Abstract The work described here consists of results from wind-tunnel tests on models of the Building Research Establishment's experimental building at Aylesbury. The use of several scale models of this building in uniform and in simulated atmospheric boundary-layer flows together with the results from the full-scale experiments allowed an assessment of the effect of variations in the ratio of the longitudinal-turbulence integral length scale to body dimension ( L x / D ). This confirmed that the values of L x / D have to be modelled correctly even in a non-homogeneous, non-isotropic turbulent flow in order to obtain model results that are representative of the full-scale situation. The present results also appear to confirm explanations given for similar results for homogeneous, isotropic turbulent flows.
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