2021
DOI: 10.3390/land10060659
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Exploring the Distribution of Gardens in Suzhou City in the Qianlong Period through a Space Syntax Approach

Abstract: This study explored the spatial distribution of Suzhou gardens in the Qianlong period (AD 1736–1796) through an innovative method combining spatial syntax and historical textual analysis. Through a spatial syntax approach, a stress axis model analysis suggested that the greater the degree of integration and prosperity of a street, the denser the distribution of gardens surrounding it. A canal axis model analysis indicated that more gardens were built around canals that were less integrated and had less traffic… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…The integration reflects the degree of aggregation or dispersion between a unit space and all other spaces in the system (Chen and Liu 2021). In this study, higher integration means more intersection with other paths, which means more accessibility and potential people gathering (Yun et al 2021), indirectly revealing the path's spatial significance among the urban structures. This study analyzes the integration of the network of historical roads and paths on Depthmap 10.14 and identifies the main roads.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…The integration reflects the degree of aggregation or dispersion between a unit space and all other spaces in the system (Chen and Liu 2021). In this study, higher integration means more intersection with other paths, which means more accessibility and potential people gathering (Yun et al 2021), indirectly revealing the path's spatial significance among the urban structures. This study analyzes the integration of the network of historical roads and paths on Depthmap 10.14 and identifies the main roads.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Additionally, the road east of node 21 and the roads south of nodes 16 and 17 constitute the high-value area of local integration (Figure 7b). The coincidence of these roads with the global integration suggests that they are used more frequently [44]. In addition, the road on the east side of the settlement has a high local integration value, but no outdoor spatial nodes are distributed there.…”
Section: Spatial Syntactic Axial Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Considering the city's evolutionary traits across different historical epochs, as well as factors such as map data acquisition and cartographic precision, this study focused on five key temporal junctures for spatial syntactic analysis: 1843 (Qing Dynasty's Daoguang era), 1913 (early Republic of China), 1951 (early founding of the People's Republic of China), 1970s (early economic reforms), and 2021 (2020s). The five maps were vectorized and georeferenced using ArcGIS 10.5 [37] (Figure 4). Subsequently, the river and street network maps from each period were imported into Depthmap+ Beta 1.0 software for syntactic parameter analysis, the establishment of a topology dataset, and the quantitative analysis of the foreground and background networks utilizing the Normalized Angular Integration, the Normalized Angular Choice, and the Metric Mean Depth tools.…”
Section: Data Acquisition and Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The evolutionary characteristics of the distribution and hierarchical structure of commercial districts in the ancient Beijing city area were validated through an analysis of street networks [17]. This revealed the historical evolution of the relationship between the water system and gardens in Suzhou city from the 13th to 20th century through the application of spatial syntax methods to urban waterway transportation [18]. By integrating the historical geography method and the histogram method, the empirical study in the Famagusta region proved the close relationship between land use and socioeconomic activities directly, reflecting the process of change in the physical and social space of the city [19].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%