Spatiotemporally Explicit Mapping of Built Environment Stocks Reveals Two Centuries of Urban Development in a Fairytale City, Odense, Denmark
Journal article, 2022

The urban built environment stocks such as buildings and infrastructure provide essential services to urban residents, and their spatiotemporal dynamics are key to the circular and low-carbon transition of cities. However, spatiotemporally explicit characterization of urban built environment stocks remains hitherto limited, and previous studies on fine-grained mapping of built environment stocks often focus on an urban area without consideration of temporal dynamics. Here, we combined the emerging geospatial data and historical maps to quantify the spatially and temporally refined stocks of buildings and infrastructure and developed a novel indexing method to track the construction, demolition, and renovation for each building across various historical snapshots, with a case study of Odense, Denmark, from 1810 to 2018. We show that built environment stock in Odense increased from 80 t/cap in 1810 to 279 t/cap in 2018. Their dynamics appear overall in line with urban development of Odense over the past two centuries and well reflect the combined effects of industrialization, infrastructure development, socioeconomic characteristics, and policy interventions. Such spatiotemporally explicit stock mapping offers a physical and resource perspective for measuring urbanization and provides the public and government insight into urban spatial planning and related resource, waste, and climate strategies.

urban sustainability

material flow analysis

circular economy

spatial planning

built environment stocks

Author

Qiaoxuan Li

East China Normal University

University of Southern Denmark

Srinivasa Raghavendra Bhuvan Gummidi

University of Southern Denmark

Maud Lanau

University of Sheffield

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Building Technology

Bailang Yu

East China Normal University

Gang Liu

University of Southern Denmark

Environmental Science & Technology

0013-936X (ISSN) 1520-5851 (eISSN)

Vol. 56 22 16369-16381

Subject Categories

Architecture

Landscape Architecture

Human Geography

DOI

10.1021/acs.est.2c04781

PubMed

36256736

More information

Latest update

3/7/2024 9