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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Microplastic pollution on historic facades: Hidden ‘sink' or urban threat?

Environmental Pollution 2023 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Katrin Wilhelm, Katrin Wilhelm, Dania Albini, Sam Woor, Josep Grau‐Bové, Sam Woor, Michelle C. Jackson, Michelle C. Jackson, Dania Albini, Dania Albini, Neil T. Young, Neil T. Young, Phani Karamched, Michelle C. Jackson, Michelle C. Jackson, Phani Karamched, M. Wright, M. Wright, Josep Grau‐Bové, Josep Grau‐Bové, Scott Allan Orr, Scott Allan Orr, Jack Longman, Jack Longman, Tim De Kock Tim De Kock

Summary

Researchers conducted the first study quantifying microplastic contamination on historic building facades in a UK urban area, finding an estimated mean density of 975,000 fibers per square meter. They identified three distinct patterns of fiber distribution based on building height and exposure to weather, with sheltered areas accumulating more short fibers. The findings raise the question of whether urban facades act as a significant environmental sink for airborne microplastics.

Despite the increasing concerns surrounding the health and environmental risks of microplastics (MPs), the research focus has primarily been on their prevalence in air and the oceans, consequently neglecting their presence on urban facades, which are integral to our everyday environments. Therefore, there is a crucial knowledge gap in comprehending urban MP pollution. Our pioneering interdisciplinary study not only quantifies but also identifies MPs on historic facades, revealing their pervasive presence in a medium-sized urban area in the UK. In this case study, we estimated a mean density of 975,000 fibres/m^2 (0.10 fibres/mm^2) for fibre lengths between 30 and 1000 μm with a ratio of 1:5 for natural to artificial fibres. Our research identifies three groups of fibre length frequencies across varied exposure scenarios on the investigated urban facade. Sheltered areas (4m height) show a high prevalence of 60-120 μm and 180-240 μm fibres. In contrast, less sheltered areas at 3m exhibit lower fibre frequencies but similar lengths. Notably, the lowest area (2-1.5m) features longer fibres (300-1000 μm), while adjacent area S, near a faulty gutter, shows no fibres, highlighting the impact of exposure, altitude, and environmental variables on fibre distribution on urban facades. Our findings pave one of many necessary paths forward to determine the long-term fate of these fibres and provoke a pertinent question: do historic facades serve as an urban 'sink' that mitigates potentially adverse health impacts or amplifies the effects of mobile microplastics? Addressing MP pollution in urban areas is crucial for public health and sustainable cities. More research is required to understand the multi-scale factors behind MP pollution in large cities and to find mitigation strategies, paving the way for effective interventions and policies against this growing threat.

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