ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Living Structure as an Empirical Measurement of City Morphology

Chris A. de Rijke    
Gloria Macassa    
Mats Sandberg and Bin Jiang    

Resumen

Human actions and interactions are shaped in part by our direct environment. The studies of Christopher Alexander show that objects and structures can inhibit natural properties and characteristics; this is measured in living structure. He also found that we have better connection and feeling with more natural structures, as they more closely resemble ourselves. These theories are applied in this study to analyze and compare the urban morphology within different cities. The main aim of the study is to measure the living structure in cities. By identifying the living structure within cities, comparisons can be made between different types of cities, artificial and historical, and an estimation of what kind of effect this has on our wellbeing can be made. To do this, natural cities and natural streets are identified following a bottom-up data-driven methodology based on the underlying structures present in OpenStreetMap (OSM) road data. The naturally defined city edges (natural cities) based on intersection density and naturally occurring connected roads (natural streets) based on good continuity between road segments in the road data are extracted and then analyzed together. Thereafter, historical cities are compared with artificial cities to investigate the differences in living structure; it is found that historical cities generally consist of far more living structure than artificial cities. This research finds that the current usage of concrete, steel, and glass combined with very fast development speeds is detrimental to the living structure within cities. Newer city developments should be performed in symbiosis with older city structures as a whole, and the structure of the development should inhibit scaling as well as the buildings themselves.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Changzhen Wang, Michael Leitner and Gernot Paulus    
Health care accessibility studies are well established in the US but lacking in Austria, even though both experience high costs and have hospital care as the largest contributor to health care spending. This study aims to examine multiscale spatial acces... ver más

 
Sk Rahaman, Datunaka Sai Srujan, Jayati Ray Dutta, Arkamitra Kar and Mohna Bandyopadhyay    
Bacterial concrete is a possible approach toward sustainability in concrete construction through crack-healing. Including a bacterial culture as an admixture in concrete can enhance the service life of a structure through the self-healing of cracks. Inco... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Li Hu and Tao Yang    
Both Tulous (??) and Weilong Houses (???) are important types of traditional Hakka (??) dwellings whose architectural morphology is closely related to the historical origin, social organisation, and cultural values of Hakkas. Previous studies focused on ... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Ruyi Zhang, Songnian Li, Baojing Wei and Xu Zhou    
The division of the territorial space functional area is the primary method to study the rational exploitation and use of land space. The research on the Production?Living?Ecological Space (PLES) change and its motivating factors has major implications f... ver más

 
Cristobal Sierra, Shuva Paul, Akhlaqur Rahman and Ambarish Kulkarni    
A road network is the key foundation of any nation?s critical infrastructure. Pavements represent one of the longest-living structures, having a post-construction life of 20?40 years. Currently, most attempts at maintaining and repairing these structures... ver más
Revista: Infrastructures