Abstract :
We present several models of residential development at the rural–urban fringe to evaluate the effectiveness of a greenbelt located
beside a developed area, for delaying development outside the greenbelt. First, we develop a mathematical model, under two
assumptions about the distributions of service centers, that represents the trade-off between greenbelt placement and width, their
effects on the rate of development beyond the greenbelt, and how these interact with spatial patterns of aesthetic quality and the
locations of services. Next, we present three agent-based models (ABMs) that include agents with the potential for heterogeneous
preferences and a landscape with the potential for heterogeneous attributes. Results from experiments run with a one-dimensional
ABM agree with the starkest of the results from the mathematical model, strengthening the support for both models. Further, we
present two different two-dimensional ABMs and conduct a series of experiments to supplement our mathematical analysis. These
include examining the effects of heterogeneous agent preferences, multiple landscape patterns, incomplete or imperfect information
available to agents, and a positive aesthetic quality impact of the greenbelt on neighboring locations. These results suggest
how width and location of the greenbelt could help determine the effectiveness of greenbelts for slowing sprawl, but that these
relationships are sensitive to the patterns of landscape aesthetic quality and assumptions about service center locations.
Keywords :
Land-use change , urban sprawl , Agent-based modeling , Landscape ecology