Evaluating the impact of water protection policy on urban growth: A case study of Jiaxing

Author:

Guan ChengHe1ORCID,Gómez Jairo A2ORCID,Tripathy Pratyush3ORCID,Duque Juan C4ORCID,Passos Santiago4,Cheng Tong5,Li Ying1,Keith Michael6

Affiliation:

1. Shanghai Key Laboratory of Urban Design and Urban Science, NYU Shanghai, China; Division of Arts and Sciences, NYU Shanghai, China

2. i2t Research Group, Department of Communication and Information Technologies, Universidad Icesi, Cali, Colombia

3. Geospatial Lab, Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bengaluru, India; Department of Geography, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA

4. Research in Spatial Economics (RiSE) Group, Department of Mathematical Sciences, EAFIT University, Medellín, Colombia

5. Shanghai Key Laboratory of Urban Design and Urban Science, NYU Shanghai, China; School of Ecological and Environmental Sciences, East China Normal University, Shanghai, China

6. COMPAS, School of Anthropology, University of Oxford, UK

Abstract

Source water protection can be a greater challenge in cities where the hydric resource is deeply embedded within a rapidly growing urban area. In these types of cities, the delimitation of protection areas along water resources, as one of the main mechanisms for water resource protection, has a direct impact on the way the urban form evolves. On the one hand, narrow protection areas may not be enough to guarantee that the built city does not affect water levels and quality. On the other hand, wide protection areas can result in a fragmented city, with low levels of accessibility and tendencies towards dispersed and disorderly growth. In this article we use the city of Jiaxing, China, as a case study to determine what the optimal size of water protection areas might be. For this, we use two urban growth models and simulate various urban growth scenarios between 2020 and 2040. The results indicate that a protection area of 400 m guarantees a good level of protection of the water resource and a sufficient availability of land that allows an efficient urban growth.

Funder

NYU Shanghai Major-Grants Seed Fund

PEAK Urban programme, supported by UKRI’s Global Challenge Research Fund

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Urban Studies,Geography, Planning and Development,Architecture

Reference35 articles.

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