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Urban Form Morphometrics×Urban Sprawl Measurement×
क्षेत्रUrban StudiesUrban Studies
परिवारProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
उद्भव वर्ष20192014
प्रवर्तकQuantitative urban-morphology tradition; momepy toolkit by Martin FleischmannReid Ewing & Shima Hamidi (building on Galster et al.)
प्रकारSystematic quantitative measurement of urban form across buildings, plots, blocks, and streetsComposite index combining multiple dimensions of urban form into a sprawl/compactness score
मौलिक स्रोतFleischmann, M. (2019). momepy: Urban Morphology Measuring Toolkit. Journal of Open Source Software, 4(43), 1807. DOI ↗Ewing, R., & Hamidi, S. (2015). Compactness versus sprawl: A review of recent evidence from the United States. Journal of Planning Literature, 30(4), 413–432. DOI ↗
उपनामUrban Morphometrics, Quantitative Urban Morphology, Morphometric Analysis of Urban Form, Built-Form MorphometricsSprawl Index, Compactness Index of Sprawl, Ewing Sprawl Index, Composite Sprawl Measure
संबंधित44
सारांशUrban form morphometrics is the systematic, quantitative measurement of the physical form of cities — the dimensions, shapes, spatial arrangement, intensity, and connectivity of buildings, plots, blocks, and streets. Rather than describing morphology in words, it computes hundreds of reproducible numerical characters on each morphological element and its local context, turning the qualitative tradition of urban morphology into a measurable science. The open-source momepy toolkit, introduced by Martin Fleischmann in 2019, standardized this workflow, building a morphological tessellation from building footprints and computing dimension, shape, distribution, intensity, and connectivity characters at scale.Urban sprawl measurement quantifies how compact or sprawling a metropolitan region is by combining several distinct dimensions of urban form into a single composite index. The dominant approach, developed by Reid Ewing, Shima Hamidi and colleagues, captures four factors — development density, land-use mix, activity centering, and street-network connectivity — and folds standardized indicators of each into one score, calibrated so the average region equals 100 and higher values mean greater compactness. Because sprawl is multidimensional, no single variable such as density adequately describes it, which is why the composite-index strategy has become the standard for comparing regions and linking form to outcomes.
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