ScholarGate
Pembantu
Process / pipelineLand-use change simulation / growth management

Urban Growth Boundary Analysis

Urban growth boundary (UGB) analysis uses spatial simulation to design and evaluate containment lines that separate land where urban development is allowed from land to be kept rural. Built on the cellular-automata urban-growth tradition exemplified by Clarke, Hoppen, and Gaydos's self-modifying SLEUTH model, it calibrates how a region urbanizes, then imposes candidate boundaries as hard or soft constraints and simulates land conversion forward in time. By comparing scenarios with and without a boundary, the method estimates how much farmland and open space a UGB would protect, how much it would densify the interior, and whether it would push leapfrog development beyond the line.

Buka dalam MethodMindTidak lama lagiGuna, banding, dapatkan panduan
Alat & sumber
Muat turun slaid
Pelajari & terokai
VideoTidak lama lagi

Baca kaedah sepenuhnya

Ahli sahaja

Log masuk dengan akaun percuma untuk membaca bahagian ini.

Log masuk

Peta kaedah

Kejiranan kaedah berkaitan — pilih satu nod untuk meneroka.

Sumber

  1. Clarke, K. C., Hoppen, S., & Gaydos, L. (1997). A self-modifying cellular automaton model of historical urbanization in the San Francisco Bay area. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design, 24(2), 247–261. DOI: 10.1068/b240247

Cara memetik halaman ini

ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Urban Growth Boundary Analysis (Scenario Simulation of Containment and Land Conversion). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/ms/urban-studies/urban-growth-boundary-analysis

Kaedah yang mana?

Letakkan kaedah ini di sebelah kaedah yang paling rapat dengannya dan baca secara bersebelahan — perpustakaan menyusun buku di atas meja; pilihan terletak pada anda.

Bandingkan secara bersebelahan

Dirujuk oleh

ScholarGateUrban Growth Boundary Analysis (Urban Growth Boundary Analysis (Scenario Simulation of Containment and Land Conversion)). Dicapai 2026-06-24 daripada https://scholargate.app/ms/urban-studies/urban-growth-boundary-analysis · Set data: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026