Medellín, Colombia - Urban Green Corridors
Green Heat Flood

Medellín, Colombia - Urban Green Corridors

Medellín, Colombia · 2022 · Pop. 2570000 · Green Infrastructure & Heat Reduction

Medellín transformed 30 street corridors into lush green lanes, reducing peak temperatures by up to 3°C and sparking a global rethink of street design

Temperature drop of 2–3°C along corridors
30 green corridors covering 36 km
Cited as global model by UN-Habitat

Challenge

Medellín, Colombia’s second-largest city, sits in a narrow Andean valley where rapid urban growth, vehicle traffic and limited green space combine to create intense urban heat. Annual temperatures have been rising, increasing heat stress for residents — particularly in dense, low-income neighbourhoods. The city also faces flash flooding during heavy rain events, aggravated by impervious surfaces.

The Green Corridors Programme

Between 2016 and 2019, Medellín converted 30 heavily trafficked streets into “green corridors” (Corredores Verdes). Each corridor features dense planting of native trees and shrubs along the central reservation and footpaths, combined with cycling infrastructure, wider footways and improved drainage.

What Was Built

  • 36 km of corridors across 30 streets in the city centre and El Poblado
  • 880,000 plants installed including trees, shrubs and ground cover species
  • Drip irrigation powered by water harvested from the roadway
  • Cycling and pedestrian priority lanes reducing private vehicle space

Measured Cooling Effect

Thermal monitoring conducted before and after the corridors found peak surface temperatures fell by 2–3 °C along greened streets compared with control streets. The European Environment Agency’s UHI mapping tool was used to validate the city-scale thermal improvement.

The corridors also improved air quality (PM₁₀ concentrations fell by up to 14% in adjacent areas) and reduced surface runoff through soil infiltration.

Outcomes

The transformation was rapid and visible. Within one year of completion, the corridors became popular social spaces as well as functional climate infrastructure. UN-Habitat cited Medellín as a global model for nature-based urban cooling.

  • Temperature reductions of 2–3°C on greened streets
  • 30 corridors covering 36 km across the city
  • Air quality improvements of up to 14% in PM₁₀
  • Awarded UN-Habitat Scroll of Honour 2019

Lessons Learned

  1. Street redesign and greening can be delivered at scale quickly when political will exists
  2. Native species adapted to local conditions require less irrigation and maintenance
  3. Combining green infrastructure with cycling and pedestrian improvements multiplies social benefits
  4. Real-time thermal monitoring builds the evidence base for scaling up

Tools Used in This Case Study

Climate Tools Applied

Green Infrastructure Coalition
Green Infrastructure Coalition
Tools and resources for implementing green infrastructure in urban areas
Urban Heat Island Effect Tool
European Environment Agency
Map and analyse urban heat islands at city and neighbourhood scale using satellite thermal...