1. Introduction
The concept of the metropolitan area was proposed in the United States in 1910, however, it has been used extensively in Japan [
1]. There are some differences in understandings and interpretations of the metropolitan area in different countries. In the United States, the metropolitan area that mirrors a current urban spatial structure [
2] is a geographical statistical unit serving federal statistics and national surveys. It consists of an urban core with a certain population and its surrounding areas, where the economy and society are highly integrated into the former [
3,
4]. However, it reflects the theoretical model of urban spatial structure in Japan and represents the geographical scope of a certain aspect of functional services that can be accepted by the central city (population of over 100,000) with a cycle of 1 day [
5,
6,
7]. In Europe, especially in France, Germany and the Netherlands, it is mainly a framework concept for the spatial development policies among European countries, and the purpose is to enhance international competitiveness and national strength [
8] by means of joint coordination, consultation and resource sharing [
9]. For China, it is a spatial form of urbanization within the urban agglomeration and centered on mega-cities or large cities with strong radiation-driven functions, with a one-hour commuter circle as the basic scope [
10]. Even though some deviations are existent in various countries, there is a certain consensus that the metropolitan area plays the role of regional growth poles [
11] and undertakes the important task of regional and even national economic development.
Transportation infrastructure is the strategic cornerstone of promoting regional economic growth [
12]. After long-term traffic construction, the region will form a better traffic network; however, due to the influence of natural, economic, social and other factors, a spatial imbalance always prevails in its transportation situation [
13]. Such spatial imbalance directly determines the flow capacity of production factors and the ability of industrial agglomeration, thus affecting the opportunities and potential of regional development [
14]. Well-planned transportation networks can facilitate the efficient transportation of resources [
15]. An area with good transportation infrastructure is attractive for companies [
16], capital [
17], population, etc., and further brings about industrial clustering, which will invigorate the regional economic vitality, competitiveness and economic growth [
18,
19,
20,
21]. However, if the transportation infrastructure in an area is underdeveloped, the spatial production component flow will not be smooth and lead to a lack of choice, innovation and intellectual opportunities for the development [
22], which will limit its economic growth to a certain extent. Taking advantage of the transportation’s superiority while avoiding the transportation’s shortcomings is a key element of laying out an industrial enterprise and conducting economic activities [
13]. Therefore, it is important to evaluate traffic dominance and analyze its spatial pattern, which could provide a scientific basis for the optimization of its transportation and industrial layout, so as to promote its economic development and further contribute to the regional or even national economy.
Existing studies mainly concentrated on countries, large regions, urban agglomerations or cities; however, they paid insufficient attention to metropolitan areas. For instance, Shih-Lung Shaw et al. (2014) employed a timetable-based evaluation approach to accessibility to analyze the changes in travel cost, travel time and distance accessibility for the main stages of HSR development in China [
23]; Wang Zhiheng et al. (2021) used the traffic dominance model to investigate the spatial pattern of highway traffic dominance in the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau [
24]; Juan Nicolás Ibáñez and Francesco Rotoli (2017) measured the impact of the Trans-European transportation network on the accessibility of European urban agglomerations [
25]; Steven Farber and Liwei Fu (2017) used travel time cubes to analyze the dynamic public transit accessibility of the Wasatch Front, Utah and the Portland region in Oregon [
26]; and Miao Yi et al. (2021) additionally constructed a comprehensive traffic dominance evaluation system to discuss the traffic dominance of Nyingchi City [
27] and so on.
China announced the “Outline of the 14th Five-Year Plan for National Economic and Social Development of the People ’s Republic of China and the Vision 2035” in March 2021. This outline proposed to give full scope to the leading role of central cities and urban agglomerations and build a modern metropolitan area [
28]. Subsequently, the Chinese government approved six national metropolitan areas including Nanjing, Fuzhou, Chengdu, Changzhou-Zhuzhou-Tan, Xi’an, Chongqing and Wuhan. Among them, the Xi’an metropolitan area is the economic growth pole of Northwest China, and its gross domestic product (GDP) is almost one-fourth of the GDP of the five provinces in Northwest China [
29]. However, compared with the other five metropolitan areas, its economic development strength is relatively poor [
30]. Therefore, this paper chooses the Xi’an metropolitan area as a case to analyze the spatial pattern of traffic dominance and further explores its influencing factors. The purpose is to determine the advantages and problems of traffic development in the Xi’an metropolitan area and based on the research results, propose scientific traffic optimization measures as well as a guide to the rational layout of the industry.
The remainders of this paper are as follows:
Section 2 describes related studies and proposes the entry point of this paper. The study area, data collection and methodology are introduced in
Section 3.
Section 4 shows the characteristics of the distribution pattern, correlation pattern and influencing factors of traffic dominance from 2010 to 2022, and
Section 5 discusses the theoretical significance and practical implications of this paper. The conclusions of the analysis are summarized at the end.
2. Literature Review
Previous studies have two main perspectives for evaluating traffic superiority and analyzing its spatial patterns: accessibility and traffic dominance.
Accessibility is conceived from classical location theory [
31]. Hansen (1959) pioneered the concept of accessibility in 1959 [
32] and defined accessibility as potential opportunities for interaction [
33]. Since then, many scholars have interpreted accessibility from various perspectives based on their research [
22,
34,
35]. Regardless of which definition is used, it reflects the traffic dominance of the destination to some extent. Many scholars have studied traffic dominance from the perspective of accessibility, such as Dea Christine Melbye et al. (2015), who measured the accessibility of the international airport and city center (Posta) in Dar es Salaam from a time–distance perspective, and its results showed that accessibility to the international airport was extremely poor, and the expected travel time to the Posta was high [
15]; based on the travel time method, Calvin P. Tribby and Paul A. Zandbergen (2012) additionally proposed a new and high-resolution spatio–temporal model of public transit accessibility and measured the accessibility of Albuquerque in New Mexico [
36]; Jing Cao et al. (2013), Shaw S L et al. (2014) and Wang Lvhua et al. (2018) used weighted average travel time, travel cost or travel distance and other methods to analyze the traffic accessibility of major cities or counties in China with an HSR network as the object; however, the results were somewhat different because of differences in cities, research methods or research periods [
23,
37,
38]; Javier Gutiérrez (2005) used methods such as weighted average travel time to evaluate the future impact of accessibility from the completion of HSR on the Madrid–Barcelona–France border [
39]. Besides directly and objectively evaluating the accessibility, researches on the accessibility of medical facilities [
40,
41,
42,
43], employment [
44,
45], schools [
46], tourism attractions [
47,
48], parks [
49,
50], etc., indirectly reflect traffic dominance as well.
The traffic dominance index was proposed by Jin Fengjun (2008) [
13], who considered that the traffic superiority of a region could be reflected in three aspects: “quantity”, “quality” and “advantage”. In his view, “quantity” referred to the scale of transportation facilities, which can be expressed by traffic network density; “quality” meant the quality and ability of transportation facilities, which can be denoted by traffic arterial influence; and “advantage” indicated the advantage of a traffic location that represented the location condition of an area relative to the main city in a regional system, which could be expressed via accessibility. Thus, the traffic dominance is an integrated index, which is composed of traffic network density, traffic arterial influence and accessibility [
51]. Some scholars used the traffic dominance index to evaluate regional traffic conditions. For example, Hu Hao et al. (2015) and Chen Shuting et al. (2022) used this index to study the traffic superiority of China based on the county units, respectively [
51,
52]; Sun Hongri et al. additionally took the county as basic units to analyze the pattern of traffic dominance in Northeast China, and the results showed that its distribution pattern presented a “core-periphery” structure [
53]; in order to adapt to the actual situation of a region, some scholars adjusted the traffic dominance index; however, they additionally comprehensively reflected transportation superiority from multiple dimensions. For example, Guo Zheng et al. (2020) constructed a traffic dominance index from the aspects of traffic network connectivity and accessibility to analyze Kenya’s traffic conditions and its spatial differentiation pattern [
54]; Miao Yi et al. (2021) believed that the traffic dominance index should include four aspects: internal traffic function, external traffic function, traffic system stability and location and then used this index to conduct an empirical discussion on the traffic dominance in Nyingchi City [
27].
Generally speaking, we find that there are some deficiencies in previous studies. Above all, in terms of a study area, they focused on countries, large regions, urban agglomerations or cities, whereas metropolitan areas received less attention; in terms of study units, most concentrated on the counties and cities and paid insufficient attention to town units. However, towns are the basic units to narrow the gap between urban and rural areas and thus achieve regional economic integration. In addition, accessibility merely reflects a single dimension of traffic conditions: traffic location advantage; however, the traffic dominance index reveals the traffic conditions from multiple dimensions including traffic network density, arterial influence and accessibility. Therefore, compared with accessibility, the traffic dominance index is more comprehensive in evaluating traffic conditions. Moreover, accessibility mainly abstracts the spatial unit as a node, which reflects the traffic conditions of the node more; however, the traffic dominance index is mainly applied to those of regional areas. Therefore, it is more suitable to use the traffic dominance index to evaluate regional traffic conditions. In view of this, this paper utilizes the traffic dominance index and uses towns as the basic units to analyze the traffic superiority pattern in the Xi’an metropolitan area and further explore its influencing factors.
4. Results and Analysis
4.1. Distribution Pattern of the Traffic Dominance
4.1.1. Traffic Network Density
The traffic network density in each town was calculated on the basis of ordinary roads and subways. According to the statistical distribution, the density in the 337 towns can be divided into 5 grades (
Figure 3). Major characteristics are shown as follows:
- (1)
The traffic network density went through a “core-periphery” pattern to a “point-axis” pattern. The density progressively declined from the core to its peripheries in 2010 and from the point to its surrounding areas and the axis to its sides in 2022;
- (2)
The density of only a small number of towns was greater than or equal to 12 km/km2, whereas the density of a large proportion of towns was less than or equal to 2 km/km2. The proportion of towns with a density greater than or equal to 12 km/km2 did not exceed 7% from 2010 to 2022, concentrated in Xincheng District, Lianhu District, Beilin District Yanta District and Weiyang District of Xi’an city. However, a large proportion of towns with a density less than or equal to 2 km/km2 occupied the periphery of the metropolitan area, accounting for 79.82% in 2010 and 42.43% in 2022, respectively;
- (3)
In the density pattern, the towns with the rising grades were mainly distributed along the Zhengzhou–Xi’an, Xi’an–Yinchuan and Xi’an–Yan’an HSRs, and the reason may be that the development of these HSRs stimulated the economy in the areas along the railways and increased the demand for traffic construction.
Figure 3.
The distribution diagram of town traffic network density.
Figure 3.
The distribution diagram of town traffic network density.
4.1.2. Traffic Arterial Influence
According to the calculation results of the traffic arterial influence, we divided them into five grades (
Figure 4).
Figure 4 shows the distribution pattern of the traffic arterial influence in 2010 and 2022 based on railways, expressways, primary roads, secondary roads and so on. Several results are summarized as follows:
- (1)
The traffic arterial influence always showed an “axis-spoke” pattern, gradually weakening from the axis to both sides. In 2010, only the axis of Xi’an–Weinan was included, and by 2022 there were two more, Xi’an–Yinchuan and Xi’an–Chengdu;
- (2)
Towns with a traffic arterial influence of over or equal to 6.5 linearized in space, which had high spatial coupling with the development of HSR. In 2010, these towns were mainly distributed along the Xi’an–Zhengzhou HSR, accounting for approximately 5.64%. With the construction of the Xi’an–Yinchuan and Xi’an–Chengdu HSRs, the traffic arterial influence increased significantly in the areas along the HSRs, and the proportion of these towns increased to 19.88% in 2022;
- (3)
Towns with a relatively low impact on traffic arteries were mainly distributed in the periphery of the metropolitan areas, such as Zhouzhi County, Lantian County, Huazhou District, Fuping County, Yaozhou District, etc.; however, their numbers decreased from 2010 to 2022. The proportion of towns with an arterial influence of 3.0–4.5 and less than or equal to 3 decreased from 29.67% and 11.57% in 2010 to 9.20% and 1.19% in 2022, respectively.
Figure 4.
The distribution diagram of town traffic arterial influence.
Figure 4.
The distribution diagram of town traffic arterial influence.
4.1.3. Accessibility
Accessibility is usually measured by the travel time or distance from origin to destination [
65,
66,
67]. We selected cities and counties to represent key node cities and adopted the average travel time to key node cities to calculate the accessibility of town units. The 337 towns can be classified into 5 grades, based on a statistical distribution of accessibility (
Figure 5).
Figure 5 illustrates the distribution pattern of accessibility in 2010 and 2022, and its features are observed as follows:
- (1)
Accessibility has always been a “core-periphery” pattern; however, the “core” evolved from a “double-core” structure in 2010 to a “single-core” structure in 2022. Furthermore, accessibility decreased from the core to its peripheries;
- (2)
Towns with an accessibility of less than or equal to 30 min were mostly distributed in the main urban areas of Xi’an city, such as Xincheng District, Lianhu District, Beilin District, Weiyang District, Lintong District and so on. However, its scope expanded to Sanyuan County in the northwest, to Huyi District southward, to Xingping City westward and to Linwei District eastward, and the proportion of towns increased from 19.88% in 2010 to 34.42% in 2022;
- (3)
Accessibility to most towns was within or under 60 min; however, there were still a few towns whose accessibility was over 60 min or even more than 90 min. There were 247 towns whose access times were less than 60 min, accounting for 73.29% in 2010. By 2022, the number of towns whose access times were less than 60 min increased to 309, and the proportion increased to 91.69%. The towns whose access times were more than 90 min were mainly located in the periphery of the metropolitan areas, and their proportion reduced from 6.82% in 2010 to 1.19% in 2022.
Figure 5.
The distribution diagram of towns’ accessibility.
Figure 5.
The distribution diagram of towns’ accessibility.
4.1.4. Integrated Traffic Dominance
The traffic network density, traffic arterial influence and accessibility can embody the traffic dominance in different dimensions of the region. The traffic dominance index integrates three dimensions to comprehensively reflect the integrated traffic dominance and development potential of the region. According to the statistical distribution of its values, the 337 towns can be classified into 5 grades (
Figure 6): very poor (≤0.25), poor (0.25–0.4), fair (0.4–0.55), good (0.55–0.7) and excellent (≥0.7). The distribution pattern of the integrated traffic dominance can be characterized as follows:
- (1)
The traffic dominance patterns showed an unbalanced distribution feature that consistently displayed a “point-axis” pattern. The “point” was situated in the main urban area of Xi’an city in 2010; however, by 2022 its scope had gradually expanded in this area, and at the same time, some small-scale “points” additionally formed in Linwei District, Yangling District and other counties or districts as well;
- (2)
Towns with excellent grades (≥0.7) in 2010 were mainly clustered in the districts of Xincheng, Lianhu, Beilin, Yanta, Weiyang and Baqiao of Xi’an city in a block style. By 2022, they were still concentrated in the six districts of Xi’an city; however, Linwei County, Yangling District, Xingping City and other counties or districts were additionally partially involved. Furthermore, the proportion of towns increased from 7.72% in 2010 to 25.82% in 2022, which indicated that the traffic dominance in the main urban area of Xi’an city had the strongest support ability for economic society; meanwhile, the abilities of Linwei District, Yangling District, Xingping City, etc., additionally had increasing trends;
- (3)
Towns with good grades (0.55–0.7) were clustered on the east–west axis, further broadening to the eastern and northern areas from 2010 to 2022, with the percentage of towns growing from 7.72% to 25.82%. Overall, the towns were mainly distributed on the east–west axis within 30 km, indicating that the east–west axis within 30 km had relatively strong comprehensive supporting capabilities for economic and social development in the future;
- (4)
Towns with very poor (≤0.25), poor (0.25–0.4) and fair (0.4–0.55) grades were mostly distributed in the fringes of their metropolitan areas that had already shown declines in their numbers. Of those, the proportion of towns with poor grades decreased significantly; it dropped from 19.29% in 2010 to 4.15% in 2022. Although the number of towns with very poor grades had been the lowest, there were still 1.48% of towns scattered in Zhouzhi County, Huazhou District and Fuping County on the edge of their metropolitan areas in 2022.
Figure 6.
The distribution diagram of towns’ integrated traffic dominance.
Figure 6.
The distribution diagram of towns’ integrated traffic dominance.
4.2. Correlation Pattern of the Traffic Dominance
4.2.1. Global Correlation Pattern
The first law of geography says that geographical objects or phenomena are related in spatial distribution, marked by random, clustering and regularity distribution [
62].
Table 5 shows the Global Moran’s index of integrated traffic dominance in the Xi’an metropolitan area, which can reflect the spatial correlation characteristics between towns. As we can see in
Table 5, the Global Moran’s I of traffic dominance was greater than 0 and passed the significance test at the 1% level, indicating that the traffic construction and development of towns positively correlated in the Xi’an metropolitan area from 2010 to 2022, which was characterized by an agglomeration distribution in space. The Global Moran’s I, which ranged from 1.13 in 2010 to 1.14 in 2022 changed little, illustrating that the traffic dominance of towns in the Xi’an metropolitan area had a stable global relationship from 2010 to 2022.
4.2.2. Local Correlation Pattern
Through the study of the Global Moran’s I, it is found that the integrated traffic dominance between towns was an agglomeration in space. Hence, we did more with the Local Moran’s I to discover where the agglomeration was located.
Figure 7 maps the traffic dominance pattern by the Local Moran’s I in 2010 and 2022. From
Figure 7, it can be found that most towns with traffic dominance passed the significance test, accounting for 69.44% in 2010 and 57.86% in 2022, respectively, and they mainly formed 3 kinds of agglomeration types: high–high aggregation, low–low aggregation and low–high aggregation.
The ratio of towns with high–high agglomeration areas was 39.17% in 2010 and 34.12% in 2022, and they were mainly located in the main urban areas of Xi’an and Xianyang city, which indicated that these areas were hot spots of transportation construction in the Xi’an metropolitan area. Although the main urban area of Weinan City still formed a high–high agglomeration area, the scale significantly reduced from 2010 to 2022.
The low–low agglomeration areas were mainly distributed in the Weibei hilly and gully areas in the north of the Xi’an metropolitan area and the Qinling mountain areas in the south of the Xi’an metropolitan area, such as Yaozhou District, Fuping County, Zhouzhi County, Lantian County, Huazhou District and so on; however, the ratio of towns involved decreased from 27.89% in 2010 to 21.07% in 2022. It showed that the hilly and gully areas of Weibei and the mountainous areas of Qinling Mountains were the zones with weak traffic conditions, and the transportation construction and development of the Xi’an metropolitan area should be paid more attention in the future.
The low–high agglomeration areas always nested on the edge of high–high agglomeration areas, and the ratio of towns involved remained stable: 2.37% in 2010 and 2022. Some towns had changed agglomeration type, whereas Lingzhao Town, Mingdu Town and Paoli Town still maintained low–high agglomeration status.
The high–low agglomeration pattern was not apparent in the Xi’an metropolitan area, and a single town showed the agglomeration pattern in 2022.
4.3. Influencing Factor
The regional traffic dominance is affected by multiple factors, such as the natural environment, economy, population and so on. Referring to the research of Sun Hongri et al. [
53] and considering the principle of data availability and operability, the elevation, slope, GDP, population and construction intensity (
Table 6) are selected to analyze the influencing factors of town traffic dominance. In the meantime,
Section 4.1.4 found that the traffic dominance in the main urban area of Xi’an city and its surroundings is relatively high; therefore, this paper speculates whether the closer to Xi’an city, the higher the traffic dominance. Therefore, we further introduce the location index (
Table 6). After, this paper uses the geo-detector model to find the factors in 2010 and 2022 by taking the integrated traffic dominance as the explanatory variable and factor indices as the explanatory variables. The results are shown in
Table 7.
The q values of the factor represent their ability to influence town traffic dominance, as shown in
Table 7. We can then see that the order of q values between the various factors was the same in 2010 and 2022. Moreover, location, GDP and elevation had a greater impact on town traffic dominance, whereas construction intensity, population and slope had a relatively small influence.
Specifically, the q value of location (X6) was the largest among all factors, and its values were 0.90 in 2010 and 0.85 in 2022, respectively, indicating that location had the strongest influence on town traffic dominance, and the closer a town was to Xi’an city, the higher the traffic dominance.
The q value of GDP (X3) was positive in 2010 and 2022, and its values were relatively high. This result showed that GDP had a greater positive impact on traffic dominance, which may be because areas with higher economic levelshave a greater traffic demand to meet daily production and life. The q value of elevation (X1) was additionally relatively large, which was 0.57 in 2010 and 0.49 in 2022, respectively. Since the elevation has been reversely standardized, it reflected that the higher the elevation, the lower the traffic dominance. The q value of construction intensity (X5) was 0.35 in 2010 and 0.29 in 2022, respectively. Compared with location and GDP, it had a limited impact on town traffic dominance. In a further comparison with GDP, population (X4) had a relatively small impact on traffic dominance, and its q values were only 0.26 in 2010 and 0.19 in 2022, respectively, which indicated that the town’s traffic development was less dependent on the regional population. The q value of slope (X2) was the smallest, indicating that its influence strength was the lowest; however, similar to the elevation, it had a reverse effect on town traffic dominance.
In addition, the q value of each index showed a decreasing trend from 2010 to 2022, showing that the ability of each index to act on the town traffic dominance declined. The primary reason was the fact that the economic integration development of the Xi’an metropolitan area required internal traffic integration, which drove the development of traffic construction in various towns. Of course, they were additionally affected by other reasons; for example, the weakening effect of elevation and slope was additionally related to the advancement of transportation technology. The advancement of technology reduced the ability of the natural environment to limit traffic development, and the reasons for the decrease in the impact of GDP were additionally linked to the country’s strategic policies such as targeted poverty reduction and poverty alleviation, which accelerated the construction of the industrial roads and poverty alleviation roads for poor areas in recent years.
5. Discussion
There are a few theoretical implications to this paper. On the one hand, as far as study areas are concerned, previous studies of traffic dominance were focused on countries [
23,
54], large regions [
24,
53], urban agglomerations [
25] or cities [
15,
27], and little attention has been given to the metropolitan areas; moreover, as far as study units are concerned, most of them concentrate on county units [
24,
51,
59] and city units [
68] and do not pay much attention to town units. Furthermore, naturally, there is less literature to study the traffic dominance of a metropolitan area based on town units. Therefore, this paper uses towns as the basic units to research the traffic dominance in the Xi’an metropolitan area, which will enrich the case choice and study units to a certain extent. On the other hand, the research results further supplement and improve theoretical research of regional traffic dominance.
From the practice viewpoint, this research mainly includes two aspects. The first aspect is that the study results can provide a scientific basis for the formulation of traffic optimization strategies in the Xi’an metropolitan area. For example, in view of accessibility dimensions, a travel time of less than 60 min is an important criterion in the boundary delimitation for China’s metropolitan areas; however, by the end of the study period, 8.31% of towns still took longer than 60 min, of which 1.19%, including Hou Zhenzi, Ban Fangzi and other towns, had a travel time of over 90 min. This finding implies that relevant governments should focus more on these areas in the future and strengthen the accessibility between them and their surrounding key node cities by constructing rapid roads to improve the road network connectivity, so as to make these areas better integrated into the construction and development of the Xi’an metropolitan area. From the perspective of integrated traffic dominance, we can find that the Weibei hilly and gully areas in the north of the Xi’an metropolitan area and the Qinling mountain areas in the south of the Xi’an metropolitan area, especially Fuping District, Zhouzhi County and Huazhou District, have relatively poor traffic conditions and show the correlated characteristics of low–low agglomeration. Because these regions have more complex topographic factors, ecological protection is of higher importance, and there are more serious constraints on traffic construction; we recommend that these areas are not suitable for large-scale transit construction, and the green economy should be used as the guide to build industrial channels to improve their traffic dominance which could serve the development of regional ecology, agriculture, tourism and other industries.
The other aspect is that it is additionally beneficial to guide the rational layout of regional industries, based on the study results. Traffic construction provides access and media for spatial activities of production factors [
69]. Areas with higher traffic dominance are more likely to attract the aggregation of labor, capital, land, technology and other production factors, which provide the basis for industrial economy aggregation [
70], making it easier to form industrial agglomeration areas and industrial scale development. According to the research results, it can be found that the regional traffic dominance is higher in the main urban area of Xi’an city and its east–west axis areas within 30 km; in other words, these areas have a stronger agglomeration ability for industrial development. Therefore, considering the regional functional orientation in the development planning of the Xi’an metropolitan area [
29], we suggest that the main urban area of Xi’an city should disperse the general manufacturing and logistics industries in an orderly manner and strengthen the guidance for financial business, the digital economy, R and D and design and other services industries. Simultaneously, its east–west axis areas within 30 km should actively undertake the industrial transfer from the main urban area of Xi’an city and the eastern coastal cities and strive to promote the manufacturing, logistics, e-commerce, food processing and other industries to gather along the axis areas.
It is noted that the main urban area of Xi’an city is relatively excellent in traffic network density, traffic arterial influence, accessibility and its integrated traffic dominance; however, these areas are the agglomeration centers of the economy and population in the metropolitan area, and traffic congestion in these areas should be a concern. Accordingly, we hold that it is necessary to clear regional broken roads, broaden the bottleneck roads and improve the aging roads when formulating regional traffic optimization strategies in the future, so as to smooth the microcirculation pattern of regional transportation.
6. Conclusions
This paper used the traffic dominance index and other methods to analyze the spatial patterns and influencing factors of traffic superiorities on the foundation of the town division in the Xi’an metropolitan area. The results showed that integrated traffic dominance presented unbalanced distribution characteristics, which consistently displayed a “point-axis” pattern from 2010 to 2022, and traffic network density, traffic arterial influence and accessibility had different distribution patterns. The integrated traffic dominance among towns had stable spatial agglomeration features in the whole Xi’an metropolitan area, and it mainly formed three agglomeration patterns in the local areas: high–high aggregation, low–low aggregation and low–high aggregation. Furthermore, it was additionally found that location, GDP and elevation had a greater impact, whereas construction intensity, population and slope had a relatively small effect on town traffic dominance, and their influence abilities had a decreasing trend from 2010 to 2022.
The traffic dominance index could reveal the traffic condition of a certain area from multiple dimensions, including traffic network density, traffic arterial influence and accessibility. Among the three dimensions, traffic network density was the reflection of the “quantity” of transport infrastructure, traffic arterial influence reflected the “quality” of transport infrastructure and accessibility indicated the traffic location “advantage” of transport infrastructure. It is clear that the traffic dominance index is more comprehensive and generalized than the single-dimension accessibility index; thus, this index will be a good choice to evaluate the integrated traffic superiorities of metropolitan areas, urban agglomerations, countries or other regions in the future. However, it should additionally be noted that we adopted the weight assignment method of an equal-weighted, expert scoring or alternatively referred to the existing literature when calculating the traffic dominance index, traffic arterial influence or accessibility, the weight assignment of which was relatively subjective in general. Hence, further exploration and a combination of the objective weighting methods (analytic hierarchy process, entropy weight method and so on) need to be completed in the future. In addition, we set the same speed for the same road mode in the calculation of accessibility. However, the speed of the same road mode varied in the suburbs and urban areas, or in the peak period and off-peak period of traffic because of traffic congestion. It is, therefore, valuable to simulate microscopically the speed of the same road mode in different regions or different time periods so that the results are closer to reality when calculating accessibility.
It is worth mentioning that transportation development is closely related to urban land expansion. Noticeably, there was relatively high traffic superiority within 30 km of the east–west axis in the Xi’an metropolitan area. This means that these areas, additionally, can easily become high-intensity areas of land expansion. In order to avoid disorderly expansion and urban sprawl in the metropolitan area, it is desirable to formulate scientific urban planning to guide the rational layout of industries and to optimize the allocation of land resources in the future.