Abstract

Urban megaregions have emerged as a new urbanized form. However, previous studies mostly focused on urban expansion at the city scale, particularly for large cities. Understanding urban expansion at the regional scale including cities having different sizes is important for extending current knowledge of urban growth and its environmental and ecological impacts. Here, we addressed two questions: (1) How do the extent, rate, and morphological model of urban expansion vary at both the regional and city scales? (2) How do factors, such as city size and expansion rate, influence urban expansion models? We focused on the three largest urban megaregions in China, Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei (BTH), Yangtze River Delta (YRD) and Pearl River Delta (PRD). We quantified and compared the spatiotemporal pattern of urban expansion during 2000–2010 at both the regional and city scales based on remote sensing data. We used correlation analysis and linear regressions to address our research questions. We found that (1) the three urban megaregions experienced rapid and massive urban growth, but the spatiotemporal pattern varied greatly. Urban expansion was dominated by edge-expansion in the BTH, edge-expansion and infilling in the YRD, and infilling in the PRD. Cities in the same megaregion tended to have similar expansion morphology; (2) geographical location influenced the model of urban expansion the most, followed by city size and by its expansion rate. Small-sized cities were more likely to develop in a leapfrogging model, while cities with relatively rapid expansion tended to grow in an edge-expansion model.

Highlights

  • Urban expansion drives the conversion of landscapes and causes a massive of environmental and ecological impacts [1,2,3,4,5]

  • We addressed the following two questions: (1) What are the spatiotemporal patterns of the extent, rate, and morphological model of urban expansion at both the regional and city scales in the three urban megaregions; and (2) How do factors such as geographical locations, the size of the city and its expansion rate influence the model of urban expansion? We first quantified and compared the spatiotemporal patterns of urban expansion from 2000–2010 at both the regional and city scales based on remote sensing data

  • As for morphological models of urban expansion, small-sized cities were more likely to develop in a leapfrogging model, while cities with relatively rapid expansion tended to grow in an edge-expansion model (Table 6)

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Summary

Introduction

Urban expansion drives the conversion of landscapes and causes a massive of environmental and ecological impacts [1,2,3,4,5]. These impacts occur within the urban area itself and well beyond the urban boundaries [1,2,3]. A considerable number of studies have been conducted to quantify spatiotemporal pattern of urban expansion. Recognizing the importance of urban morphology for environmental and ecological issues [17,18], there is an increasing interest in quantifying the models of urban expansion [17,19,20,21]

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