Publication | Closed Access
Measuring polycentricity via network flows, spatial interaction and percolation
42
Citations
27
References
2019
Year
EngineeringMetropolitan Area PolycentricityNetwork AnalysisSocial SciencesSpatial NetworkData ScienceStatisticsMobility AnalysisSocial Network AnalysisNetwork FlowsGeographyUrban PlanningTransportation GeographyNetwork TheoryCommunity StructureUrban GeographyOrganise Metropolitan AreasNetwork ScienceUrban EconomicsCentral Urban PlacesUrban MobilityUrban SpaceSpatial StatisticsTransportation Systems
Polycentricity, or the number of central urban places, is commonly measured by location-based metrics (e.g. employment density/total number of workers, above a threshold). While these metrics are good indicators of location ‘centricity’, results are sensitive to threshold choice. We consider the alternative idea that a centre’s status depends on its connectivity to other locations through trip inflows/outflows: this is inherently a network rather than place idea. Three flow and network-based centricity metrics for measuring metropolitan area polycentricity using journey-to-work data are presented: (a) trip-based; (b) density-based; and (c) accessibility-based. Using these measures, polycentricity is computed and rank-centricity distributions are plotted to test Zipf-like or Christaller-like behaviours. Further, a percolation theory framework is proposed for the full origin–destination matrix, where trip flows are used as a thresholding parameter to count the number of sub-centres. Trip flows prove to be an effective measure to count and hierarchically organise metropolitan areas and sub-centres, tackling the arbitrariness of defining any threshold on employment statistics to count sub-centres. Applications on data from the Greater Sydney region show that the proposed framework helps to characterise polycentricity and sub-regional organisation more robustly, and provide unexpected insights into the connections between land use, labour market organisation, transport and urban structure.
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