The effects of atmospheric stability on flow in urban street canyons were studied using a stratified wind tunnel. We conducted experiments using a model that represented city streets with simply shaped block forms, while varying atmospheric stability across seven stages from stable (Rb=0.79) to unstable (Rb=-0.21). We used a laser Doppler anemometer (LDA) and a cold wire to measure the flow field and temperature within and above the street canyon. In addition to mean values of wind speed components and temperatures, we measured turbulence intensity, shear stress, and heat flux distribution. Our results led to the following conclusions: Cavity eddies that arose in the street canyon tended to be weak when the atmosphere was stable and strong when unstable. Stable atmospheric conditions led to a positive feedback effect in which the downward flow into the street canyon weakened due to buoyancy, which facilitated the formation of a more highly stable stratification. As a result, when stability exceeded a certain threshold (somewhere in the range of Rb=0.4-0.8), the wind speed in the street canyon dropped nearly to zero.