Spatial Morphology Lab 01. International laboratory for comparative research in urban form. Street networks, Sweden - Motorised network of Stockholm
Citation and access
Citation and access
Data access level:
Creator/Principal investigator(s):
- Kailun Sun - Chalmers University of Technology
Research principal:
Data contains personal data:
No
Citation:
Language:
Method and outcome
Method and outcome
Time period(s) investigated:
Variables:
1
Data format/data structure:
Geographic coverage
Geographic coverage
Geographic location:
Geographic description:
The data cover three cities in Sweden (Stockholm, Gothenburg and Eskilstuna) and Amsterdam in the Netherlands. The study areas include the metropolitan areas of the cities, which span out of their municipal boundaries and include the whole urbanised areas. To define these metropolitan areas, we used the Urban Morphological Zone (UMZ) boundaries, as they are defined by the European Environment Agency (EEA) and the Eurostat for all European cities. Urban morphological zones (UMZ) are defined by Corine land cover classes that are considered to contribute to the urban tissue and function (source: http://www.eea.europa.eu/data-and-maps/data/urban-morphological-zones-2006 (download date 13-7-2016). A UMZ can be defined as a set of urban areas laying less than 200m apart. UMZ boundaries are used for the statistical comparisons between the cities of the European Union. However, because of their highly irregular shapes which could become problematic for spatial analysis, what was instead used as the boundary of each study area, was the convex hull of each UMZ.
Administrative information
Administrative information
Responsible department/unit:
Department of Architecture and Civil Engineering
Contributor(s):
- University College London
- Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
Funding
Funding
Funding agency:
- Chalmers University of Technology
