Westchester County's sustainability planning encourages cool-roof installations, expanded tree canopy, and reflective surfaces in dense urban centers like Yonkers, Mount Vernon, and New Rochelle to mitigate the urban heat island effect.
Through the Climate Smart Communities program and county sustainability grants, Westchester promotes cool-roof retrofits, lighter-colored pavement on county lots, and tree planting in environmental-justice neighborhoods. The state Energy Conservation Construction Code already requires cool roofs on most low-slope new construction. Cities such as Yonkers and New Rochelle layer additional incentives or requirements for large redevelopment sites. Single-family homeowners are not generally compelled to install cool roofs but may qualify for utility rebates.
There are no direct fines tied to county heat-island goals. Code requirements for cool roofs on commercial buildings are enforced through standard building-permit reviews and may delay certificates of occupancy until corrected.
See how Westchester County's heat island mitigation rules stack up against other locations.
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