Abstract

Portraying urban functional zones provides useful insights into understanding complex urban systems and establishing rational urban planning. Although several studies have confirmed the efficacy of remote sensing imagery in urban studies, coupling remote sensing and new human sensing data like mobile phone positioning data to identify urban functional zones has still not been investigated. In this study, a new framework integrating remote sensing imagery and mobile phone positioning data was developed to analyze urban functional zones with landscape and human activity metrics. Landscapes metrics were calculated based on land cover from remote sensing images. Human activities were extracted from massive mobile phone positioning data. By integrating them, urban functional zones (urban center, sub-center, suburbs, urban buffer, transit region and ecological area) were identified by a hierarchical clustering. Finally, gradient analysis in three typical transects was conducted to investigate the pattern of landscapes and human activities. Taking Shenzhen, China, as an example, the conducted experiment shows that the pattern of landscapes and human activities in the urban functional zones in Shenzhen does not totally conform to the classical urban theories. It demonstrates that the fusion of remote sensing imagery and human sensing data can characterize the complex urban spatial structure in Shenzhen well. Urban functional zones have the potential to act as bridges between the urban structure, human activity and urban planning policy, providing scientific support for rational urban planning and sustainable urban development policymaking.

Highlights

  • Cities are human settlements where people engage in different activities and interact with the man-made space and natural environment

  • Urban landscapes are extracted from remote sensing imagery; city-wide human activities are recognized from massive mobile phone positioning data

  • All urban cells are divided into six categories that represent typical urban function zones: urban center, sub-center, suburbs, transit region, urban buffer and the ecological area

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Summary

Introduction

Cities are human settlements where people engage in different activities and interact with the man-made space and natural environment. In China, the urbanization rate has increased from 26.4 percent in the year 1992 to 57.4 percent in 2016 as 400 million people have mitigated to cities [2]. It is estimated that total urban population will rise to five billion in the year 2030. This transition has enormous economic, social and environmental consequences [3,4]. Targeting the aim of sustainable cities, remote sensing has been widely used to monitor the spatial structure, economy and environment of cities [5,6,7,8,9,10]

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