4.7 Article

Spatial Characterization of Urban Vitality and the Association With Various Street Network Metrics From the Multi-Scalar Perspective

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.677910

Keywords

urban vitality; spatial design network analysis; spatial scales; big data; Wuhan

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41601162]
  2. General Financial Grant from the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2016M601112]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province, China [BK20200109]

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In the context of rapid urbanization in developing countries, the spatial organization of cities has been progressively restructured over the past decades, with little understanding of how this expansion has affected the socio-economic spaces. This study in Wuhan, China explores the relationship between street network metrics and urban vitality at different scales, revealing that connectivity plays the largest role in urban vitality (over 40%), with betweenness and closeness explaining roughly 28% each. The findings highlight the importance of considering street configurations in enhancing urban vitality.
In the context of rapid urbanization in developing countries, the spatial organization of cities has been progressively restructured over the past decades. However, little has been done to understand how the physical expansion affected the reorganization of socioeconomic spaces in cities. This study explores the association between various street network metrics and urban vitality and how it changes across different scales using geographic big data through a case study of Wuhan, China. Urban vitality is characterized by four components: concentration, accessibility, livability, and diversity. The new technique of spatial design network analysis (sDNA) is employed to characterize street network metrics, including connectivity, closeness, betweenness, severance, and efficiency, with 16 localized network variables. Furthermore, the stratified spatial heterogeneity between street network metrics at multiple scales and the four components of urban vitality is investigated using the Geodetector tool. First, concentration, accessibility, and diversity decline with distance from the urban center, whereas livability has a fluctuating upward trend with distance from the urban core. Second, the correlation between street network characteristics and urban vitality is sensitive to different spatial scales. Third, connectivity explains the largest amount of the variance in urban vitality (over 40%), while both betweenness and closeness explain roughly 28% of urban vitality. Efficiency and severance contribute 22 and 10% to the spatial heterogeneity of urban vitality, respectively. The study sheds light on the mechanisms between street configurations and urban vitality from the multi-scalar perspective. Some implications are provided for the improvement of the streets' urban vitality.

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