A data-driven approach to analyse the co-evolution of urban systems through a resilience lens: A Helsinki case study
Date
2024Author
Casali, Y.
Aydin, N.Y.
Comes, T.
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Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science : (2024)
Abstract
Urban areas are dynamic systems, in which different infrastructural, social and economic subsystems
continuously co-evolve. As such, disruptions in one system can propagate to another.
However, open challenges remain in (i) assessing the long-term implications of change for resilience
and (ii) understanding how resilience propagates throughout urban systems over time. Despite the
increasing reliance on data in smart cities, few studies empirically investigate long-term urban coevolution
using data-driven methods, leading to a gap in urban resilience assessments. This paper
presents an approach that combines Getis-ord Gi* statistical and correlation analyses to investigate
how cities recover from crises and adapt by analysing how the spatial patterns of urban characteristics
and their relationships changed over time. We illustrate our approach through a study on
Helsinki’s road infrastructure, socioeconomic system and built-up area from 1991 to 2016, a period
marked by a major socioeconomic crisis. By analysing this case study, we provide insights into the
co-evolution over more than two decades, thereby addressing the lack of longitudinal studies on
urban resilience.