Beijing’s Sub-Administrative Center (BSAC) is located in the South-eastern Beijing Plain, which exhibits severe subsidence. The rapid urban expansion in recent years has aggravated land subsidence and threatens the safe operation of Beijing. First, this study applied the persistent scatterer-interferometric synthetic aperture radar (PS-InSAR) to extract BSAC subsidence time series data. Second, combined with the index-based built-up index (IBI), expansion intensity index (EII), and expansion gradient index (EGI), the spatiotemporal characteristics of urban expansion were retrieved from optical data. Finally, we examined the urban expansion effects on land subsidence at the regional and single-building scales. The results showed that the maximum subsidence velocity in the BSAC reached 121 mm/year from 2015 to 2018, and the urban construction land area increased by 22%. At the regional scale, there existed a positive correlation between land subsidence and EGI or EII. This indicated that urban expansion had a certain impact on land subsidence. Therefore, we further explored the relationship between construction and land subsidence at the single-building scale. The engineering construction effects on land subsidence were divided into three periods, namely, rapid settlement, rebound, and stable periods. Although construction had a significant influence on land subsidence, it did not cause subsidence mutation.
CITATION STYLE
Cao, J., Gong, H., Chen, B., Shi, M., Zhou, C., Lei, K., … Sun, Y. (2021). Land Subsidence in Beijing’s Sub-Administrative Center and Its Relationship with Urban Expansion Inferred from Sentinel-1/2 Observations. Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing, 47(6), 802–817. https://doi.org/10.1080/07038992.2021.1964944
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