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Articles

Urban development and landscape change in the Yangtze River Delta region in China

Pages 141-153 | Received 23 Jun 2018, Accepted 02 Aug 2018, Published online: 13 Aug 2018
 

ABSTRACT

The impact of large-scale urban development on land resources has long been debated by urban planners and designers. This study investigated the extent to which different urban characteristics are associated with land-cover change. The Yangtze River Delta region in China, forming one of the largest sprawling urban landscapes among the regions around the world, was chosen for the study area. Spatial analysis and multiple regression methods were applied to empirically investigate the pattern of resource sites lost to urban development in the area between the 1950s and 2017. The results showed that contrary to the widespread notion that large-sized cities are predominantly responsible for a region’s environmental degradation, city size was not a significant factor in determining the rate of resource loss. Large-sized cities gained their populations with far lesser impacts on land than small-sized cities and towns if normalized to the same number of populations. One explanation for the diminishing effect of city size on land-cover change relates to the degree of spatial dispersion of urban development and local differences in social valuation of diversified lands by cities.

Acknowledgments

The article was developed between 2017 and 2018 based on the author’s research from the Harvard University Graduate School of Design.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

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