Abstract

Accelerated urbanization and population expansion present substantial pressures on the built environment, particularly in terms of inadequate space and pronounced inequality of building provision. A comprehensive understanding of building space provision and inequality of city remains constrained. This study utilizes high-quality building structure data and fine-scale gridded population product to investigate the building space provision and inequality across 67 Chinese cities from a three-dimensional (3-D) perspective. We integrate both dimensions of building space provision and inequality to facilitate a more nuanced understanding of the built environment. With an overall average building volume per capita (perBV: 517.67 m3 /person) and Gini measures (BV-Gini: 0.497), our study reveals that tier-1 cities suffer shortage of building space, while rapidly developing tier-2 cities are confronted with high degree of inequality. The results indicate that urban areas are characterized by a more limited building space provision (perBV: 1,074.52m3/person for rural, and 500.83 m3/person for urban) and higher inequality (BV-Gini: 0.494 for urban, and 0.427 for rural) compared to rural areas. This study provides valuable insights into comprehension of the built environment from 3-D building perspective toward achieving adequate and equitable building space, consistent with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the principles of New Urban Agenda.

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