Abstract

Enhancing urban vitality is a key goal for both the government and ordinary urban residents, and creating this vitality is emphasized in China’s urban development strategy. Enhancing urban vitality through the rational design of urban forms is a leading topic of Western urban research. An urban growth pattern (UGP) reflects the dual characteristics of a static pattern and the dynamic evolution of the external urban form. It affects urban vitality by influencing the spatial allocation of internal structural elements and patterns in the adjacent location. The cellular automata (CA) mode can effectively simulate the aggregation process of urban growth (infilling expansion or edge expansion). However, it does not simulate the diffusion of urban growth, specifically the evolution of outlying expansion. In addition, CA focuses on learning, simulating, and building knowledge about geographic processes, but does not spatially optimize collaborative land use against multiple objectives or model multi-scale land use. As such, this paper applies a coupling model called the “promoting urban vitality model,” based on cellular automata (CA) and genetic algorithm (GA) (abbreviated as UV-CAGA). UV-CAGA optimally allocates cells with different UGPs, creating a city form that promotes urban vitality. Wuhan, the largest city in Central China, was selected as a case study to simulate and optimize its urban morphology for 2025. The main findings were as follows. (1) The urban vitality of the optimized urban form scheme was 4.8% higher than the simulated natural expansion scheme. (2) Compared to 2015, after optimization, the simulated sizes of the newly increased outlying, edge, and infilling areas in 2025 were 6.51 km2, 102.69 km2, and 23.48 km2, respectively; these increases accounted for 4.90%, 77.32%, and 17.68%, respectively, of the newly increased construction land area. This indicated that Wuhan is expected to have a very compact urban form. (3) The infilling expansion type resulted in the highest average urban vitality level (0.215); the edge expansion type had the second highest level (0.206); outlying growth achieved the lowest vitality level (0.199). The UV-CAGA model proposed in this paper improves on existing geographical process simulation and spatial optimization models. The study successfully couples the “bottom-up” CA model and “top-down” genetic algorithm to generate dynamic urban form optimization simulations. This significantly improves upon traditional CA models, which do not simulate the “diffusion” process. At the same time, the spatial optimization framework of the genetic algorithm in the model also provides insights related to other effects related to urban form optimization, such as urban environmental security, commuting, and air pollution. The integration of related research is expected to enrich and improve urban planning tools and improve the topic’s scientific foundation.

Highlights

  • Urban vitality is the foundation for urban attractiveness and the most direct external expression of comprehensive urban strength

  • The results indicated that the edge type growth was the most important urban growth pattern in Wuhan during this period, followed by the outlying type that represented diffusion growth, followed by compact and intensive infilling growth

  • The results indicated that the edge type growth was the most important urInt

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Summary

Introduction

Urban vitality is the foundation for urban attractiveness and the most direct external expression of comprehensive urban strength. Urban vitality is an abstract concept, with no unified definition [1]. J. Jacobs first proposed the concept, noting that complex human activities and human life create the diversity of urban life, and that the expression of urban life is urban vitality [2]. In the book “Good urban form,” Lynch positioned “vitality” as the primary standard to evaluate the quality of an urban form, defining it as the degree of settlement support for life functions, ecological requirements, and human activities [3]. Urban vitality is understood to be the diversity of urban life generated by people’s gatherings and activities. It is widely considered to be a spatial feature and its isomorphism with human activities is its main social attribute [4,5]

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