Atlas of Urban Expansion, online resource monitoring growth of cities worldwide

Friday, January 13, 2017

Extensive database updated and revised, and available in new format

For immediate release
Contact: Anthony Flint 617-503-2116 anthony.flint@lincolninst.edu / Will Jason 617-503-2254

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (January 13, 2017) -- The Atlas of Urban Expansion, an open-source online resource with maps, satellite images, and data on spatial changes in cities around the world, has been revised and updated.

The new database, a partnership of the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, UN-Habitat, and New York University, can be accessed via the Atlas of Urban Expansion page at the Lincoln Institute website.

The Atlas of Urban Expansion now features a global sample of 200 cities, representing the universe of all 4,231 cities and metropolitan areas that had 100,000 people or more in 2010. The aim is to provide a scientific understanding of how the world’s cities are growing, and to measure performance and identify trends in the implementation of the New Urban Agenda following the Habitat III global cities summit in Quito, Ecuador in October 2016.

Massive urbanization, accompanied by the rapid expansion of cities and metropolitan regions and the sprawling growth of megacities the world over, is one of the most important transformations of our planet. Developing world cities are set to double their urban population in the next 30 years, and triple the land area they occupy. From 1990 and 2015, the area occupied by cities in less developed countries increased by a factor of 3.5; if that rate continues, the total amount of land taken over by urban land use would be equivalent to the entire country of India.

Much of this explosive growth has been unplanned. Cities in developing countries have been unprepared for absorbing the many millions of the rural poor that are still crowding into informal settlements. The unfettered growth is bad for the environment, increases the cost of delivering basic services, and hinders economic activity and food security. The expanding footprint of sprawling cities, particularly at the outer fringe of fast-growing metropolitan regions, is characterized by a lack of arterial grids, unwieldy block sizes that compromise walking and biking, and inadequate open space.

The Atlas of Urban Expansion provides the geographic and quantitative dimensions of urban expansion and its key attributes in cities the world over. The empirical data and quantitative dimensions of past, present, and future urban expansion in cities around the world are critical for making minimal preparations for the massive urban growth expected in the coming decades.

Related publications available at the Lincoln Institute website include the Atlas of Urban Expansion 2016 Volume I and Volume IIPlanet of Cities (2012); Atlas of Urban Expansion (2012); and the Policy Focus Report Making Room for a Planet of Cities (2011).

The Lincoln Institute of Land Policy is an independent, nonpartisan organization whose mission is to help solve global economic, social, and environmental challenges to improve the quality of life through creative approaches to the use, taxation, and stewardship of land.

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