4.6 Article

Land degradation and metropolitan expansion in a peri-urban environment

Journal

GEOMATICS NATURAL HAZARDS & RISK
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 1797-1818

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/19475705.2021.1951363

Keywords

Exurban development; land degradation risk; urban planning; sustainable land management; peri-urban areas

Funding

  1. MIUR (Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research), OT4CLIMA PON (National Operational Programme) project [ARS01-00405]

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This study investigated the link between exurban development and soil/land degradation in the region of Athens and found that exurban development mainly occupied poor soil quality land, while compact urban settlements are more vulnerable to land degradation. Urban planning should integrate multi-dimensional indicators such as soil, climate and vegetation quality to evaluate the environmental impact of exurban development.
The couple rapid urbanization and policy failure in controlling urban expansion was sometimes associated to soil and land degradation phenomena in both developing and developed countries. This work points to investigate the link between exurban development and soil/land degradation in the region of Athens (Greece) as a typical semiarid Mediterranean area experiencing a shift from a land-saving compact urban form to a dispersed, low-density urban expansion. The examined area is among the most populated areas in the Mediterranean basin showing an enormous population growth during the last 60 years. While low-density, dispersed urban settlements mainly developed over the decade (2000-2010) in the investigated area occupied mostly land classified at poor soil quality, the overall assessment of vegetation, climate and soil quality layers renders a complex picture in which exurban development consumed high-quality land that were classified as non-vulnerable to land degradation. On the contrary, compact urban settlements prevail in land with intermediate (or even high) soil quality but with inadequate climatic and vegetation conditions, which are classified as highly vulnerable to land degradation. Urban planning should integrate multi-dimensional indicators of soil, climate and vegetation quality to evaluate the environmental impact of exurban development.

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