2018
DOI: 10.15292/geodetski-vestnik.2018.03.472-486
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A method for identification of future suburbanisation areas

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Cited by 5 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Municipalities do not resort to significant limits in the early stages of suburbanisation, because they often compete with other municipalities for new inhabitants [26], and so many municipalities do not make any significant regulation until the capacity of the municipality is fulfilled. However, the interest of developers, as well as individuals, in land and real estate in the municipality can predict in the future a higher degree of development dynamics and pressure on a municipality [68], and thus, it is possible to predefine institutional frameworks and control mechanisms in the municipality development [16].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Municipalities do not resort to significant limits in the early stages of suburbanisation, because they often compete with other municipalities for new inhabitants [26], and so many municipalities do not make any significant regulation until the capacity of the municipality is fulfilled. However, the interest of developers, as well as individuals, in land and real estate in the municipality can predict in the future a higher degree of development dynamics and pressure on a municipality [68], and thus, it is possible to predefine institutional frameworks and control mechanisms in the municipality development [16].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This can also be supported by regulations concerning the preservation of site morphology, such as fixed parameters for the construction and appearance of a new house, its dimensions and the built-up area, etc. However, on the basis of the intensity and quantification of changes in land use, it is possible to predict possible areas with a higher suburbanisation rates in the future [68].…”
Section: Suburbanisation-possible Solutions and Challenges For The Fumentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In order to plan sustainable urban development, at city and agglomeration scale, one of the most important measures is density, i.e., the surface of spatial structure elements per surface of the studied area (density of development, housing density, population, intensity of development, land occupancy rate) [72] (p. 23), [73] (pp. [5][6][7][8]. An important tool for studying the development of areas at different scales is population density, but its results differ depending on the assumed boundaries of the studied area, because from the scale of an urban block to that of a metropolitan area density can decrease a hundred-fold [74].…”
Section: Methods Of Obtaining Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This paper investigates the phenomenon of spatial chaos in Poland resulting from urban sprawl. The phenomenon is particularly visible in the case of suburban small cities which, in contrast to cities in the EU-15 countries with similar populations, are expanding excessively, causing a growth of urbanized areas exceeding several times the growth of their population [6,7].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%