自然破碎化增加了城市密度,但阻碍了全球交通和城市发展

Luyao Wang, Albert Saiz, Weipeng Li
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引用次数: 0

摘要

长期以来,自然地理一直被认为是全球城市发展、土地利用和环境成果的关键。然而,文献尚未对全球城市地理障碍的范围和影响进行全面的定量分析。在此,我们引入了三个新的指数:自然障碍所占比例、非凸性(衡量自然破碎程度的指标)和平均道路绕行率,以衡量和研究全球城市周围自然限制因素的实际范围和影响。我们针对四个不同的全球城市边界定义及其周边地区计算了这些指数,并用额外的变量扩充了原始数据。我们发现,自然障碍会导致更复杂的交通环境,与更高的城市密度、更小的城市化足迹、更高的建筑和更少的污染有关,但也与更低的收入和更少的人口有关。要得出有意义的政策结论,对全球城市的环境、经济和社会成果进行比较研究时,应始终考虑其周边的地理环境。本文计算了全球 13000 多个城市的三种障碍(水、陡峭的山脉和国界)是如何限制城市发展和互联互通的。文章发现,天然屏障与城市密度更高、规模更小、更环保、对土地的需求更少有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Natural fragmentation increases urban density but impedes transportation and city growth worldwide

Natural fragmentation increases urban density but impedes transportation and city growth worldwide
Physical geography has long been identified as critical for urban development, land use and environmental outcomes in cities worldwide. However, the literature has yet to provide comprehensive, quantitative analyses of the global extent and impact of urban geographic barriers. Here we introduce three novel indexes: the share of natural barriers, nonconvexity (a measure of natural fragmentation) and the average road detour, to measure and study the practical reach and effects of natural constraints around global cities. We calculate these indexes for areas in and around four separate global city-boundary definitions, augmenting the original data with additional variables. We find that natural barriers lead to more complex transportation environments and are associated with higher urban densities, smaller urbanized footprints, taller buildings and less pollution but also with lower incomes and smaller populations. To draw meaningful policy conclusions, comparative research about environmental, economic and social outcomes across global cities should always account for their surrounding geographies. This Article calculates how three barriers (water, steep mountains and national borders) limit urban growth and interconnectivity for more than 13,000 cities around the world. It found that natural barriers are associated with denser, smaller, greener and less land-hungry cities.
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