DocumentCode
3507240
Title
Measuring urban sprawl in Tier II cities of Karnataka, India
Author
Aithal, Bharath H. ; Ramachandra, T.V.
Author_Institution
Centre for Ecological Sci., Indian Inst. of Sci., Bangalore, India
fYear
2013
fDate
23-24 Aug. 2013
Firstpage
321
Lastpage
329
Abstract
Rapid irreversible urbanisation has haphazard and unplanned growth of towns and cities. Urbanisation process is driven by burgeoning population has resulted in the mismanagement of natural resources. Human-induced land use changes are the prime drivers of the global environmental changes. Urbanisation and associated sub growth patterns are characteristic of spatial temporal changes that take place at regional levels. Rapid urbanization subsequent to opening up of Indian markets in early ninety´s show dominant changes in land use during the last two decades. Urban regions in India are experiencing the faster rates of urban dominance, while peri-urban areas are experiencing sprawl. Tier II cities in India are undergoing rapid changes in recent times and need to be planned to minimize the impacts of unplanned urbanisation. This communication focuses on seven tier II cities, chosen based on population. Mysore, Shimoga, Hubli, Dharwad, Raichur, Belgaum, Gulbarga and Bellary are the rapidly urbanizing regions of Karnataka, India. In this study, an integrated approach of remote sensing and spatial metrics with gradient analysis was used to identify the trends of urban land changes with a minimum buffer of 3 km buffer from the city boundary has been studied (based on availability of data), which help in the implementation of location specific mitigation measures. Results indicated a significant increase of urban built-up area during the last four decades. Landscape metrics indicates the coalescence of urban areas has occurred in almost all these regions. Urban growth has been clumped at the center with simple shapes and dispersed growth in the boundary region and the peri-urban regions with convoluted shapes.
Keywords
land use planning; remote sensing; Belgaum; Bellary; Dharwad; Gulbarga; Hubli; India; Karnataka; Mysore; Raichur; Shimoga; Tier II cities; city boundary; global environmental changes; haphazard growth; human induced land use changes; natural resources mismanagement; periurban areas; rapid irreversible urbanisation; remote sensing; spatial metrics; spatial temporal changes; unplanned; urban dominance; urban sprawl; Cities and towns; Entropy; Measurement; Remote sensing; Sociology; Statistics; Vegetation mapping; India; Karnataka; Landscape Metrics; Remote sensing; Tier II; Urban Sprawl; Urbanisation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Global Humanitarian Technology Conference: South Asia Satellite (GHTC-SAS), 2013 IEEE
Conference_Location
Trivandrum
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-1094-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/GHTC-SAS.2013.6629939
Filename
6629939
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