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Heat Dome Household Survival

How to Cool a Home Passively

Expected time required: 2 mins

Apply passive cooling techniques to manage indoor temperatures and recognize the life-threatening signs of heatstroke.

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The hum of air conditioning often gives us into a false sense of security. But when the power grid buckles under the strain of a prolonged heat dome, a modern house stops protecting the people inside and starts baking them instead.

Without electricity or air conditioning, survival relies on thermal physics and basic bodily awareness rather than a thermostat dial.

So how can you keep your living space safe if the grid fails or you lack air conditioning?

Blocking solar radiation

The first line of defense is keeping the sun's energy from entering the home at all. Once sunlight passes through a pane of glass, it transforms into trapped thermal energy, acting exactly like a greenhouse.

Because of this effect, stopping solar radiation outside the glass is far more effective than trying to block it inside (IEA, 2018). External awnings, exterior shutters, or even temporary shade cloths prevent the pane from heating up. If you only have internal blinds or curtains, keep them tightly closed during the day, particularly on east- and west-facing windows, but understand that some heat has already entered the room.

Strategic cross-ventilation

When indoor air feels stifling, instinct often tells us to throw open a window. During a heat dome, this is a dangerous mistake.

MYTH VS. FACT
Myth: Opening windows creates a breeze that always cools the room.

Fact: If the air outside is hotter than the air inside, an open window just pulls extreme heat indoors. Keep windows completely shut until outdoor temperatures drop.

If the air outside is 35°C (95°F) and the air inside is 28°C (82°F), opening a window simply pulls that intense heat indoors. You must ventilate only when ambient temperatures drop below your indoor baseline, which usually means waiting until late at night or early morning.

Once the outdoor air is cooler, use cross-ventilation to flush the trapped heat. Open windows on opposite sides of your living space to create a pressure difference that actively pulls cool nighttime air through the rooms. Close everything and draw the shades again the moment the sun rises.

Opening windows on opposite walls creates a pressure difference that actively pulls cool evening air through the room.
Opening windows on opposite walls creates a pressure difference that actively pulls cool evening air through the room.

Eliminating indoor heat sources

Your home is also an active source of heat. Everyday appliances act as subtle, persistent heaters that compound the indoor thermal load during a heat dome.

An oven baking dinner or a tumble dryer spinning clothes releases significant residual heat into stagnant indoor air. During a crisis, shift all heat-generating tasks to the coolest hours of the night, or switch entirely to no-cook meals and air-drying (WHO, 2021). Even turning off unnecessary incandescent lighting or large electronics can slightly lower the ambient temperature.

Spotting the biological tipping point

Despite your best passive cooling efforts, indoor temperatures may still reach dangerous levels. Recognizing the difference between a stressed body and a failing one saves lives.

Heat exhaustion is the body's warning system. It typically presents with heavy sweating, weakness, dizziness, and a rapid pulse. At this stage, the body is struggling but still actively trying to cool itself through evaporation.

Heatstroke is a catastrophic failure of that system and a severe medical emergency. The core temperature spikes uncontrollably. Key signs include severe confusion, fainting, and crucially, hot, dry skin because the sweat glands have completely shut down (WHO, 2023). If someone stops sweating in a hot environment and becomes disoriented, they require immediate external cooling and professional intervention, not just a glass of water.

WARNING
If you suspect Heatstroke (confusion, fainting, lack of sweat), call emergency services immediately. Move the person to the coolest available space and apply cold, wet cloths directly to their skin while waiting.

What to take away

Surviving without power means actively managing your home's thermal boundaries and knowing the body's warning signs.

  • Block sunlight on the outside of your windows before the heat penetrates the glass.
  • Keep windows tightly sealed during the heat of the day and only cross-ventilate at night.
  • Watch out for confusion and dry skin, which signal life-threatening heatstroke rather than just exhaustion.

With these passive strategies in place, you can buy critical time during extreme weather anomalies.

References
  1. International Energy Agency. (2018). The Future of Cooling. IEA. Source
  2. World Health Organization. (2021). Heatwaves: How to stay cool. WHO Regional Office for Europe. Source
  3. World Health Organization. (2023). Information and public health advice: heat and health. WHO Press. Source

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