Abstract

The expansion and evolution of urban areas are the most perceptible manifestations of the transformation of the urban spatial form. This study uses remote sensing images of Nanjing from 2001, 2006, 2011, 2016, and 2021, along with socio-economic data to analyse the spatio-temporal characteristics of the city’s urban expansion. Furthermore, we utilize a binary logistic regression to quantitatively analyse the driving forces in each stage. We find that from 2001 to 2021, Nanjing’s urban area expanded approximately 3.97 times. Notably, the city started moving from a stage of medium-speed development to rapid development in 2006, and then slowed down and returned to medium-speed development in 2011. The urban land mainly expanded in the north, northeast, southeast, and southwest directions in a lopsided cross-shape roughly along the northwest-southeast direction; meanwhile, the city’s centre of gravity continuously moved towards the southeast. Among the driving factors, neighbourhood (distance from planned commercial centres, railways, and highways), topography, and geolocation (distance from the Yangtze River, and elevation) had a greater, albeit inhibitory effect on urban expansion. However, the effects of different socio-economic factors (GDP per capita, resident population, secondary and tertiary industry, etc.) varied across different time periods.

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