Assessing sustainable urbanism in emerging Chinese Edge Cities: the case Of Beijing

China has experienced rapid development over the last few decades, with more and more cities becoming metropolitan cities. Such massive concentrations of people have led to the expansion of urban centres, resulting in urban transformation and agglomeration in urban periphery areas. During the rapid...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wang, Yunlu
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/73801/
_version_ 1848800814697545728
author Wang, Yunlu
author_facet Wang, Yunlu
author_sort Wang, Yunlu
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description China has experienced rapid development over the last few decades, with more and more cities becoming metropolitan cities. Such massive concentrations of people have led to the expansion of urban centres, resulting in urban transformation and agglomeration in urban periphery areas. During the rapid development phase, the main objective of cities is to meet the functional demand of people, often to the detriment of sustainable urban design from a human scale perspective. However, as the economy grows, people’s needs also grow beyond the merely functional, and their sense of identity and how they experience a place increases. Against this background, the main objective of this study is to investigate the current state of urbanism in Chinese edge cities and to understand the current performance of this urban structure. To do this, the study explores the present spatial structure of edge cities, typical everyday activities and resulting experiences to identify both the potentials and constraints for an increasing place attachment rooted in walkable environments. For these purposes, a theoretical framework is used in combination with both quantitative and qualitative analyses to discuss two cases of emerging edge cities in Beijing. The quantitative surveys mainly consist of mapping spatial conditions by using GIS data and Space Syntax to analyse the existing urban structure and its key centralities. Qualitative surveys are urban studies that analyse typical scenario-based everyday activities and experiences of the place via field studies to identify some essential factors promoting or discouraging walks instead of other means of mobility. An analysis of the Beijing Economic-Technological Development Area (BDA) and Zhongguancun Science Park - Haidian Sub-Park (HSP) shows that most Chinese edge cities start as development zones and gradually develop into edge cities. But based on the research findings, Chinese edge cities are functional entities with high urban densities and a sufficient supply of public transit, however the pedestrian experience suffers from large block sizes and a strict mono-functional land-use distribution discouraging everyday walks, which are essential to diversify spatial developments in future and to establish a unique imageability promoting place attachment.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:57:33Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-73801
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:57:33Z
publishDate 2023
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-738012025-02-28T15:18:17Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/73801/ Assessing sustainable urbanism in emerging Chinese Edge Cities: the case Of Beijing Wang, Yunlu China has experienced rapid development over the last few decades, with more and more cities becoming metropolitan cities. Such massive concentrations of people have led to the expansion of urban centres, resulting in urban transformation and agglomeration in urban periphery areas. During the rapid development phase, the main objective of cities is to meet the functional demand of people, often to the detriment of sustainable urban design from a human scale perspective. However, as the economy grows, people’s needs also grow beyond the merely functional, and their sense of identity and how they experience a place increases. Against this background, the main objective of this study is to investigate the current state of urbanism in Chinese edge cities and to understand the current performance of this urban structure. To do this, the study explores the present spatial structure of edge cities, typical everyday activities and resulting experiences to identify both the potentials and constraints for an increasing place attachment rooted in walkable environments. For these purposes, a theoretical framework is used in combination with both quantitative and qualitative analyses to discuss two cases of emerging edge cities in Beijing. The quantitative surveys mainly consist of mapping spatial conditions by using GIS data and Space Syntax to analyse the existing urban structure and its key centralities. Qualitative surveys are urban studies that analyse typical scenario-based everyday activities and experiences of the place via field studies to identify some essential factors promoting or discouraging walks instead of other means of mobility. An analysis of the Beijing Economic-Technological Development Area (BDA) and Zhongguancun Science Park - Haidian Sub-Park (HSP) shows that most Chinese edge cities start as development zones and gradually develop into edge cities. But based on the research findings, Chinese edge cities are functional entities with high urban densities and a sufficient supply of public transit, however the pedestrian experience suffers from large block sizes and a strict mono-functional land-use distribution discouraging everyday walks, which are essential to diversify spatial developments in future and to establish a unique imageability promoting place attachment. 2023-07-21 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/73801/1/Yunlu%20WANG%2020208946%20corrected%20version.pdf Wang, Yunlu (2023) Assessing sustainable urbanism in emerging Chinese Edge Cities: the case Of Beijing. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Urban design Chinese urbanisation integrated urbanism sustainable city edge city polycentric development
spellingShingle Urban design
Chinese urbanisation
integrated urbanism
sustainable city
edge city
polycentric development
Wang, Yunlu
Assessing sustainable urbanism in emerging Chinese Edge Cities: the case Of Beijing
title Assessing sustainable urbanism in emerging Chinese Edge Cities: the case Of Beijing
title_full Assessing sustainable urbanism in emerging Chinese Edge Cities: the case Of Beijing
title_fullStr Assessing sustainable urbanism in emerging Chinese Edge Cities: the case Of Beijing
title_full_unstemmed Assessing sustainable urbanism in emerging Chinese Edge Cities: the case Of Beijing
title_short Assessing sustainable urbanism in emerging Chinese Edge Cities: the case Of Beijing
title_sort assessing sustainable urbanism in emerging chinese edge cities: the case of beijing
topic Urban design
Chinese urbanisation
integrated urbanism
sustainable city
edge city
polycentric development
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/73801/