articleScienceFeb 7, 2008Closed access

The Size, Scale, and Shape of Cities

University College London

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Despite a century of effort, our understanding of how cities evolve is still woefully inadequate. Recent research, however, suggests that cities are complex systems that mainly grow from the bottom up, their size and shape following well-defined scaling laws that result from intense competition for space. An integrated theory of how cities evolve, linking urban economics and transportation behavior to developments in network science, allometric growth, and fractal geometry, is being slowly developed. This science provides new insights into the resource limits facing cities in terms of the meaning of density, compactness, and sprawl, and related questions of sustainability. It has the potential to enrich…

Citation impact

1,391
total citations
FWCI
81.05
Percentile
100%
References
33
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Urban sprawl
  • Economic geography
  • Sustainability
  • Competition (biology)
  • Allometry
  • Scale (ratio)
  • Urban density
  • Urban planning
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Sustainable cities and communities
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