Abstract

Urban expansion is one of the most dramatic forms of land transformation in the world and it is one of the greatest challenges in achieving sustainable development in the 21st century. Previous studies analyzed urbanization patterns in areas with rapid urban expansion while urban areas with low to moderate expansion have been overlooked, especially in developed countries. In this study, we examined the spatiotemporal dynamics of urban expansion patterns in South Florida, United States (US) over the last 25 years (1992–2016) using Remote Sensing and GIS techniques. The main goal of this paper was to investigate the degree and spatiotemporal patterns of urban expansion at different administrative level in the study area and how spatiotemporal variance in different explanatory factors influence urban expansion in this region. More specifically, this research quantifies the rates, types, intensity, and landscape metrics of urban expansion in Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Palm Beach, Florida Metropolitan Statistical Area (Miami MSA) which is the 7th largest MSA and 4th largest urbanized area in the US using remote sensing (satellite imageries) data from National Land Cover Datasets (NLCD) and Coastal Change Analysis Program (C-CAP) at 30 m spatial resolution. We further investigated the urban growth patterns at the county and city areas that are located within this MSA to portray the local ‘picture’ of urban growth in this region. Urban expansion in this region can be divided into two time periods: pre-2001 and post-2001 where the former experienced rapid urban expansion and the later had comparatively slow urban expansion. Results suggest that infilling was the dominant type of urban expansion followed by edge-expansion and outlying. Results from landscape metrics represent that newly developed urban lands became more aggregated and simplified in form as the time progressed in the study region. Also, new urban lands were generated away from the east coast and historic cities which eventually created new urban cores. We also used correlation analysis and multiple linear stepwise regression to address major explanatory factors of spatiotemporal change in urban expansion during the study period. Although the influence of factors on urban expansion varied temporally, Population and Distance to Coast were the strongest variables followed by Distance to Roads and Median Income that influence overall urban expansion in the study area.

Highlights

  • The level of urbanization went up by almost 80 percent in some parts of the world in 2003 including North America, Europe, and Australia and more than half of the world’s population lives in urban areas today [1]

  • Since the main objective of this research is to examine the spatiotemporal pattern of urban expansion over the last 25 years in the study area and there are a lot of metrics available, we chose four metrics to identify the shape, landscape and distribution of urban patches including Number of Patches (NP), Largest Patch Index (LPI), Landscape Shape Index (LSI), and Area-weighted Mean Shape Index (SHAP_AM) [28]

  • Less attention has been paid on the dynamics of urban expansion in this region than necessary and timely monitoring and evaluation of urban land expansion is extremely important

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Summary

Introduction

The level of urbanization went up by almost 80 percent in some parts of the world in 2003 including North America, Europe, and Australia and more than half of the world’s population lives in urban areas today [1]. This number is expected to increase even more in the coming years. As the total urban and coastal population is expected to increase at an alarming rate, urban growth and urbanization have become a crucial issue among the city planners, policymakers, and scientific community. The impacts of urban expansion exceed its boundary [6,11] and include landscape change [12,13], loss of agricultural land [9], biodiversity [14,15], air and water pollution [4,16,17], biogeochemical cycles [18,19], and local and regional climate change [4,20,21] at different scales

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