Title: Urban Land Use: lessons from the Urban Atlas
1Urban Land Use lessons from the Urban Atlas
- Lewis Dijkstra
- Deputy Head of the Analysis Unit
- European Commission DG Regional Policy
- Lewis.Dijkstra_at_ec.europa.eu
2Overview
- New grid based definitions
- Urban-rural regional typology Urban clusters
- Degree of urbanisation
- Cities and hinterland High-density clusters and
commuting zones - Measuring urban land use
- CORINE
- Soil sealing
- Urban Atlas
3A new urban-rural regional typology
- Classifying EU NUTS3 regions
- A variant of the OECD methodology
- Aiming to provide a consistent basis for
describing urban, intermediate and rural regions
in various Commission reports and publications - Developed by
- DG Agriculture and Rural Development
- DG Regional Policy
- Eurostat
- DG Joint Research Centre
4Why a new typology?
- Distortions using the OECD methodology at NUTS3
level - Large variation in area of local administrative
units (LAU2) - Large variation in area of NUTS3 regions
- Some city centres separated from surroundings, at
NUTS3 level
5The new typology local level
- Units 1 km² grid cells
- Population grid registered population when
available, otherwise disaggregation grid (JRC) - Identify population living in urban areas
- Selection of grid cells with density gt 300
inh./km² - Only groups of grid cells, representing a total
population of gt 5000 inhabitants - Contiguity is evaluated including diagonals
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10What is degree of urbanisation?
- Classification of all LAU2s into three
categories - Thinly populated
- Intermediate density
- Densely populated
- It is used primarily in the Labour Force Survey
(LFS), but also in other surveys such as Survey
on Income and Living Conditions (SILC) and IT - It is based on LAU2 density and contiguity
- In use for 20 years
11Why a revision?
- Distortions due to the large variation in area of
local administrative units (LAU2) - Revised urban-rural typology is based on a grid
based definition of rural areas which is more
reliable than OECD or LFS approach - Harmonising spatial concepts
- Rural (OECD) and thinly populated areas (LFS)
- Densely populated areas (LFS) and cities (UA)
12Previously 3 conflicting definitions
Urban-Rural Typology Degree of urbanisation Urban Audit
Rural LAU2 ? Thinly populated
Intermediate density
Densely populated ? Cities
13New Proposal Harmonised definition based on
population grid
Revised Degree of urbanisaton
Thinly populated ? Rural LAU2
Intermediate density
Densely populated ? Urban Audit Cities
14New Proposal 3 Criteria 3 Classes
Type of Area Criteria
Thinly populated gt 50 population in rural grid cells
Intermediate density lt50 population in rural grid cells and lt50 population in high-density grid cells
Densely populated gt 50 population in high-density grid cells
15Definitions
- Rural grid cells cells outside urban clusters
- Urban clusters contiguous (including diagonals)
cells with a density of at least 300 inhab/km2
and a minimum of 5 000 inhabitants - High-density clusters contiguous (without
diagonals and with gap filling) cells with a
density of at least 1500 inhab/km2 and a minimum
of 50 000 inhabitants
16Population grid
- Units 1 km² grid cells (future reference for all
population grids) - Registered population in NO, CH, HR, AT, FI, SE,
DK and NL - Elsewhere disaggregation grid v5 (JRC)
- FR is creating a real 1 km2 population grid
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20City and hinterland definition
21Why a new definition?
- No harmonised European definition of a city and
its functional area existed - Use the same criteria as the degree of
urbanisation - Uses commuting analysis to define commuting zone
- Consider poly-centricity by checking for
connected centres
22City definition
- A city consists of one or more municipalities
(local administrative unit level 2 LAU2). - At least half of the city residents live in an
urban centre (i.e. a cluster of high-density grid
cells with the gaps filled) - An urban centre has at least 50 000 inhabitants.
23City definition
24Hinterland definition
- If 15 of employed persons living in one city
work in another city, these cities are combined
into a single destination (polycentric) - All municipalities with at least 15 of their
employed residents working in a city are
identified - Municipalities surrounded by a single functional
area are included and non-contiguous
municipalities are dropped
25Hinterland definition
26Urban Land Use
27Goal and obstacles
- Accurately measure urban land use, especially at
the urban fringe - CORINE is designed to mainly measure agricultural
uses, coarse resolution and does not identify
low-density developed (i.e. below 50 of soil
sealing) - Soil sealing, high resolution and measures all
levels of sealing, but no land use info
28The Urban Atlas
- Designed to measure urban land use at high
resolution and at low levels of soil sealing - Providing harmonised land cover/land use maps
according to a common classification - Covering 305 major European agglomerations, based
on Urban Audits Larger Urban Zones - Imagery reference year 2006 (/- 1 year)
- Project duration 2009-2011
29Main features
- Thematic classes based on CORINE Land Cover
nomenclature - But more specific for built-up areas, and less
specific outside urban areas - Geometric resolution of 110,000
- Minimum mapping unit of 0.25 ha in urban areas, 1
ha in other areas
30CORINE Land Cover
31Urban Atlas
32SPOT / ALOS images
33Production
- Mix of automatic classification and
photo-interpretation - Various data sources used, depending on thematic
classes
34Thematic classes
- Residential areas use of soil sealing layer to
distinguish between density classes
35Thematic classes
- Non-residential urban areas
- Detailed transport network layer (COTS)
- Local maps as auxiliary source of information
36Thematic classes
- Other classes
- Less thematic detail for agricultural, natural
and forest areas (and MMU 1 ha)
37Dissemination
- Georeferenced layers are freely available
- Data download
- http//www.eea.europa.eu/data-and-maps/data/urban
-atlas - Map viewer http//dataservice.eea.europa.eu/map/U
rbanAtlasbeta/
38Derived indicators
- Can be exploited at the level of Urban Audit
units - Larger Urban Zone (LUZ), kernel, city, sub-city
districts (SCD) - Land cover/use surface breakdown
- Green urban areas per inhabitant
- A sprawl index (ESPON project) www.espon.eu
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43The future of the Urban Atlas
- Repeat Urban Atlas in order to create a detailed
dynamic view on urban land cover/use - Coherence with other data collection projects is
important - Census 2011
- Urban Audit
- Consequences
- Define imagery acquisition requirements (2011 /-
year) - Update methodology, including change detection,
to be determined - Ensure compatibility with revised Urban Audit
following new harmonised definition