Abstract
The paper investigates the urban landscape changes for the last 50 years in Bucharest, the capital city of Romania. Bucharest shows a complex structural transformation driven by the socialist urban policy, followed by an intensive real-estate market development. Our analysis is based on a diachronic set of high-resolution satellite imagery: declassified CORONA KH-4B from 1968, SPOT-1 from 1989, and multisensor stacked layers from Sentinel-1 SAR together with Sentinel-2MSI from 2018. Three different datasets of land cover/use are extracted for the reference years. Each dataset reveals its own urban structure pattern. The first one illustrates a radiography of the city in the second part of the 20th century, where rural patterns meet the modern ones, while the second one reveals the frame of a city in a full process of transformation with multiple constructions sites, based on the socialist model. The third one presents an image of a cosmopolitan city during an expansion process, with a high degree of landscape heterogeneity. All the datasets are included in a built-up change analysis in order to map and assess the spatial transformations of the city pattern over 5 decades. In order to quantify and map the changes, the Built-up Change Index (BCI) is introduced. The results highlight a particular situation linked to the policy development visions for each decade, with major changes of about 50% for different built-up classes. The GIS analysis illustrates two major landscape transformations: from the old semirural structures with houses surrounded by gardens from 1968, to a compact pattern with large districts of blocks of flats in 1989, and a contemporary city defined by an uncontrolled urban sprawl process in 2018.
Highlights
Urban landscape change analysis is a necessary approach for the Eastern European cities [1,2], being related to quality of life [3] and socio-ecologic configuration [4,5]
The current study proposes a methodology for the integration of historical imagery dataset with recent Earth Observation (EO) images
For statistic approach and metric analysis, we introduced the Built-up Change Index (BCI) as a percentage difference of built-up area quantified for a reference surface of 1 hectare (1)
Summary
Urban landscape change analysis is a necessary approach for the Eastern European cities [1,2], being related to quality of life [3] and socio-ecologic configuration [4,5]. In the study of city evolution and configuration, while the thematic classification of higher spatial resolution satellite data for the urban area is essential in mapping process for practical uses [11]. The city of Bucharest represents an example of intensive and complex urban landscape change [16]. It shows the effect of a remarkable demographic and industrial growth between 1950–1989, followed by an uncertain transition period between 1990
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