Published August 29, 2018 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Toward cities without slums: Topology and the spatial evolution of neighborhoods

  • 1. Santa Fe Institute
  • 2. Sam Houston State University
  • 3. University of Chicago

Description

The world is urbanizing quickly with nearly 4 billion people presently living in urban areas, about 1 billion of them in slums. Achieving sustainable development from rapid urbanization relies critically on creating cities without slums. We show that it is possible to diagnose systematically the central physical problem of slums—the lack of spatial accesses and related services—using a topological analysis of neighborhood maps and resolved by finding solutions to a sequence of constrained optimization problems. We set up the problem by showing that the built environment of any city can be decomposed into two types of networked spaces—accesses and places—and prove that these spaces display universal topological characteristics. We then show that while the neighborhoods of developed cities express the same common topology, urban slums fall into a different topological class. We demonstrate that it is always possible to find solutions that grow a street network in existing slums, providing universal accesses at minimal disruption and cost. We then show how elaborations of this procedure that include local preferences and reduce travel distances between places result from additional access construction. These methods are presently taking effect in neighborhoods in Cape Town (South Africa) and Mumbai (India), demonstrating their practical feasibility and emphasizing their role as a platform to enable communities and local governments to combine technical knowledge with local aspirations into contextually appropriate urban sustainable development solutions.

Data availability

All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Supplementary Materials. Demonstrations, data, code, and a selection of maps are available at http://openreblock.org and https://github.com/brelsford/topology. Additional data related to this paper may be requested from the authors.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1126/sciadv.aar4644
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:11068

Funding

Army Research Office
W911NF1210097
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
13-105749-000-USP
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Laboratory Directed Research and Development

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Ecology and Evolution
Center(s) or Institute(s)
Mansueto Institute for Urban Innovation