Bioclimatic study has been conducted in terms of hosing design, public transportation planning, and public space planning. You may find the relevant articles for these examples as attached.
I have been involved bioclimatic housing design. If you are interested to know more about it, please kindly refer to the following articles which are available in my Research Gate website:
Unleashing the potential of traditional construction technique in the development of modern urban mass housing
Crossing the unlimited Architecture possibilities: Advancing the art of design and aesthetic using precast innovation
Design Revolution for Affordable Housing in Tropical Country
Divergent Dwelling Design (D3) – A new approach to the sustainable living system of mass housing in Malaysia
Besides, I coming up article entitled "THE ADOPTION OF PASSIVE COOLING STRATEGY IN DESIGNING PUBLIC ASSEMBLY BUILDING IN TROPICAL CLIMATE" is also featuring the use of bioclimatic designs in public space development. Please kindly follow my latest publication if interested.
The extents of the effects of a medium–sized, unindustrialised and well planned city, on human thermal comfort conditions tried to be determined comparing the results of thermal comfort calculations, by means of meteorological data (from 1999 to 2008) taken from rural and urban areas and thermohygrometric index (THI) and predicted mean vote (PMV), two of the most widely used bioclimatic condition calculation indices. Urban characteristics of the city are evaluated for human thermal comfort and offered to improve the environmental quality of urban areas considering the principles of landscape architecture and land use planning.
In the meantime, do check out Ken Yeang, Malaysian architect, ecologist and author known for his signature ecoarchitecture and ecomasterplans. He is an early pioneer of ecology-based green design and masterplanning, carrying out design and research in this field since 1971.
I would recommend the research of Michael Hebbert, of University College London, who has done some excellent research on this
Hebbert, M. (2014). Climatology for city planning in historical perspective. Urban Climate. doi:10.1016/j.uclim.2014.07.001
Hebbert, M. J., & Jankovic, V. (2013). Cities and Climate Change: the precedents and why they matter. Urban Studies: an international journal for research in urban studies, 50 (7), 1332-1347. doi:10.1177/0042098013480970
Hebbert, M., & Mackillop, F. (2013). Urban Climatology Applied to Urban Planning: A Postwar Knowledge Circulation Failure. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 37 (5), 1542-1558. doi:10.1111/1468-2427.12046
Hebbert, M. (2013). Urbanism in the Age of Climate Change. Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning, 15 (1), 129-130. doi:10.1080/1523908X.2013.766480
Hebbert, M. (2012). Catching Up With Climatology. Urban Design &V 121, 1-11.
Janković, V., & Hebbert, M. (2012). Hidden climate change - urban meteorology and the scales of real weather. Climatic Change, 113 (1), 23-33. doi:10.1007/s10584-012-0429-1