Brown Bag Fridays - March Series
Venue: NUS Cities Office
Time: 12PM onwards 8 March 2024 |
Heat Stress and Impacts of Rising Urban Heat
Time: 12PM onwards 8 March 2024 |
Heat Stress and Impacts of Rising Urban Heat
by Research Assoc. Prof. Jason Lee (Director of Heat Resilience and Performance Centre, NUS)
A/P Jason Lee is currently the Director of the Heat Resilience and Performance Centre and is the lead PI of the Human Potential Translational Research Programme. He obtained his first degree (Sports and Exercise Science – 1st Class Honours) from Loughborough University, UK. Following the award of G V Sibley Memorial Prize, he stayed on to complete a PhD in Exercise Physiology under sponsorship from the UK Overseas Research Scholarship and Faculty Studentship.
Jason is a Fellow of the American College of Sports Medicine and a member of the Professionals in Nutrition for Exercise and Sport. Tapping on his experience as a Commando Officer in the Singapore Armed Forces and domain knowledge, he serves in various national and international panels related to human performance and safety. Jason’s main research interests are in fluid balance, thermoregulation and mitigation strategies for improving human performance. He studies the physiological demands associated with passive and exertional heat stress and how humans adapt to ensure optimum performance and survival. A key outcome of his research is the formulation of a holistic heat management system.
Jason completed his 12-year tenure at the DSO National Laboratories in 2018 by directing the Human Performance Programme in his final appointment. He has delivered more than 150 invited presentations locally and internationally. He provides consultancy to enhance performance of military and elite sports personnel, and is a member of the WHO and WMO Report on Climate Change on Workers’ Health and Productivity.
15 March 2024 |
Study on Neighbourhoods
by Assoc. Prof. Ho Kong Chong (Head of Studies, Urban Studies, Yale-NUS College)
A/P Ho Kong Chong is trained as an urban sociologist and conducts research on neighbourhoods and community development, heritage and place-making, the political economy of cities and more recently, higher education. Much of his published work is on East Asian (Hong Kong, Seoul and Taipei) and Southeast Asian (Bangkok and Singapore) cities. Recent publications include “The Neighbourhood Roots of Social Cohesion: Notes on an exceptional case of Singapore” Environment and Planning C (2018, with Chua) and Neighbourhoods for the City in Pacific Asia (University of Amsterdam Press, 2019).
His active research projects include: the Ministry of National Development (MND) funded “Study of Mixed Housing Typologies” (Lead Researcher), SSRTG grant “In Work Poverty and Challenges of Getting by among the Young” (Co Lead), USPC_NUS grant “Governing Diverse Cities in Europe and Asia”, MND funded “PLAB: A Research and Design Investigation of the Redevelopment of the Paya Lebar Airbase” (Co-Lead) and SSHR grant “Fostering Positive Community Behavior (Co-Lead). A/P Ho has a PhD from the University of Chicago.
22 March 2024 |
Guest Presentation
by Professor Tony Wong (Visiting Professor, NUS Cities; and Professor, Monash University)
Tony Wong is Professor of Sustainable Development at Monash Sustainable Development Institute. He was formerly Chief Executive of the Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) for Water Sensitive Cities (2012-2020), a $120 million Australian Government initiative established in 2012. Prior to his CRC appointment, Tony was a founding co-director of Monash University’s Centre for Water Sensitive Cities and served as Chief Executive from its establishment until 2012.
A Civil Engineer with a PhD in Water Resources Engineering and over 30 years professional experience, Professor Wong is internationally recognised for his research and practice in sustainable urban water management, particularly water sensitive urban design. His expertise has been gained through national and international consulting, research, and academia. He has led a large number of award-winning urban design projects in Australia and overseas and has been commended for having defined "a new paradigm for design of urban environments that blends creativity with technical and scientific rigour”.
Professor Wong has pioneered a programme of work, referred herein as the Water Sensitive Cities approach, which takes a unique socio-technical approach for concurrently addressing the social, environmental and economic challenges of traditional urban water management. The development of this approach has encompassed a sequence of his significant achievements in research and development, technology, urban design and policy. His early work on Water Sensitive Urban Design (WSUD) has diffused globally, and his subsequent transformation of WSUD into the more holistic Water Sensitive Cities approach has been mainstreamed across Australia, and increasingly amongst developing nations. Through this 20 plus year journey, Professor Wong has advanced new understandings of the relationship between the societal and biophysical dimensions of water security and city waterscapes – enabling solutions to be underpinned by creative design, and technical and scientific rigour for delivering sustainable urban water outcomes.
Professor Wong provides strategic advice on sustainable urban water management to the land development industry and to state and local governments, and has led the development of numerous state and corporate policies on water sensitive urban design. His impact in research, policy, and on-ground practice now directly affect human health – sparking the kinds of big changes that mirror his vision for water as a champion for true change.