Higher urban temperatures have a negative impact on: cooling energy demand [4] and cooling peak energy demand [5]; the production of atmospheric ozone [6–9], one of the main components of urban smog; air pollution level [10], human health [11–13] and the perception of well-being [...
Based on these predisposing conditions, short-term transient phenomena, such as heavy rainfalls [5] or dynamic inputs (i.e., earthquakes or anthropic vibrations), can represent triggers able to lead the slope to failures, acting mutually on resistances and disturbing forces [6–10]. In ...