Spatial Configurations and Walkability Potentials. Measuring Urban Compactness with Space Syntax
Abstract
:1. Introduction—Conditions for Urban Compactness
2. Writings on Compact Cities
2.1. Sustainable Development, Urban Sustainability and Moving towards the Compact City Concept
2.2. Definitions of the Compact City and its Conditions
- Physical aspects: High density of the built mass in central areas and sub-centres, pedestrian-friendly streets, and clear demarcation of what is public and private space.
- Functional aspects: Dense location and mixed use of dwellings, work, services, retail and shops in urban areas, short movement routes between facilities, pedestrian-friendly, dense concentration of people, access to public transport, and an intensifying of human activities in the urban centres.
- Social aspects: Low crime, mixture of people of different class and race, healthy and good dwelling areas, safe streets, possibilities for social contact between inhabitants and visitors.
- Economic aspects: Vital centres and sub-centres and a mixture of small and large enterprises in urban areas.
- Environmental aspects: Reduction of energy use, new development on recycled land, and reduction of low-density urban sprawl in the countryside.
- Political aspects: The ways in which governments on the local, regional, and national level should act or not in order to encourage sustainable development rather than the opposite.
- A city is not walkable unless the city in question is compact. Thus, compactness of urban environments is a necessary condition for walkability.
- Compactness guarantees walkability. It is a sufficient condition for walkability.
2.3. Influencial Writings Related to Compact Cities
2.4. The Mobility Network and Urban Compactness
2.5. The Spatial Configurative Approach—Space Syntax
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results from the Spatial Analyses
4.1. Spatial to-Movement & through-Movement Potentials and Their Influences on Economic Vital Urban Centres and Sustainable Mobility Means
4.2. The Building–Street Interface and its Influence on Street Safety and Vitality in Urban Areas
4.3. Identifying Urban Compactness through Spatial Configurations
5. Conclusions: Spatial Conditions for Generating Walkability Potentials
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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van Nes, A. Spatial Configurations and Walkability Potentials. Measuring Urban Compactness with Space Syntax. Sustainability 2021, 13, 5785. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13115785
van Nes A. Spatial Configurations and Walkability Potentials. Measuring Urban Compactness with Space Syntax. Sustainability. 2021; 13(11):5785. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13115785
Chicago/Turabian Stylevan Nes, Akkelies. 2021. "Spatial Configurations and Walkability Potentials. Measuring Urban Compactness with Space Syntax" Sustainability 13, no. 11: 5785. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13115785
APA Stylevan Nes, A. (2021). Spatial Configurations and Walkability Potentials. Measuring Urban Compactness with Space Syntax. Sustainability, 13(11), 5785. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13115785