Abstract

As the global urban population grows due to the influx of migrants from rural areas, many cities in developing countries face the emergence and proliferation of unplanned and informal settlements. However, even though the rise of unplanned development influences planning and management of residential land-use, reliable and detailed information about these areas is often scarce. While formal settlements in urban areas are easily mapped due to their distinct features, this does not hold true for informal settlements because of their microstructure, instability, and variability of shape and texture. Therefore, detecting and mapping these areas remains a challenging task. This research will contribute to the development of tools to identify such informal built-up areas by using an integrated approach of multiscale deep learning. The authors propose a composite architecture for semantic segmentation using the U-net architecture aided by information obtained from a multiscale contourlet transform. This work also analyzes the effects of wavelet and contourlet decompositions in the U-net architecture. The performance was evaluated in terms of precision, recall, F-score, mean intersection over union, and overall accuracy. It was found that the proposed method has better class-discriminating power as compared to existing methods and has an overall classification accuracy of 94.9–95.7%.

Highlights

  • Due to rapid urbanization and population migration, many cities in developing countries such as India have large areas of unplanned development interspaced with planned areas

  • The study area is densely populated with a mixture of informal and formal built-up areas

  • Informal settlements in the region provide housing and livelihood for the lower economic strata population. These informal settlements are very dense with clusters of row houses

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Summary

Introduction

Due to rapid urbanization and population migration, many cities in developing countries such as India have large areas of unplanned development interspaced with planned areas. A forecast of the United Nations (UN) estimated that the population of India will be about 1.44 billion in 2024 and will surpass 1.66 billion around 2050 [1] This increase, coupled with migration from rural areas to urban centres, will lead to the growth of both informal and formal urban settlements that include low-, medium-, and upper-class housing and commercial developments. Urbanization is often not accompanied by adequate development of infrastructure, including housing, sanitation, and transportation corridors. This lack of planning when coupled with the large share of informal low-paid employment results in the growth of informal settlements in densely populated urban areas [2]. Demarcating and differentiating urban structures is difficult due to the nature

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