belfast Heat Walking Tour

Taking the idea of telling a story through place one step further, the next storytelling method Once Upon a Time in a Heatwave took the form of a walking tour through Belfast.

Walking the streets of Belfast

Recent research independently at the University of Bristol and the UK Met Office both created new mapping results of heat risk and vulnerability in Belfast. The walking tour took to the streets with a group of stakeholders from the Public Health Agency, Housing Executive, Belfast Healthy Cities and Department of Health to see how these mapping products compare with reality in Belfast.

Heat risk maps of Northern Irleand and Belfast from the University of Bristol (left) and UK Met Office (right)

Stops on the tour told the story of heat vulnerability: what builds resilience or what enhances risks, walking a transect of low to high risk. At each stop, some specific details and data about the current electoral ward area, the temperature amplification effect of the urban heat island and different potential heat adaptation measures were discussed.

A stop on the walking tour discussing urban heat island

In between stops, there was plenty of opportunities to question and discuss ideas further, and get feedback on the research work from the stakeholders. The tour ended at the recently opened 2 Royal Avenue building, where a workshop was held with the same group of stakeholders, plus a few extras, to map out how and where climate data such as the heat risk maps can be used to feed into decision making. This was done on two themes: health & communities and the built environment & infrastructure. After the workshop, visual notes were drawn up showing with weather symbols where climate data can be used.

Group work at the climate decision making workshop

Visual notes mapping how climate data feeds into decision making on the built environment

Feedback on this activity was positive and there are plans to run the event again in the future. Interested in learning more? Leave a comment and let’s talk.

Summer Heat and Agriculture NI

Given my quantitative background in physical geography, I do like a good graph, map or figure. I was therefore interested to explore visual storytelling through a collection of graphs, and particularly whether interactive graphs could make the story more engaging than a conventional scientific report or presentation.

Introducing the Summer Heat and Agriculture NI app, launched in the summer of 2022, highlighting some of the impacts of summer heat extremes on the agricultural sector in Northern Ireland. The app is built in Shiny, a package for the statistical software R, and allows differing levels of interaction with each graph. There are several tabs to the app, taking the user through past heatwaves and their impacts to the potential magnitude of future events.

Before I go any further, why not have an explore yourself:

The aim of this app is to be of use to agricultural policy makers, i.e. those who are setting strategies or feeding into larger scale climate, environmental or agricultural reports focussing on the whole of Northern Ireland. While a local postcode checker is included in the app to show potential future temperature extremes at a local level, the underlying climate data is not detailed enough to provide specific advice for individual farms. However, it is hoped that the app would be of interest to anyone who works in agriculture and feedback on it is very welcome.

What would make it more useful to you? Leave a comment and let’s have a conversation!

Time Travelling in the Northern Irish Countryside

The second story I’d like to share is much more conventionally a ‘story’. It is an imaginative story about our changing world.

Participatory arts-based research was carried out through a pair of storytelling workshops led by local storyteller, Liz Weir. These workshops brought together young people aged 17-26 from rural Northern Ireland to explore how the Northern Irish countryside has changed and will continue to change in the future.

The outcome? Each young person got to write and tell their own short story about the future of the countryside, set in 2050. Liz Weir wove together one narrative bringing together elements of each of the individual stories. This story, plus memories shared of the past countryside, were turned into a beautiful map and story by designer Ellie Shipman.

The final narrative is a complex mixture of positive and negative, which I think is a truer reflection of reality than some conventional narratives on the future and environmental change.

Map of the North Coast and rural Northern Ireland, showing early memories of first connections in life with the countryside. The final story, written by Liz Weir using words from the young people's stories.

This work was kindly supported by additional participatory research funding from Research England.

Castlederg: Care in weather extremes

The first storytelling of Once Upon a Time in a Heatwave is a case study telling the story of a place.

The town of Castlederg in Co. Derry/Londonderry currently holds the record for being both the hottest and coldest place in Northern Ireland. While many UK studies of heat extremes focus on urban areas, this report looks at the impacts of these heat extremes on a rural community, as well as highlighting steps that have been taken in Castlederg to improve resilience to such extremes. It is hoped these steps can be adopted elsewhere in Northern Ireland to adapt to rising global temperatures.

The research involved semi-structured interviews with local care providers and those in care, bringing together their stories and experiences of past major heatwaves.

Download the full report here: Castlederg: Care in weather extremes.

First page of the Castlederg case study report

Read the report? Let’s chat – I’d love to hear your feedback. Please leave a comment with any thoughts or questions and I’ll get back to you.