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Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up? George Galster, Wayne State University Royce Hanson, U. Maryland- Baltimore Co. Hal Wolman, George Washington U. Presented at the Conference: “Planning in the Post- Sprawl Era”

Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

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Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?. George Galster , Wayne State University Royce Hanson , U. Maryland-Baltimore Co. Hal Wolman , George Washington U. Presented at the Conference: “Planning in the Post-Sprawl Era” University of Southern California, Nov. 30, 2001. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

George Galster, Wayne State University

Royce Hanson, U. Maryland-Baltimore Co.

Hal Wolman, George Washington U.

Presented at the Conference: “Planning in the Post-Sprawl Era”

University of Southern California, Nov. 30, 2001

Page 2: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Overview of Presentation

• Sprawl has multiple dimensions

• Possible to develop meaningful, objective measures of multiple dimensions of sprawl

• Despite its lack of predominant core, LA is NOT very residentially sprawled relatively on most dimensions; it’s well above-average in housing density and proximity

Page 3: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Dimensions of Sprawl

• Density• Continuity• Concentration• Compactness

• Centrality• (Mono-)Nuclearity• Mixed Uses• Proximity

Page 4: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

A Definition of Sprawl

A pattern of urbanized land use exhibiting low levels of some

combination of the aforementioned dimensions

Page 5: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Density

The average amount of the given urban land use per areal unit of

developable land

Page 6: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

1.DENSITYThe Average Number of Residential Units PerSquare Mile of Developable Land in an UrbanizedAre.

= Border of Urbanized Area

= MSA

= Square Miles

= ¼ square miles

= Vacant parcels

= Undevelopable Land

= 1000 units

A

B

High Density Area

Low Density Area

Page 7: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Concentration

The degree to which a given urban land use is located disproportionately in relatively few square miles of the

developed area

Page 8: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

= MSA

= Border of Urbanized Area

= Square Miles

= ¼ square miles

= Vacant parcels

= Undevelopable Land

AHigh Concentration

BLow Concentration

3. CONCENTRATIONThe degree to which development is located in relatively few squaremiles rather than spread evenly across the urbanized area.

Page 9: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Centrality

The degree to which a given urban land use is, on average, located close to the

core of the developed urban area

Page 10: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

= MSA

= Border of Urbanized Area

= Square Miles

= ¼ square miles

= Vacant parcels

= Undevelopable Land

= 1000 units

= CBD

AHighly CentralizedArea

B

5. CENTRALITYThe degree to which development in an urbanized area is located closeto the Central Business District (CBD).

Highly Decentralized Area

Page 11: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

(Mono-) Nuclearity

The degree to which development is characterized by a single-node pattern of

the given urban land use

Page 12: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

= Border of Urbanized Area

= MSA

= Square Miles

= ¼ square miles

= Vacant parcels

= Undevelopable Land

= 1000 units

A

B

6. NUCLEARITYThe extent to which an urbanized area is characterized by amononuclear or polynuclear pattern of development.

Mononuclear Area

Polynuclear Area

Page 13: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Proximity

The degree to which observations of a single (or different) urban land

uses(es) are close to each other across the developed area

Page 14: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

= Border of Urbanized Area

= MSA

= Square Miles

= ¼ square miles

= Vacant parcels

= Undevelopable Land

=1000 Residential Units

= 1000 Non-residential Units

A

B

8. PROXIMITYThe degree to which different land uses are close to each other acrossan urbanized area.

High Proximity of Uses

Low Proximity of Uses

Page 15: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Measuring Sprawl: A Prototype

• 13 Urbanized Areas • 5 Dimensions of sprawl operationalized • Housing Units (HUs) is land use considered• GIS used to construct database of HUs in

one square mile grids, extracting from 1990 Census block files

• Z-scores calculated for individual sprawl dimensions, plus unweighted average index

Page 16: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?
Page 17: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Prototype Measures of Sprawl

• Density: # Housing Units / Square Mile• Concentration: Dissimilarity of Housing Units vs.

Land Area Across Grids (Delta Index)• Centrality: Inverse of Ave. Distance of HUs from

City Hall, Weighted by Square root of HUs• Nuclearity: % of HUs in all Nodes (grids in top

1% of HU density) located in Contiguous Core• Proximity: Inverse Ave. Distance between HUs,

Standardized by Ave. Grid Centroid Separation

Page 18: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Sprawl Rankings: Least to Most

DensityConcen-tration Centrality Nuclearity Proximity Rank

New York, NY 1 1 1 1 1 1Philadelphia, PA 6 4 2 2 9 2Boston, MA 10 2 3 3 6 3Chicago, IL 4 6 9 4 3 4Los Angeles, CA 2 8 8 9 2 5San Francisco, CA 5 3 13 5 5 6Washington, DC 8 9 5 8 11 7Detroit, MI 9 10 11 6 7 8Houston, TX 11 6 4 13 10 9Dallas, TX 12 4 10 12 4 9Denver, CO 7 12 6 7 13 11Miami, FL 3 11 12 11 12 12Atlanta, GA 13 13 7 10 8 13

Page 19: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Are There Sprawl Archetypes?

Lesson:

Density alone does not sprawl make

(nor does any other single dimension)

Page 20: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Urbanized Areas’ Profiles of Residential Sprawl

Measured on Five DimensionsStandardized Indicators Expressed as Proportional Differences from the Sample Mean

Source: Constructed from data reported in George Galster et al (2000), Table 1

New York

-0.60 -0.40 -0.20 0.00 0.20 0.40 0.60

Proximity

Nuclearity

Centrality

Concentration

Density

Atlanta

-0.60 -0.40 -0.20 0.00 0.20 0.40 0.60

Proximity

Nuclearity

Centrality

Concentration

Density

Miami

-0.60 -0.40 -0.20 0.00 0.20 0.40 0.60

Proximity

Nuclearity

Centrality

Concentration

Density

Dallas

-0.60 -0.40 -0.20 0.00 0.20 0.40 0.60

Proximity

Nuclearity

Centrality

Concentration

Density

Boston

-0.60 -0.40 -0.20 0.00 0.20 0.40 0.60

Proximity

Nuclearity

Centrality

Concentration

Density

Los Angeles

-0.60 -0.40 -0.20 0.00 0.20 0.40 0.60

Proximity

Nuclearity

Centrality

Concentration

Density

Page 21: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Future Directions I

Expand Study Area Beyond Urbanized Area

Add grids within PMSA/UA counties having:

30%+ commuters to UA and 60+ housing units

Page 22: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?
Page 23: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Future Directions II

Use U.S. Geological Survey’s NLCDB:

Residential & non-residential uses

Vacant but “developable” land

“undevelopable” land

Page 24: Multiple Dimensions of Sprawl: How Does LA Stand Up?

Conclusions

• Possible to develop meaningful, objective measures of multiple dimensions of sprawl

• Despite its lack of predominant core, LA NOT very residentially sprawled relatively on most dimensions; well above-average in housing density and proximity