Hierarchical Quantification of Utilization Rate and Related Indicators of Mixed-Use High-Rise Buildings
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Development of Mixed-Use High-Rise Buildings
1.2. Business Types of Mixed-Use High-Rise Buildings
2. Indicators of the Utilization Rate of Mixed-Use High-Rise Buildings at Three Levels
2.1. Research Background
- (1)
- In previous studies, one typical floor was usually used as a sample for a building interval, and this calculation is only applicable to cases with low building heights. However, when the building height reaches 250 m or more, each typical floor will produce changes. In this case, using the previous calculation method may produce a large error.
- (2)
- Although previous studies considered factors such as building lease span, floor-to-floor height, elevators, etc., which can affect the space efficiency of buildings, these factors can also vary in mixed-use super high-rise buildings due to the different types of businesses and different needs. These factors will affect the vertical layout, space design, and space efficiency of the business.
- (3)
- Previous studies usually used one dataset to represent the efficiency value of a building. However, for mixed-use super high-rise buildings, this approach ignores the relationship between changes in building height and business type, and spatial efficiency. At the same time, it also ignores the impact on spatial efficiency that occurs with increasing building height as the building’s load and vertical traffic demand decrease. These are also the reasons for the study presented in this paper.
2.2. Research Purpose
2.3. Three-Level Indicators
- (1)
- The typical floor utilization rate (k1) refers to the efficiency value of each floor from the building’s ground floor to the top floor. It is calculated based on the basic information of the typical floor of each business type.k1 = (c + b)/f
- (2)
- The business utilization rate (k2) refers to the overall efficiency value of each business and its supporting function. The calculation of the business utilization rate is based on the data of the typical floor utilization rate for a certain business type.k2 = (C + B)/FF = ∑ fi (i = 1, 2, 3, ⋯, n, B = ∑ bi (i = 1, 2, 3, ⋯, n), C = ∑ ci (i = 1, 2, 3, ⋯, n)
- (3)
- The building utilization rate (k3) refers to the overall efficiency value of all floors of the building. It is a study of the utilization rate of the entire building (i.e., superimposition of the typical floor, equipment floor, refuge floor, etc.).k3 = [S(c) + S(b)]/S(f)S(f) = ∑ fi (i = 1, 2, 3, ⋯, n), S(b) = ∑ bi (i = 1, 2, 3, ⋯, n), S(c) = ∑ ci (i = 1, 2, 3, ⋯, n)
2.4. Definition and Calculation of Key Indicators
- (1)
- The typical floor area refers to the horizontal projection area enclosed by the outer wall and the outer edge of the column or the axis of adjacent walls, as shown in Figure 3. When the building is connected to a podium, the podium typical floor area is the projected area of the ground floor of the building. This definition is also referred to as the Gross Area (GSF), which includes exterior wall thickness, and all vertical penetrations (mechanical/electrical, plumbing, elevator shafts, stairwells, etc.), as well as basements, garages, and penthouses. It excludes parking lots and loading docks outside the building line.
- (2)
- The traffic space area of typical floors refers to the space between the rentable space and the outer edge of the core, as shown in Figure 4. If the rentable space and traffic space are not divided in the CAD drawing of the office floor, the traffic space shall be calculated with a width of 1.8 m. China’s standard (Code for Fire Protection Design of Building) clearly stipulates the setting of the traffic space area and does not allow the area outside the core to be used as a rentable area. (Note: Lobbies and hotel facilities are included in the traffic space). This definition is also known as the Circulation Area (Primary and secondary), and the Circulation Area can be broken into the following two types: primary and secondary. Primary circulation is the main route connecting the building core and common spaces, such as elevator lobbies, exit stairs, and core toilets. Secondary circulation refers to the aisles between individual and support spaces. According to the Chinese standard, the traffic space area and primary circulation contain the same content.
- (3)
- The core area of the typical floors refers to the area enclosed by the outer boundary of the core structure, as shown in Figure 5. The core refers to the central part of a building, which consists of elevator shafts, stairs, ventilation shafts, cable shafts, public restrooms, and some equipment rooms. It forms a frame-tube structure with peripheral frames and is made of reinforced concrete. In all the studied buildings, the central tube design was adopted.
- (4)
- The rentable area refers to the building area on each floor where services are provided or rented to customers, as shown in Figure 7. (Note: Areas for rent and sale in the core and hotel facilities are all included in the rentable space). In the definition of this concept, there are some differences between China and other countries. Usually, in the international, e.g., US, calculation of the utilization rate (see Table 2 for the definition of area indicators in China and the USA), the utilization rate is the ratio of net floor area (NFA) to gross floor area (GFA) [4,24,26,29]. Net Area includes workspaces (office and workstations), dedicated support (conference rooms, supply rooms, etc.), shared support (shared copier rooms, break rooms, etc.), and special mission-critical support spaces (evidence rooms, laboratories, courtrooms, etc.). However, from the definition described, the rentable area in China is equivalent to the combination of both the Net Area and Secondary circulation area. This paper mainly focused on Chinese projects, and the target audience is domestic and foreign architects participating in Chinese architectural design. Therefore, in order to better suit the sales and operation mode of Chinese super high-rise buildings, the rentable area was measured and calculated according to Chinese standards in this paper.
- (5)
- Definition and measurement of other important indicators, as shown in Table 3.
3. Quantification of Indicators Related to the Utilization Rate of Mixed-Use High-Rise Buildings
3.1. Quantification of Typical Floor Utilization Rate and Related Indicators
3.1.1. Typical Floor Area
3.1.2. Core Area
3.1.3. Structural Area
3.1.4. Variation of Typical Floor Core Area and Utilization Rate (k1)
- (1)
- According to the division of the typical floors of MUHR buildings, the typical floors and cores are designed in a unified and coordinated manner in different buildings in line with the business combination mode. The typical floor and core of different cases show a uniform form of variation (Figure 20), with the following main types: Dongguan International Financial Center, Guiyang International Financial Center, and Kingkey 100 Building. As the building height increases, the demand for the core decreases. The partial space of the core forms an atrium, which provides a high-quality public space for the lobby or conversion level of the hotel and apartment. For example, in the Guiyang International Finance Center, the traffic flow of hotel guests and apartment residents is organized through the lobby on the 53rd floor. The 53rd to the 55th floors with a large lease span is equipped with the hotel’s service lobby, dining space, swimming pool, and other supporting service spaces. The core of the typical floor above the 55th floor is split to form an atrium, the building shape is gradually reduced, and the typical floor area decreases to meet the needs of hotels and residential space. Figure 21 and project drawings show that the k1 value is improved through different designs and reasonable structural changes. In the Guangzhou International Finance Center project, the area of the typical floor decreases as the number of floors increases. Through the conversion of the core structure, three small cores are formed. A high-quality hotel lobby can also be formed at the conversion level. At the same time, the public corridor space of guest rooms is more suitable in scale. Moreover, the core structure conversion can make use of the natural light from the roof of the building to form a bright, comfortable, and energy-saving public space. The core area of the hotel space in the Guangzhou International Financial Center reduced to one-third of that of the office space, and the utilization rate of the hotel space increased to more than 80%, as shown in Figure 21. Therefore, a reasonable core design and vertical traffic organization gradually increase the utilization rate of the hotel space compared to that of the office space. In other projects, a gradual shrinkage or reduction in the core is more often used. For example, due to the relatively low heights of the Guangzhou Fuli Yingkai and the Guangxi Jiuzhou International Building, the relationship between the lease span and business type is mainly coordinated through the building shape and core. A statistical analysis of the eight buildings’ typical floor and core designs was carried out to provide references for future design, as shown in Figure 20 and Figure 21.
- (2)
- When calculating the utilization rate of the typical floors, it was found that the utilization rate in the eight buildings fluctuated in the range of 65 to 80%, as shown in Figure 21. General service space accounted for 3–5% of the typical floor area. Restrooms, storage, and equipment account for 3–5%, equipment space accounts for 8–12%, and public walkways account for 12–18% of the typical floor area. Due to the small sample size, only data statistics were included, and no graphs were included in the paper.
- (3)
- Except for the Guangxi Jiuzhou International Building, the typical floor utilization rate k1 of all other buildings in this study showed an upward trend. Although the typical floor area of the low-zone area is large, the core carries the demands for the elevator system, structure, and equipment shafts from the high-zone area. In addition, the higher the building, the larger the demand, and the higher the ratio of the core area and traffic area. Therefore, the utilization rate of the low-zone area is low. For example, the low-zone office space (the 5th to the 21st floors) of the Guiyang International Financial Center has a k1 value of about 71.93%, the mid-zone office space’s (the 22nd to the 36th floors) k1 value is about 77.03%, the high-zone office space’s (the 38th to the 51st floors) k1 value is 79.33%, and the hotel and residential space’s (the 53rd to the 9th floors) k1 value reaches around 85.32%. For the Guangxi Jiuzhou International Building, as mentioned above, the hotel area was located below the office area. It can be clearly seen from the data that the typical floor and core area of the hotel area were larger than the buildings with a similar height. As a result, the typical floor utilization rate k1 showed a decreasing trend, as shown in Figure 21.
- (4)
- The data shows that the utilization rate of the lobby area and the business conversion floor is relatively low. To meet the demands of different business and vertical traffic and improve spatial quality, two lobbies (in the 7th, 8th, 41st, and 42nd floors) are set up in the office space of the Guangzhou Chow Tai Fook Financial Center, and the utilization rate is only 37%. In the hotel space (the 93rd to the 95th floors) there are supporting service spaces, the utilization rate on the 93rd floor is 44%, and the remaining space is mainly equipment space and public service supporting space. The fluctuation of the utilization rate demonstrates the difference between MUHR buildings and single-use models, as shown in Figure 21.
3.2. Quantification of the Business Utilization Rate and Related Indicators
3.2.1. Business-Related Area Indicators
3.2.2. Variation of the Business Utilization Rate (k2)
3.2.3. Correlation between the Business Area and the Business Utilization Rate k2
3.3. Quantification of the Building Utilization Rate and Related Indicators
3.3.1. Building-Related Area Indicators
3.3.2. Variation of Building Utilization Rate k3
3.3.3. Building Height and Total Gross Area and their Correlations with the Building Utilization Rate k3
4. Conclusions and Limitations
4.1. Conclusions
- (1)
- First of all, the data of typical floor area, core area, and other indicators show that the typical floor-related indicators of mixed-use supertall buildings are in a dynamic process of change. This is not only influenced by the change of building form but also by a variety of internal factors, including structural load, vertical traffic demand, and change in business function. The findings of the study, such as the range of values and the variation pattern of the indexes, provide a valuable reference for designers of mixed-use supertall buildings for the first time and help them to better understand this type of building and improve the utilization rate of the building through rational design. Consider a 5000 sq ft of rentable space, representing a 1 percent increase in a 500,000 sq ft building. At a lease cost of $20 per sq ft, over the 20 years life, the additional income to the building owner would be $2,000,000 [29].Secondly, after analyzing the quantitative data of vertical traffic, it was found that the actual situation of mixed-use supertall buildings can be somewhat different from the commonly used design guidelines. For example, through the calculation of actual cases, it was found from the case that the ratio of floor area to the number of passenger elevators in the office business was greater than the number of elevators, and the main technical parameters in the Design code for office building, which is often referred to by designers were analyzed. There are two main reasons for this. On the one hand, the standards and codes such as “Design code for office building” are only suited to the type of office business and do not consider the actual impacts of building height and building technology. On the other hand, the vertical traffic in super high-rise buildings is usually systematically calculated and designed by professionals, including the selection of double car elevators, the elevator speed, integration with the transition level, etc. This is the result of a comprehensive consideration and finally allows for the elevator system to meet the needs of the users. If the design is only designed according to the standard of Design code for office building in the scheme design stage, it will undoubtedly add more elevator tube shafts. This conclusion not only reflects the lack of relevant design standards in China but also points out the design key points and difficulties of mixed-use supertall buildings. It reminds designers to pay more attention to the complexity brought by the height and mixed mode of mixed-use supertall buildings, and all these data indicators bring accurate and efficient reference data to the building design process.Finally, through the horizontal comparison of the utilization rate k1 of the standard floor and related indexes in eight cases, it can be clearly seen that the indexes of the area of the standard floor, the utilization rate k1, and the depth of the building have the same change law in different cases (except Guangxi Jiuzhou International Building). At the same time, after analyzing the vertical combination pattern of the business mode of Guangxi Jiuzhou International Building, it became clear that the unreasonable vertical layout of business modes greatly influences the usage rate. After consulting with the person in charge of the project, we learned that the reason this is the rash decision of the developer in the design of this scheme. The authors also hope that the findings of this study can provide better guidance for decision makers.
- (2)
- The business utilization rate k2 and tower utilization rate k3 were calculated from the basic data of the typical floor utilization rate k1 study. Firstly, as mentioned above, the statistics of different cases, business types, tower utilization rates, and related data indicators can provide a high-value reference basis for designers who first encounter mixed-use super tall buildings. Secondly, after the k2 calculation and data analysis of the utilization rate of office business, it was found that there is an obvious negative correlation between the utilization rate of a business and the floor area of a business. The larger the total area of the office business, the higher the demand for the vertical transportation system, structural system, pipe well, supporting service space, and so on. Under the demand of a high-quality space depth of office business, the utilization rate of the office business will always decrease. Using the tower utilization rate k3, it was found that the number of equipment rooms and refuge floors in higher-tiered projects is higher, and the usable area of the business space is constantly compressed. The balance between these supporting areas is the complexity of mixed-use super high-rise buildings, which is also a difficult design point. How to improve the utilization rate through good coordination in terms of building and structure, equipment, and the reasonable arrangement of vertical traffic is an urgent issue to be solved in future research. In addition, the lowest point value appears in Figure 29. Does it mean that there exists a minimum value of floor area and utilization rate k3? This is a very valuable study. However, at present, due to the limited research sample, it is not possible to fully present this conclusion, and follow-up studies are required to confirm this conclusion.
- (3)
- The research method and findings of this paper on stratified quantification effectively verify that the existing calculation method of the utilization rate is not applicable to the study of the utilization rate of mixed-use supertall buildings, and reflect the advantages and purposefulness of this method. Although the statistical data take longer to obtain and the workload is larger, the precise index of stratified data can better reflect the characteristics and rules of mixed-use super high-rise buildings and proposes a new research perspective for this building type. It is expected that as my team and I accumulate practical projects and incorporate more excellent cases, we will be able to increase the scientific validity of the research findings and present clearer data-based conclusions so as to promote the sustainability of mixed-use supertall buildings.
4.2. Limitations
- (1)
- In this study, the emphasis was on MUHR buildings with a height of over 250 m. Such buildings are usually important projects for the city and design institutes, and the relevant data are protected. The data of the eight buildings used in this study were those from projects the authors have been involved in recent years. Due to the long construction period of mixed-use super high-rise buildings and the limited number of studies, the sample size was small, and a reference range for the efficiency indicators could not be provided.
- (2)
- China’s high-rise building regulations have changed in recent years. The cases in this study implemented different fire codes during their design phase. The main regulations include “Code for Fire Protection Design of High-Rise Civil Buildings” and “Code for Fire Protection Design of Buildings”. Currently, the standard fire protection code in China is the “Code for Fire Protection Design of Buildings” (GB50016-2014), which was implemented on 1 May 2015, and the “Code for Fire Protection Design of High-Rise Civil Buildings” (GB50045-95) was terminated at the same time. Changes in fire regulations can lead to certain fluctuations in some research indicators.
- (3)
- MUHR buildings are key urban development projects, and each city has different land and real estate policies and regulations, which will influence the indicators such as development intensity, zone height, and building height.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Business Types | Office | Hotel | Residential | Commercial | Restaurant | Sightseeing | Conferences | Exhibition | Entertainment | Culture | Transportation Hub | Public Places | Healthcare | Club | Parking |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Office | \ | ||||||||||||||
Hotel | ● | \ | |||||||||||||
Residential | ● | — | \ | ||||||||||||
Commercial | ● | ○ | ● | \ | |||||||||||
Restaurant | ● | ● | ● | ● | \ | ||||||||||
Sightseeing | × | × | × | ● | ● | \ | |||||||||
Conferences | ● | ● | — | ○ | ● | × | \ | ||||||||
Exhibition | ○ | ○ | × | ● | ● | ○ | × | \ | |||||||
Entertainment | ○ | ● | ● | ● | ● | ○ | — | ○ | \ | ||||||
Culture | — | — | — | ○ | ○ | ● | — | — | ○ | \ | |||||
Transportation Hub | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ○ | ● | ○ | ○ | \ | ||||
Public Places | ● | ● | ● | ● | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | — | \ | |||
Healthcare | ○ | ○ | ● | ○ | — | — | — | × | — | ○ | ○ | — | \ | ||
Club | — | ● | ● | ○ | ○ | — | — | — | ● | ○ | — | ○ | — | \ | |
Parking | ● | ● | ● | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | ○ | \ |
Nation | Name of Indicators | How to Define |
---|---|---|
China | Typical Floor Area | The typical floor area refers to the horizontal projection area enclosed by the outer wall and the outer edge of the column or the axis of adjacent walls. |
Traffic Space Area | The traffic space area of the typical floors refers to the space between the rentable space and the outer edge of the core. | |
Rentable Area | The rentable area refers to the building area on each floor where services are provided or rented to customers. | |
The USA | Gross Area | Total area of a building enclosed by the exterior face of the perimeter walls, calculated on a floor-by-floor basis. |
Rentable Area | Total Usable Area plus a prorated allocation of the floor and building common areas within a building. | |
Usable Area | Area of a floor occupiable by a tenant where personnel or furniture are normally housed. | |
Circulation Area | Primary circulation is the main circulation route connecting to the building core and common spaces, such as elevators and exit stairs. | |
Secondary circulation includes the aisles between individual spaces, such as offices and cubicles, and support spaces. | ||
Net Area | The area of each identified program space. For example, the Net Area of an 8’ x 8’ workstation is 64 NSF. It includes individual workspaces, dedicated and shared support spaces, and special mission-critical spaces. |
Name of Technical Indicators | Technical Element Definition | |
---|---|---|
Depth | The maximum vertical distance from the outer edge of the outer envelope to the wall surface of the core outer wall (based on the depth of the main facade) | |
Evacuation staircase area | In each floor plane of a super high-rise building, there is enough fireproof capacity to be used as a vertical passage of indoor stairs and outdoor stairs. It is not only an important passageway for personnel evacuation and safe evacuation in the vertical direction but also an auxiliary attack route for firefighters to extinguish the fire. (Calculation of net area). | |
Structure area | Core part | The area of the core structural wall of the typical floor |
Outer part | The area of the structural columns of the outer columns of the typical floor. | |
Evacuation room area | The floor is used for fire evacuation in high-rise buildings. The evacuation floor of a high-rise building over 100 m in height is specially set up for people evacuation for fire safety. The measurement of the data is the area of the evacuation area on the evacuation floor. | |
Elevator shaft area | Measure the area of all elevator shafts according to the technical drawings | |
Area of equipment room and tube well | Measure the technical drawings and equipment tube well area of different disciplines according to the technical drawings. |
Project Name | Location | Designer | Height (m) | Status | Commercial | Office | Hotel | Residential | Sightseeing | Restaurant | Swimming Pool and Gym | Meeting, Banquet |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(a) Dongguan International Financial Center | Dongguan, Guangdong | Tange Associates + SCAD | 288 | Completed | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | ||
(b) Guangzhou Fuli Yingkai | Guangzhou, Guangdong | GP | 296.2 | Completed | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | ||
(c) Guangxi Jiuzhou International Building | Nanning, Guangxi | SCAD | 313.6 | Completed | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | ||
(d) Guiyang World Trade Center | Guiyang, Guizhou | SOM | 379.8 | In construction | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | |||
(e) Guiyang International Financial Center | Guiyang, Guizhou | SCAD | 390.4 | Completed | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | |||
(f) Guangzhou International Financial Center | Guangzhou, Guangdong | WEA + ARUP + SCAD | 433.1 | Completed | √ | √ | √ | √ | ||||
(g) Kingkey 100 Building | Shenzhen, Guangdong | TFP | 441.3 | Completed | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | |||
(h) Guangzhou Chow Tai Fook Financial Center | Guangzhou, Guangdong | KPF | 517.75 | Completed | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ |
Standard Building Category | Number | Rated Load Capacity (kg) | Rated Velocity (m/s) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Economic | Standard | Comfortable | Luxury | ||||
Office | By building area | Per 6000 m2 | Per 5000 m2 | Per 4000 m2 | <4000 m2 per elevator | 630 800 1000 1250 1600 | 0.63 1.00 1.60 2.50 |
By effective office space | Per 3000 m2 | Per 2500 m2 | Per 2000 m2 | <2000 m2 per elevator | |||
By number of people | Per 350 persons | Per 300 persons | Per 250 persons | <250 persons per elevator |
Elevator Data of Office Space in Guiyang World Trade Center | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Elevator group | #1 | #2 | #3 | #4 |
Number of floors | 10 | 11 | 14 | 14 |
Elevator between floors | 4 | 4 | 6 | 6 |
Ratio of building area to the number of passenger elevators | 6628:1 | 6697:1 | 5804:1 | 6404:1 |
Ratio of rentable area to the number of passenger elevators | 4129:1 | 4192:1 | 3855:1 | 4113:1 |
Elevator Data of Office Space in Guangzhou Chow Tai Fook Finance Center | ||||
Elevator group | #1 | #2 | #3 | |
Number of floors | 16 | 31 (double-deck) | 10 | |
Elevator between floors | 6 | 6 | 4 | |
Ratio of building area to the number of passenger elevators | 9661:1 | 18,575:1 | 5710:1 | |
Ratio of rentable area to the number of passenger elevators | 5851:1 | 11,008:1 | 3855:1 |
Structure | Office-I (4F) | Office-II (24F) | Office-III (44F) | Office-IV (64F) | Hotel-I (70F) | Hotel-II (98F) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total structural area of the typical floor | 230.54 m2 | 209.63 m2 | 172.36 m2 | 140.91 m2 | 70.96 m2 | 52.98 m2 |
Total structural area of the core | 156.44 m2 | 148.14 m2 | 124.85 m2 | 106.09 m2 | 41.75 m2 | 41.23 m2 |
Structural area of the peripheral column | 74.10 m2 | 61.49 m2 | 47.51 m2 | 34.82 m2 | 29.21 m2 | 11.75 m2 |
Number and size of columns | 30/1790 mm | 30/1609 mm | 30/1407 mm | 30/1204 mm | 30/1104 mm | 30/702 mm |
Thickness of the outer shear wall of the core | 1100 mm | 1000 mm | 800 mm | 700 mm | 300 mm | 300 mm |
Thickness of the inner shear wall of the core | 600 mm | 600 mm | 600 mm | 600 mm | 600 mm | 600 mm |
Ratio of structural area to typical floor area | 8.31% | 6.88% | 5.74% | 5.33% | 2.86% | 3.83% |
Business Utilization Rate (k2) | Building Area of Office Space | ||
---|---|---|---|
Business Utilization Rate (k2) | Pearson correlation | 1 | −0.750 * |
Sig. (two-tail) | 0.032 | ||
Number of buildings | 8 | 8 | |
Building Area of Office Space | Pearson correlation | −0.750 * | 1 |
Sig. (two-tail) | 0.032 | ||
Number of buildings | 8 | 8 |
Utilization Rate k3 | Building Height | ||
---|---|---|---|
Utilization Rate k3 | Pearson correlation | 1 | −0.839 ** |
Sig. (two-tail) | 0.009 | ||
Number of buildings | 8 | 8 | |
Total Gross Area | Pearson correlation | −0.839 ** | 1 |
Sig. (two-tail) | 0.009 | ||
Number of buildings | 8 | 8 |
Utilization Rate k3 | Total Gross Area | ||
---|---|---|---|
Utilization Rate k3 | Pearson correlation | 1 | −0.720 * |
Sig. (two-tail) | 0.044 | ||
Number of buildings | 8 | 8 | |
Total Gross Area | Pearson correlation | −0.720 * | 1 |
Sig. (two-tail) | 0.044 | ||
Number of buildings | 8 | 8 |
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Xie, Y.; Du, P.; Luo, J. Hierarchical Quantification of Utilization Rate and Related Indicators of Mixed-Use High-Rise Buildings. Buildings 2022, 12, 956. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12070956
Xie Y, Du P, Luo J. Hierarchical Quantification of Utilization Rate and Related Indicators of Mixed-Use High-Rise Buildings. Buildings. 2022; 12(7):956. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12070956
Chicago/Turabian StyleXie, Yuchen, Peng Du, and Jianhe Luo. 2022. "Hierarchical Quantification of Utilization Rate and Related Indicators of Mixed-Use High-Rise Buildings" Buildings 12, no. 7: 956. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12070956
APA StyleXie, Y., Du, P., & Luo, J. (2022). Hierarchical Quantification of Utilization Rate and Related Indicators of Mixed-Use High-Rise Buildings. Buildings, 12(7), 956. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12070956