Exploring the Urban Form and Compactness: A Case Study of Multan, Pakistan
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Why Compact Development
3. Literature Review: Urban Form and Compactness
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Research Setting
4.2. Research Methodology
5. Results and Discussion
5.1. Land Cover Changes
5.2. Density
5.2.1. Gross Population Density
5.2.2. Built-Up Area Density
5.2.3. Average Land Consumption per Person
5.3. Landuse
5.3.1. Land use Break-Up
5.3.2. Simpson’s Index
5.4. Transportation Network
5.4.1. Mode Share
5.4.2. Road Network Density
5.4.3. Congestion Index
5.4.4. Walkability Index
5.5. Dispersion Index
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sr. No. | Source | Study Focus | Indicators/Study Variables |
---|---|---|---|
1 | [17] | Design concepts and principles of urban forms | Compactness Sustainable transport Density Mixed land uses Diversity Passive solar design Greening |
2 | [44] | Elements of urban form | Density Land use Accessibility and transport infrastructure Urban layout Housing and building characteristics |
3 | [45] | Quantitative analysis of urban form | Landscape ecology Economic structure Transportation planning Community design Urban design |
4 | [18] | Measuring compact urban form | Density Density distribution Transportation network Accessibility Shape Mixed-use land consumption |
5 | [46] | Measuring urban growth, urban form, and accessibility | Growth rates Density Spatial geometry Accessibility Aesthetics |
6 | [47] | Measuring sprawl across the urban-rural continuum using an amalgamated sprawl index | All development Low-intensity development All development clumpy Low-intensity development clumpy Impervious per capita Density change Population change |
7 | [48] | Measuring sprawl | Development density Land use mix Activity centering Street accessibility |
8 | [49] | Measuring urban sprawl and compactness | Size Density Continuity Scattering Shape Loss of green space |
9 | [50] | Urban sprawl indicators and spatial planning | Spatial and temporal analysis Landscape metrics indices Urban fragmentation Land resource impact |
10 | [51] | Monitoring urban sprawl | Urban density Change in urban density Greenfield development rate Effective share of open space Patch density Mean shape index Openness index The share of urbanized land New consumption |
11 | [8] | A new strategy of sustainable neighborhood planning | Adequate space for street and efficient street network High density Mixed land use Social mix Limited land use specialization |
12 | [22] | Measuring urban sprawl and its drivers | Urban expansion classification Density analysis Spatial matrices Geospatial analysis |
13 | [52] | Measuring urban sprawl | Built a multi-dimensional index of combining city expansion, urban compactness, and urban form to measure the urban sprawl. Developed a multi-dimensional index to measure the spatio–temporal characteristics of urban sprawl |
Year | Resolution (m) | Landsat | Row/Path | Date of Acquisition |
---|---|---|---|---|
1987 | 60 | LANDSAT_5 | 039/150 | 25/10/1987 |
1997 | 30 | LANDSAT_5 | 039/150 | 17/08/1997 |
2007 | 15/30 | LANDSAT_7 | 039/150 | 06/09/2007 |
2017 | 15/30 | LANDSAT_8 | 039/150 | 09/09/2017 |
Sr. No. | Indicators | Sub-Indicators | Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Land cover changes | - | Land-use changes for 1987, 1997, 2007, and 2017 were calculated from Landsat images by using ERDAS IMAGINE and ArcMap software. |
2 | Density | Gross population density (Persons/km2) | A total population divided by the total area [57] |
Built-up area density (Persons/km2) | The total population is divided by the built-up area of the city [57] | ||
Average land consumption per person (m2) | A total population divided by land consumption area [58] | ||
3 | Landuse | Land use break-up | Land use data acquired from Integrated Master Plan of Multan 2008–2028 |
Simpson’s Index | where a is the total area of a specific land use category and A is the total area of all land use categories | ||
4 | Transportation network | Mode share | Data were collected by conducting the primary survey |
Road network density (m/ha) | Road length divided by population [58] | ||
Congestion Index | Congestion Index = 1 − (A/M) where A is the average journey speed observed on the city’s main roads during peak hours and M is a desire to average journey on main corridors during peak an hour, which is supposed to be 30 kmph [18] | ||
Walkability Index | Walkability Index = [(W1 × Availability) + (W2 × Facility rating)] where W1 and W2 are parametric weights, which assumed 50% for both, availability is expressed as the footpath length divided by the length of major roads in the city, and facility rating is a score estimated based on opinion on the available pedestrian facility [18] | ||
5 | Dispersion Index | - | where di is the distance from the centroid of the zone to the city center, wi is the population of each zone, and A is the built-up area of the city [18] |
LULC Type | Area (Hectare) | Percentage | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1987 | 1997 | 2007 | 2017 | 1987 | 1997 | 2007 | 2017 | |
Built-up | 5795.64 | 8113.86 | 14,813.80 | 22,790.20 | 16.01 | 22.41 | 40.93 | 62.96 |
Vegetation | 30,388.65 | 28,072.77 | 21,374.16 | 13,398.61 | 83.95 | 77.55 | 59.04 | 37.01 |
Water Bodies | 15.71 | 13.37 | 12.04 | 11.19 | 0.04 | 0.04 | 0.03 | 0.03 |
Total | 36,200.00 | 36,200.00 | 36,200.00 | 36,200.00 | 100.00 | 100.00 | 100.00 | 100.00 |
Year | Population | Area (km2) | Density (Person/km2) |
---|---|---|---|
1998 | 1,501,000 | 362 | 4146 |
2017 | 2,258,570 | 362 | 6239 |
Similar Population | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cities (Countries) | Salt Lake City, (USA) | Gujranwala (Pakistan) | Harare (Zimbabwe) | Haikou, (China) | Savar (Bangladesh) | Goiania (Brazil) | Bhopal (India) | Multan (Pakistan) |
Population | 2,280,000 | 2,275,000 | 2,255,000 | 2,250,000 | 2,240,000 | 2,240,000 | 2,230,000 | 2,258,570 |
Urban Area (km2) | 1720 | 207 | 829 | 427 | 181 | 816 | 181 | 362 |
Gross Population Density (km2) | 1200 | 11,000 | 2700 | 5300 | 12,400 | 2700 | 12,300 | 6239 |
Similar Urban Area | ||||||||
Cities (Countries) | Cuiaba (Brazil) | Shantou (China) | Thrissur (India) | Leon (Mexico) | Odesa (Ukraine) | Valencia (Venezuela) | Bakersfield (USA) | Multan (Pakistan) |
Urban Area (km2) | 363 | 363 | 363 | 363 | 363 | 363 | 357 | 362 |
Population | 795,000 | 2,515,000 | 2,575,000 | 1,660,000 | 1,100,000 | 1,540,000 | 575,000 | 2,258,570 |
Gross Population Density (km2) | 2200 | 6900 | 7100 | 4600 | 3000 | 4200 | 1500 | 6239 |
Similar Density | ||||||||
Cities (Countries) | Ria de Janeiro (Brazil) | Benin City (Nigeria) | Sekondi Takoradi (Ghana) | Taizz (Yemen) | Shenzhen (China) | Semarang (Indonesia) | Zahedan (Iran) | Multan (Pakistan) |
Gross Population Density (km2) | 6300 | 6300 | 6300 | 6300 | 6200 | 6200 | 6200 | 6239 |
Urban Area (km2) | 1917 | 228 | 91 | 119 | 145 | 272 | 91 | 362 |
Population | 11,990,000 | 1,445,000 | 570,000 | 750,000 | 905,000 | 1,690,000 | 565,000 | 2,258,570 |
Year | Population | Built-up Area (km2) | Density (Person/km2) |
---|---|---|---|
1998 | 1,501,000 | 81.14 | 18,499 |
2017 | 2,258,570 | 227.90 | 9910 |
Year | Area (m2) | Population | Average Land Consumption Per Person (m2) |
---|---|---|---|
1998 | 81,138,600 | 1,501,000 | 54.06 |
2017 | 227,902,000 | 2,258,570 | 100.90 |
Mode of Transport | No. of User | Mode Share (% Age) |
---|---|---|
Non-Motorized | 149 | 37.25 |
Private | 119 | 29.75 |
Public | 43 | 10.75 |
Rickshaws/Qingqi | 89 | 22.25 |
Total | 400 | 100 |
Total Road Length (m) | Built-Up Area (ha) | Road Density (m/ha) | Population | Road Length per Person (m/person) |
---|---|---|---|---|
3,018,603.15 | 22,790.20 | 132 | 2,258,570 | 1.3 |
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Nadeem, M.; Khaliq, N.; Akhtar, N.; Al-Rashid, M.A.; Asim, M.; Codur, M.K.; Mustafaraj, E.; Codur, M.Y.; Baig, F. Exploring the Urban Form and Compactness: A Case Study of Multan, Pakistan. Sustainability 2022, 14, 16066. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142316066
Nadeem M, Khaliq N, Akhtar N, Al-Rashid MA, Asim M, Codur MK, Mustafaraj E, Codur MY, Baig F. Exploring the Urban Form and Compactness: A Case Study of Multan, Pakistan. Sustainability. 2022; 14(23):16066. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142316066
Chicago/Turabian StyleNadeem, Muhammad, Nayab Khaliq, Naseem Akhtar, Muhammad Ahmad Al-Rashid, Muhammad Asim, Merve Kayaci Codur, Enea Mustafaraj, Muhammed Yasin Codur, and Farrukh Baig. 2022. "Exploring the Urban Form and Compactness: A Case Study of Multan, Pakistan" Sustainability 14, no. 23: 16066. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142316066
APA StyleNadeem, M., Khaliq, N., Akhtar, N., Al-Rashid, M. A., Asim, M., Codur, M. K., Mustafaraj, E., Codur, M. Y., & Baig, F. (2022). Exploring the Urban Form and Compactness: A Case Study of Multan, Pakistan. Sustainability, 14(23), 16066. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142316066