Sign up & Download
Sign in

UCL CENTRE FOR ADVANCED SPATIAL ANALYSIS PAPERS

by Duncan A Smith, Andrew T Crooks
Built Environment (2010)

Abstract

The built environment is a significant factor in many urban processes, yet direct measures of built form are seldom used in geographical studies. Representation and analysis of urban form and function could provide new insights and improve the evidence base for research. So far progress has been slow due to limited data availability, computational demands, and a lack of methods to integrate built environment data with aggregate geographical analysis. Spatial data and computational improvements are overcoming some of these problems, but there remains a need for techniques to process and aggregate urban form data. Here we develop a Built Environment Model of urban function and dwelling type classifications for Greater London, based on detailed topographic and address-based data (sourced from Ordnance Survey MasterMap). The multi-scale approach allows the Built Environment Model to be viewed at fine-scales for local planning contexts, and at city-wide scales for aggregate geographical analysis, allowing an improved understanding of urban processes. This flexibility is illustrated in the two examples, that of urban function and residential type analysis, where both local-scale urban clustering and city-wide trends in density and agglomeration are shown. While we demonstrate the multi-scale Built Environment Model to be a viable approach, a number of accuracy issues are identified, including the limitations of 2D data, inaccuracies in commercial function data and problems with temporal attribution. These limitations currently restrict the more advanced applications of the Built Environment Model.

Cite this document (BETA)

Available from www.css.gmu.edu
Page 1
hidden

UCL CENTRE FOR ADVANCED SPATIAL ANALYSIS PAPERS

UCL CENTRE FOR ADVANCED SPATIAL ANALYSIS
Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis University College London 1 - 19 Torrington Place Gower St London WC1E 7HB
Tel: +44 (0)20 7679 1782 casa@ucl.ac.uk www.casa.ucl.ac.uk
WORKING
PAPERS
SERIES
From Buildings to Cities:
Techniques for the Multi-
Scale Analysis of Urban
Form and Function
ISSN 1467-1298
Paper 155 - July 10
Page 2
hidden
i
From Buildings to Cities: Techniques for the Multi-Scale
Analysis of Urban Form and Function

Duncan A. Smith and Andrew T. Crooks
duncan.a.smith@ucl.ac.uk, acrooks2@gmu.edu
Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis
University College London, 1-19 Torrington Place, London, WC1E 7HB, England
Tel. +44(0)207 7679 1782 Fax +44(0)207 7813 2843

6th July 2010

Abstract
The built environment is a significant factor in many urban processes, yet direct measures of built form are
seldom used in geographical studies. Representation and analysis of urban form and function could provide
new insights and improve the evidence base for research. So far progress has been slow due to limited data
availability, computational demands, and a lack of methods to integrate built environment data with
aggregate geographical analysis. Spatial data and computational improvements are overcoming some of
these problems, but there remains a need for techniques to process and aggregate urban form data. Here we
develop a Built Environment Model of urban function and dwelling type classifications for Greater
London, based on detailed topographic and address-based data (sourced from Ordnance Survey
MasterMap). The multi-scale approach allows the Built Environment Model to be viewed at fine-scales for
local planning contexts, and at city-wide scales for aggregate geographical analysis, allowing an improved
understanding of urban processes. This flexibility is illustrated in the two examples, that of urban function
and residential type analysis, where both local-scale urban clustering and city-wide trends in density and
agglomeration are shown. While we demonstrate the multi-scale Built Environment Model to be a viable
approach, a number of accuracy issues are identified, including the limitations of 2D data, inaccuracies in
commercial function data and problems with temporal attribution. These limitations currently restrict the
more advanced applications of the Built Environment Model.

Keywords: Urban Form, Function, Land Use, GIS, Housing, Residential Type, Dwelling Type,
Multi-Scale, Visualisation, MasterMap, Address Layer 2, Greater London

Sign up today - FREE

Mendeley saves you time finding and organizing research. Learn more

  • All your research in one place
  • Add and import papers easily
  • Access it anywhere, anytime

Start using Mendeley in seconds!

Already have an account? Sign in

Readership Statistics

16 Readers on Mendeley
by Discipline
 
 
19% Design
 
by Academic Status
 
31% Ph.D. Student
 
19% Student (Master)
 
13% Lecturer
by Country
 
19% Germany
 
13% United Kingdom
 
13% China