4.5 Article

Practical Efficient Regional Land-Use Planning Using Constrained Multi-Objective Genetic Algorithm Optimization

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijgi10020100

Keywords

land-use optimization; genetic algorithm; spatial compactness

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41890854]

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This study developed a novel Land Use Intensity-restricted Multi-objective Spatial Optimization (LIr-MSO) model that can balance competing objectives more effectively, with experiment results showing superior fitness compared to contrast experiments and rapid iteration towards near-optimality.
Practical efficient regional land-use planning requires planners to balance competing uses, regional policies, spatial compatibilities, and priorities across the social, economic, and ecological domains. Genetic algorithm optimization has progressed complex planning, but challenges remain in developing practical alternatives to random initialization, genetic mutations, and to pragmatically balance competing objectives. To meet these practical needs, we developed a Land use Intensity-restricted Multi-objective Spatial Optimization (LIr-MSO) model with more realistic patch size initialization, novel mutation, elite strategies, and objectives balanced via nominalizations and weightings. We tested the model for Dapeng, China where experiments compared comprehensive fitness (across conversion cost, Gross Domestic Product (GDP), ecosystem services value, compactness, and conflict degree) with three contrast experiments, in which changes were separately made in the initialization and mutation. The comprehensive model gave superior fitness compared to the contrast experiments. Iterations progressed rapidly to near-optimality, but final convergence involved much slower parent-offspring mutations. Tradeoffs between conversion cost and compactness were strongest, and conflict degree improved in part as an emergent property of the spatial social connectedness built into our algorithm. Observations of rapid iteration to near-optimality with our model can facilitate interactive simulations, not possible with current models, involving land-use planners and regional managers.

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