Sammenlign metoder
Gjennomgå de valgte metodene side om side; rader som avviker, er uthevet.
| Isovist Analysis× | Urban Form Morphometrics× | |
|---|---|---|
| Fagfelt | Urban Studies | Urban Studies |
| Familie | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Opprinnelsesår≠ | 1979 | 2019 |
| Opphavsperson≠ | Michael L. Benedikt | Quantitative urban-morphology tradition; momepy toolkit by Martin Fleischmann |
| Type≠ | Geometric analysis of the space visible from a vantage point | Systematic quantitative measurement of urban form across buildings, plots, blocks, and streets |
| Opprinnelig kilde≠ | Benedikt, M. L. (1979). To take hold of space: isovists and isovist fields. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design, 6(1), 47–65. DOI ↗ | Fleischmann, M. (2019). momepy: Urban Morphology Measuring Toolkit. Journal of Open Source Software, 4(43), 1807. DOI ↗ |
| Alias | Visibility Polygon Analysis, Isovist Fields, Viewshed Analysis (Architectural), Visual Field Analysis | Urban Morphometrics, Quantitative Urban Morphology, Morphometric Analysis of Urban Form, Built-Form Morphometrics |
| Relaterte | 4 | 4 |
| Sammendrag≠ | Isovist analysis describes the experience of space by computing, for any vantage point, the exact region that is visible from it — the isovist, or visibility polygon. Introduced by Michael Benedikt in 1979, the method turns intuitive notions of openness, enclosure and prospect into measurable quantities such as the area, perimeter and compactness of the visible field. By repeating the construction across a grid of points one obtains an isovist field that maps how visibility varies throughout a building or urban space, making it a core analytic tool in space syntax, architecture and environmental psychology. | Urban 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. |
| ScholarGateDatasett ↗ |
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