Abstract

The present study illustrates a simplified procedure identifying population sub-centers over 50 years in three Southern European cities (Barcelona, Rome, Athens) with the aim to define and characterize progressive shifts from mono-centric structures towards a polycentric spatial configuration of (growing) metropolitan regions. This procedure is based on a spatially-explicit, local-scale analysis of the standardized residuals from a log-linear model assessing the relationship between population concentration and the distance from a central place in each metropolitan region, under the hypotheses that (i) a mono-centric spatial structure is characterized by a linear relationship between the two variables and that (ii) population sub-centers—considered early signals of a more polycentric regional structure—are characterized by high and positive regression residuals. Results of this study indicate that the three cities have experienced distinctive urbanization waves influencing the overall metropolitan configuration, with variable impact on the original mono-centric structure. Population sub-centers include (i) peri-urban municipalities around the central city and more remote towns situated in rural districts (Barcelona); (ii) scattered towns at variable distances (20–30 km) from the central city (Rome); (iii) fringe municipalities and peri-urban locations in flat districts, 10–20 km away from the central city (Athens). These results may indicate a distinctive evolution path toward polycentric development in the three cities, more evident in Barcelona and Rome and less evident in Athens. The proposed methodology can be generalized and adapted to discriminate population from employment sub-centers in metropolitan regions all over Europe.

Highlights

  • Polycentrism is a spatial structure characterizing several regional systems worldwide [1,2,3]

  • To investigate shifts from mono-centric structures towards polycentric spatial configurations in originally compact and dense metropolitan regions, the present study introduces a simplified procedure that identifies population sub-centers and evaluates spatial patterns of population growth—as a proxy of urban growth—over a relatively long time period

  • Considering territorial divisions based on administrative boundaries, broad regions surrounding the central city were selected as the study area with the aim to assess long-term spatial changes in population distribution, as shown in Figure 1: (i) Barcelona’s province, (ii) Rome’s province, and (iii) a large part of the administrative Attica region

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Summary

Introduction

Polycentrism is a spatial structure characterizing several regional systems worldwide [1,2,3]. This relationship identifies a classical mono-centric model, with density of population, workers, or activities decreasing linearly with the distance from a central location due to agglomeration and scale factors, accessibility and land prices declining along urban gradients [31,32] In this context, metropolitan sub-centers have been frequently considered an early sign of a truly polycentric and more spatially-balanced urban development, and were identified considering separately population, employment, activities, or other functions [4,26,27,28]. Spatially-persistent, positive deviations from a density-distance linear trend are considered an honest signal of formation (and/or consolidation) of sub-centers across metropolitan regions [13]

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