Artigo Revisado por pares

Monitoring and assessing “ghost cities” in Northeast China from the view of nighttime light remote sensing data

2017; Elsevier BV; Volume: 70; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.habitatint.2017.10.005

ISSN

1873-5428

Autores

Qiming Zheng, Jingsong Deng, Ruowei Jiang, Ke Wang, Xingyu Xue, Yi Lin, Zhou Huang, Zhangquan Shen, Jun Li, Amir Reza Shahtahmassebi,

Tópico(s)

Impact of Light on Environment and Health

Resumo

Urbanization has proceeded at an unprecedented speed in China during the last 20 years, resulting in extensive natural landscapes being transformed into impervious surface. The “ghost city” phenomenon has emerged due to the unreasonable urban expansion which far exceeds the actual demand of human habitat. Previously, few research studies have provided objective and sufficient knowledge with regard to identify “ghost cities” and their spatial distribution. In this paper, we proposed an effective and feasible framework to monitor and evaluate “ghost cities” utilizing nighttime light imagery obtained from day-night band (DNB) of Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS). We established a “ghost city” index (GCI) to quantify the intensity of the phenomenon in the northeast of China, and analyzed the spatial pattern of “ghost cities” for different GCI classes. Our results indicate that the intensity of “ghost city” phenomenon decrease from regions adjacent to the border to interior areas, whilst regions with extremely high GCI are mostly districts and county cities. Tests of typical regions show that non-lit built-up area for high GCI regions is spatially clustered and low population regions have a high tendency to suffer from the “ghost city” phenomenon. Therefore, our findings provide a spatial-explicit insight into the “ghost city” phenomenon, and consequently can be beneficial to assist sustainable urban planning.

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