Abstract

This study estimates the factors affecting socially vulnerable groups’ demand for and accessibility levels to green public spaces in Dhaka City, Bangladesh. Dhaka is a high-density city with one of the lowest levels of green space per capita in the world. Dhaka has just 8.5% of tree-covered lands, while an ideal city requires at least 20% of green space. Urban public green space provides a healthy environment to city dwellers as well as ecological soundness. This study aims to examine the effects of population density and size of a community area (Thana) on the social demand for and accessibility to green parks. To determine the socially vulnerable group demand index, this study used demographic data from the National Population and Housing Census 2011 conducted by the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics. This study used geographical data extracted from Google Earth Pro to measure accessibility levels, and additionally analyzed geographical data with ArcGIS 10.0 and Google Earth Pro. We drew radius circles using Free Map Tools to measure time-distance weighted scores from community areas to urban green spaces. The results show that the large population size of socially vulnerable groups creates very high demand at the score of 0.61 for urban green public parks and small-sized, high-density community areas generate very good accessibility at 2.01% to green public spaces. These findings are highly useful to policymakers, urban planners, landscape engineers, and city governments to make a compact city sustainable, inclusive, and resilient. Moreover, the notion of a “smart city” might be a smart solution in order to manage Dhaka Megacity sustainably in this modern technological age.

Highlights

  • Urbanization is one of the global development agendas

  • This section predominantly deals with the accessibility index estimation of different classes of people and socially vulnerable groups

  • We examine the components that affect the accessibility to green parks

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Summary

Introduction

Urbanization is one of the global development agendas. Based on the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 11 (SDG 11), which aims to make urban communities and human settlements comprehensive, protected, strong, and sustainable, the United Nations extended the SDG Agenda by adopting the New Urban Agenda in 2016 [1]. Public urban green spaces (PUGS) are essential for mitigating high surface temperatures in summer [2,5,6] and are indispensable for air pollution removal and noise reduction [7,8]. The temperature contrast between urban and green regions is large in summer and small in winter. In summer, the contrast is bigger during the day than during the night, while in winter the reverse is true [9]. There have been the current economic value of 17 ecosystem services for 16 biomes, which are contributing to human welfare, both directly and indirectly [10]

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