Abstract

The spatial mismatch between population growth and settlement expansion is at the base of current models of urban growth. Empirical evidence is increasingly required to inform planning measures promoting urban containment in the context of a stable (or declining) population. In these regards, per-capita indicators of land-use change can be adopted with the aim at evaluating long-term sustainability of urbanization processes. The present study assesses spatial variations in per-capita indicators of land-use change in Rome, Central Italy, at five years (1949, 1974, 1999, 2008, and 2016) with the final objective of quantifying the mismatch between urban expansion and population growth. Originally specialized in agricultural productions, Rome’s metropolitan area is a paradigmatic example of dispersed urban expansion in the Mediterranean basin. By considering multiple land-use dynamics, per-capita indicators of landscape change delineated three distinctive waves of growth corresponding with urbanization, suburbanization, and a more mixed stage with counter-urbanization and re-urbanization impulses. By reflecting different socioeconomic contexts on a local scale, urban fabric and forests were identified as the ‘winner’ classes, expanding homogeneously over time at the expense of cropland. Agricultural landscapes experienced a more heterogeneous trend with arable land and pastures declining systematically and more fragmented land classes (e.g., vineyards and olive groves) displaying stable (or slightly increasing) trends. The continuous reduction of per-capita surface area of cropland that’s supports a reduced production base, which is now insufficient to satisfy the rising demand for fresh food at the metropolitan scale, indicates the unsustainability of the current development in Rome and more generally in the whole Mediterranean basin, a region specialized traditionally in (proximity) agricultural productions.

Highlights

  • Land use/land cover changes (LULCCs) are due to a large number of factors encompassing climate change, occurrence of natural risk, regulation/conservation policies, and human disturbance mainly consisting in various forms of urbanization [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]

  • Our study provides a long-term analysis of per-capita land cover changes at the fringe of a metropolitan region in southern Europe

  • Comparative analysis delineating latent patterns and trends in land-use has recently benefited from indicators that assess the intrinsic mismatch between landscape transformations and population growth

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Summary

Introduction

Land use/land cover changes (LULCCs) are due to a large number of factors encompassing climate change, occurrence of natural risk, regulation/conservation policies, and human disturbance mainly consisting in various forms of urbanization [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. In this perspective, in urban areas, settlement expansion and landscape transformations were intimately associated, involving multiple research dimensions encompassing ecology, planning, economic issues, and social aspects [10]. Impacts of sprawl on fringe landscapes are mixed and hardly predictable as land-use change in metropolitan regions is often the result of a complex interplay of socioeconomic factors and land constraints (e.g., accessibility, infrastructural development, land/house prices, and access to credit) [19,20,21,22]

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