2020
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1905232116
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Global trends toward urban street-network sprawl

Abstract: We present a global time series of street-network sprawl—that is, sprawl as measured through the local connectivity of the street network. Using high-resolution data from OpenStreetMap and a satellite-derived time series of urbanization, we compute and validate changes over time in multidimensional street connectivity measures based on graph-theoretic and geographic concepts. We report on global, national, and city-level trends since 1975 in the street-network disconnectedness index (SNDi), based on every mapp… Show more

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Cited by 61 publications
(52 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…Urban chaos occurs on virtually all scales considered by urban geography, from the level of a single parcel, block [18], town, city, or agglomeration [19,20], through the regional, national, and international scales [21][22][23], to a global depiction [24]. As a phenomenon with a complex genesis and multifaceted effects, the problem of spatial chaos is discussed in the literature from the point of view of many research perspectives [63].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Urban chaos occurs on virtually all scales considered by urban geography, from the level of a single parcel, block [18], town, city, or agglomeration [19,20], through the regional, national, and international scales [21][22][23], to a global depiction [24]. As a phenomenon with a complex genesis and multifaceted effects, the problem of spatial chaos is discussed in the literature from the point of view of many research perspectives [63].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Spatial chaos occurs on virtually all scales considered by urban geography-starting at the level of a single plot, quarter, or settlement [18], through a single city or agglomeration [19,20], to the regional, national, and international scales [21][22][23], and ending at the global scale [24]. Spatial chaos is viewed as the spatial manifestation of chaotic evolution [25].…”
Section: Spatial Chaos In the Context Of Urban Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In comparison to neighbouring cities, such as New York city and Staten Island, or European cities, such as Amsterdam or Paris, the low entropy and highly-ordered grid-like street orientations of Manhattan [45,46] limit any sort of ambiguity in our findings. Second, newly constructed streets are increasingly grid-like [30,47,48]. Thus, the outcome of the current study would still be valid for future urban street networks.…”
Section: Testing Regionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Epidemiologists have drawn on mobile-phone and social media data to trace out social networks and approximate short-term migration flows (Tatem, 2014). It is now far easier than it was a decade ago to describe within-urban environments using resources such as OpenStreetMap (e.g., Barrington-Leigh & Millard-Ball, 2020;Boeing, 2020). These new data enable the shifting boundaries of urban spaces to be delineated in far greater detail than was previously possible, and shed much-needed light on the interior organization of these spaces.…”
Section: Capacity Building For Spatial Demography In Se Asiamentioning
confidence: 99%