Abstract

Fractal dimension curves of urban growth can be modeled with sigmoid functions, including logistic function and quadratic logistic function. Different types of logistic functions indicate different spatial dynamics. The fractal dimension curves of urban growth in Western countries follow the common logistic function, while the fractal dimension growth curves of cities in northern China follow the quadratic logistic function. Now, we want to investigate whether other Chinese cities, especially cities in South China, follow the same rules of urban evolution and attempt to analyze the reasons. This paper is devoted to exploring the fractals and fractal dimension properties of the city of Shenzhen in southern China. The urban region is divided into four subareas using ArcGIS technology, the box-counting method is adopted to extract spatial datasets, and the least squares regression method is employed to estimate fractal parameters. The results show that (1) the urban form of Shenzhen city has a clear fractal structure, but fractal dimension values of different subareas are different; (2) the fractal dimension growth curves of all the four study areas can only be modeled by the common logistic function, and the goodness of fit increases over time; (3) the peak of urban growth in Shenzhen had passed before 1986 and the fractal dimension growth is approaching its maximum capacity. It can be concluded that the urban form of Shenzhen bears characteristics of multifractals and the fractal structure has been becoming better, gradually, through self-organization, but its land resources are reaching the limits of growth. The fractal dimension curves of Shenzhen’s urban growth are similar to those of European and American cities but differ from those of cities in northern China. This suggests that there are subtle different dynamic mechanisms of city development between northern and southern China.

Highlights

  • A study on cities begins from description and ends at understanding

  • In order to investigate the rules of urban evolution of Shenzhen city, we modelled fractal dimension values of time series of four study areas in Shenzhen by using logistic function modeling

  • The fractal dimension curves of the urban growth of Shenzhen bear S-shape characteristics and can be modeled by the conventional logistic function, which differs from the fractal dimension curves of cities in northern China

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Summary

Introduction

A study on cities begins from description and ends at understanding. To describe an urban phenomenon, we have to find its characteristic scales. Spatial patterns of cities have no characteristic scale and cannot be effectively described by conventional measures such as length and area. At this scale, the concept of characteristic scales should be substituted with scaling ideas. The urban form resembles ink splashes, usually presenting a highly irregularity and self-similarity at several different scales [4,5]. It implies that it does not obey Gaussian law and traditional measures and mathematics models cannot effectively describe it [6,7]. Urban geography is one of the biggest beneficiaries of fractal ideas [12]

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