Abstract

This contribution demonstrates how space syntax methods on various scale levels can be used to identify and describe the spatial features of a compact city. Firstly, the term urban compactness is discussed. A short discussion of some writings on the compact city are elaborated. As it transpired, urban compactness can best be approached from a spatial topological point of view, since compactness is a topological property. Secondly, urban compactness will be reconsidered in spatial configurative terms through the use of space syntax and urban micro scale tools. Examples from car-, pedestrian-, and public transport-based centres in Oslo and Bergen will be used throughout this contribution. Discussions of the examples in this contribution are discussed with references to other space syntax research results. As the case studies show, enhancing compact neighbourhoods with good walkability potential from a spatial perspective relies on spatial interaccessibility on all scale levels. Accessibility depends on spatial configurative compactness. Seemingly, it depends on the following complex set of sufficient conditions: a spatially integrated street network on all scale levels, short urban blocks and streets with building entrances with windows and doors on the ground floor level.

Highlights

  • Conditions for Urban CompactnessThis contribution attempts to answer how a spatial configurational approach of the built environment can contribute to identifying the spatial features of a compact city

  • If urban compactness consists of encouraging the location of a large variation of economic activities in city centres with short walking distances, the aim must be to understand where the most optimal location is for shops and retail locations along a built environment’s street and road network

  • Research carried out by various space syntax researchers has shown the following results in line with the theory of the natural movement economic process: First of all, shops locate themselves in streets where most people move [29,35,36,37]

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Summary

Introduction

Conditions for Urban CompactnessThis contribution attempts to answer how a spatial configurational approach of the built environment can contribute to identifying the spatial features of a compact city. There exist several writings on the social, economic, political and environmental aspects of sustainable cities dating back to the 1990s. This led to the proposal of a set of 17 sustainability goals in September 2015 at the UN Sustainable Development Summit [1]. The spatial parameters (including the spaces shaped by physical objects such as buildings) are not always taken into account This contribution aims to reveal the spatial parameters for generating walkable neighbourhoods and compact well-functioning vital local urban centres. How can these spatial parameters be measured and analysed? The overall purpose is to discover to what extent these planning and design proposals can generate sustainable means of its users

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