Delineating urban park catchment areas using mobile phone data: A case study of Tokyo

Item

Title
Delineating urban park catchment areas using mobile phone data: A case study of Tokyo
Description
Urban parks can offer both physical and psychological health benefits to urban dwellers and provide social, economic, and environmental benefits to society. Earlier research on the usage of urban parks relied on fixed distance or walking time to delineate urban park catchment areas. However, actual catchment areas can be affected by many factors other than park surface areas, such as social capital cultivation, cultural adaptation, climate and seasonal variation, and park function and facilities provided. This study advanced this method by using mobile phone data to delineate urban park catchment area. The study area is the 23 special wards of Tokyo or tokubetsu-ku, the core of the capital of Japan. The location data of over 1 million anonymous mobile phone users was collected in 2011. The results show that: (1) the park catchment areas vary significantly by park surface areas: people use smaller parks nearby but also travel further to larger parks; (2) even for the parks in the same size category, there are notable differences in the spatial pattern of visitors, which cannot be simply summarized with average distance or catchment radius; and (3) almost all the parks, regardless of its size and function, had the highest user density right around the vicinity, exemplified by the density-distance function closely follow a decay trend line within 1–2 km radius of the park. As such, this study used the density threshold and density-distance function to measure park catchment. We concluded that the application of mobile phone location data can improve our understanding of an urban park catchment area, provide useful information and methods to analyze the usage of urban parks, and can aid in the planning and policy-making of urban parks.
Accepted Manuscript
Creator
Song, Jihoon
Guan, ChengHe
Keith, Michael
Akiyama, Yuki
Shibasaki, Ryosuke
Sato, Taisei
Subject
Ecological Modelling
Geography, Planning and Development
General Environmental Science
Urban Studies
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Date
2020-04-03T14:50:33Z
2020-05
2020-04-03T14:50:33Z
Type
Journal Article
Format
application/pdf
Identifier
Guan, ChengHe, Jihoon Song, Michael Keith, Yuki Akiyama, Ryosuke Shibasaki, Taisei Sato. 2020. Delineating urban park catchment areas using mobile phone data: A case study of Tokyo. Computers Environment and Urban Systems. 81: 101474
0198-9715
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:42652467
10.1016/j.compenvurbsys.2020.101474
Source
Computers, Environment and Urban Systems
Language
en_US
Relation
10.1016/j.compenvurbsys.2020.101474
Computers, Environmental, and Urban Systems