Divergence of Urban Function and Its Influences on Urban Land Prices: Evidence from Cities in the Yangtze River Economic Belt in China

2021 ◽  
Vol 147 (3) ◽  
pp. 04021039
Author(s):  
Zhixian Chai ◽  
Song Zhao ◽  
Qi Tang
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 2733 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Li ◽  
Hua Shao ◽  
Nan Jiang ◽  
Ge Shi ◽  
Xin Cheng

The development of the Yangtze River Economic Belt (YREB) is an important national regional development strategy and a strategic engineering development system. In this study, the evolution of urban spatial patterns in the YREB from 1990 to 2010 was mapped using the nighttime stable light (NSL) data, multi-temporal urban land products, and multiple sources of geographic data by using the rank-size distribution and the Gini coefficient method. Through statistical results, we found that urban land takes on the feature of “high in the east and low in the west”. The study area included cities of different development stages and sizes. The nighttime light increased in most cities from 1992 to 2010, and the rate assumed an obvious growth tendency in the three urban agglomerations in the YREB. The results revealed that the urban size distribution of the YREB is relatively dispersed, the speed of urban development is unequal, and the trend of urban size structure shows a decentralized distribution pattern that has continuously strengthened from 1990 to 2010. Affected by factors such as geographical conditions, spatial distance, and development stage, the lower reaches of the Yangtze River have developed rapidly, the upper and middle reaches have developed large cities, and a contiguous development trend is not obvious. The evolution of urban agglomerations in the region presents a variety of spatial development characteristics. Jiangsu, Zhejiang, and Shanghai have entered a phase of urban continuation, forming a more mature interregional urban agglomeration, while the YREB inland urban agglomerations are in suburbanization and multi-centered urban areas. At this stage, the conditions for the formation of transregional urban agglomerations do not yet exist, and there are many uncertainties in the boundary and spatial structure of each urban agglomeration.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 1227 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bowen Chen ◽  
Changyan Wu ◽  
Xianjin Huang ◽  
Xuefeng Yang

Urban land expansion (ULE) has caused negative effects as a result of urbanization and industrialization in China in the past few decades. Strengthening economic linkage and the cooperation among regions has great implications for effectively controlling disorderly ULE and achieving sustainable and intensive land use. Previous research has rarely investigated the relationship between ULE and economic linkage. Therefore, this study analyzes the spatial patterns of ULE and economic linkage in the Yangtze River Economic Belt (YREB) of China via social network analysis and a gravity model. Moreover, the spatial relationship and coupling level between ULE and economic linkage are investigated by building a bivariate spatial autocorrelation model and a coupling coordination degree model, respectively. The results indicate that the YREB experienced rapid ULE, and the area increased from 4.24 × 104 km2 in 1990 to 7.89 × 104 km2 in 2015. The cities that experience rapid ULE have gradually transferred from the east to the west of the YREB. In addition, the economic linkage in eastern cities is evidently higher than that of western cities. Our bivariate spatial model further proves that there are strong negative spatial correlation characteristics between ULE and economic linkage. This indicates that the higher the economic linkage, the lower the speed of ULE. Moreover, the coupling coordination between ULE and economic linkage show that the overall coupling stage changed from an antagonistic stage to a running-in stage. However, the coupling coordination in the YREB presented significant spatial heterogeneity, and most cities in urban agglomeration had a relationship between ULE and economic linkage that was barely balanced, slightly unbalanced, or seriously unbalanced. By considering the limitations and obstacles of current initiatives, suggestions and policy implications for sustainable land use at large regional scales are suggested.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baoni Li ◽  
Lihua Xiong ◽  
Quan Zhang ◽  
Shilei Chen ◽  
Han Yang ◽  
...  

Abstract Land use/cover change (LUCC) affects regional climate not only through its direct changes of land surface properties, but also through its further modifications of land-atmosphere interactions. Urban land expansion is a typical case of LUCC in highly populated areas, and has been widely discussed about its impacts on regional air temperature, notably known as urban heat island (UHI) effects. Besides air temperature, atmospheric humidity, as another key variable in hydrometeorology and climate, would be inevitably affected by LUCC as well. However, the impacts of LUCC on atmospheric humidity seem to have not been investigated as much as on temperature. We examined atmospheric humidity changes by trend analyses of humidity indicators in three representative urban agglomerations in the Yangtze River Economic Belt (YREB), China during 1965-2017, and found the evident urban dry island (UDI) effects which are characterized by significant humidity decrease and vapor pressure deficit increase. In different urban cores, the severity levels of UDI are different. Furthermore, strong positive correlations between humidity and evapotranspiration, and between evapotranspiration and leaf area were detected during 2001-2017 when cities entered the accelerated stage of land expansion, indicating that LUCC affects regional climate through an ecohydrological way. We speculated that the UDI effect will not appear until urban land expands to a certain scale. Besides, the UHI effect emerged in the early stage of urban expansion, about 5 years earlier than the UDI effect, and has not performed prominently in recent years. This implies that urbanization-induced LUCC may exert a larger influence on UDI than on UHI in the current later period of urban expansion.


资源科学 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 723-734
Author(s):  
Qingke YANG ◽  
Xuejun DUAN ◽  
Zhifeng JIN ◽  
Lei WANG ◽  
Yazhu WANG ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baoni Li

<p>Land use/cover change (LUCC) affects regional climate change not only through its direct changes of land surface properties, but also through its further modifications of land-atmosphere interactions including the surface energy budget, water cycle and carbon cycle. Urban land expansion as a typical case of LUCC, has been widely discussed about its effects on regional climate, notably on temperature and known for urban heat island (UHI). Another important climate variable atmospheric humidity is also seriously affected by LUCC but has not earned as much attention as temperature. We examined atmospheric humidity changes by a series of indicators in the Yangtze River Delta urban agglomeration of China during 1965-2017, and found obvious urban dry land (UDI) effect in the urban cores, as characterized by decreased humidity and increased vapor pressure deficit. Furthermore, we found similar spatial patterns of humidity changes with urban land expansion process and strong correlations of humidity changes with evapotranspiration and leaf area index changes, indicating that LUCC affects regional climate through an ecohydrological way. We suggest that the UDI effect should be paid more attention in future urban planning and landscape design and more quantitative estimations of urban expansion effect on regional and global drying trends are needed.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-223
Author(s):  
Yuhong Cao ◽  
Meiyun Liu ◽  
Yuandan Cao ◽  
Chen Chen ◽  
Dapeng Zhang

The construction land includes the urban land, rural residential areas and other construction land. The Wanjiang City Belt along the Yangtze River is an important demonstration area for undertaking industrial transfer in China. With the accumulation of factors relative to economic development, the construction land has increased sharply, and the regional ecological security pattern is facing new challenges. After collecting the image interpretation data of multi-period land use of the Wanjiang City Belt, the work studied the characteristics of construction land change pattern since 1995 and its driving mechanism based on the GIS platform, land use transfer matrix, expansion intensity index, hotspot analysis and mathematical statistics. The results showed that: (1) From 1995 to 2015, the urban land and other construction land in the Wanjiang City Belt have increased, but the rural residential areas decreased in 2010-2015. The three types of land had the largest changes in 2005-2010 and the change in the other construction land was particularly prominent. (2) The hotspots for construction land expansion are mainly in urban areas with rapid economic development such as Hefei, Wuhu, Ma’anshan and Tongling, where the land use changes most severely. (3) The driving factors for the change of construction land area include natural and social factors. Among social and economic factors, the GDP, industrial added value, secondary output value and urbanization rate are the main driving forces for changes. In the past 20 years, the construction of China’s Undertaking Industrial Transfer Demonstration Area has changed the land optimal allocation and intensive use mode in the region, providing the basis for resource development and utilization, economic development and industrial structure adjustment.


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