Publication | Closed Access
Compact, Dispersed, Fragmented, Extensive? A Comparison of Urban Growth in Twenty-five Global Cities using Remotely Sensed Data, Pattern Metrics and Census Information
876
Citations
65
References
2008
Year
Pattern MetricsComparative Urban ResearchUrban ModellingEconomic DevelopmentUrban DevelopmentUrban FormUrban ScienceEarth ScienceSocial SciencesUrban GrowthGlobal Urban PlanningUrban EnvironmentUrban SprawlGeographyUrban PlanningAmerican Urban SprawlUrban GeographyUrban EconomicsBusinessRemote SensingGeospatial DataCensus Information
Despite growing recognition of the important role of cities in economic, political and environmental systems across the world, comparative, global-scale research on cities is severely limited. This paper examines the similarities and differences in urban form and growth that have occurred across 25 mid-sized cities from different geographical settings and levels of economic development. The results reveal four city types: low-growth cities with modest rates of infilling; high-growth cities with rapid, fragmented development; expansive-growth cities with extensive dispersion at low population densities; and frantic-growth cities with extraordinary land conversion rates at high population densities. Although all 25 cities are expanding, the results suggest that cities outside the US do not exhibit the dispersed spatial forms characteristic of American urban sprawl.
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