European cities, territorial analysis of characteristics and trends : an application of the LUISA Modelling Platform (EU Reference Scenario 2013 - Updated Configuration 2014)
This report illustrates how European cities could potentially evolve over the time period 2010-2050, according to the reference configuration of the LUISA modelling platform, on the basis of a collection of spatial indicators covering several thematic fields. These spatial indicators aim to improve our understanding of urbanization and urban development processes in Europe; explore territorial dimensions of projected demographic and economic changes, and finally examine some key challenges that urban areas are or may be exposed to. Some of the key findings of this report are given below: - The proportion of the population living in cities, towns and suburbs is higher in the EU than in the rest of the world. According to the LUISA forecasts, the urban proportion will continue to increase up to 2030; subsequently slow down, and reach a relatively steady state by 2050. - In 2010, 65% of the EU population were living in Functional Urban Areas (FUA, the city and its commuting zone). This figure is expected to reach 70% by 2050. The total EU-28 population is expected to grow by 4.6%. Most of this population growth will occur particularly in FUA which will grow by an average 14%. - As of 2010, the amount of artificial areas per inhabitant in the EU-28 was estimated as 498 m2: it becomes 539 m2 in 2050 with an 8% increase. Although there is not a unique spatial pattern, land take tends to start peak at 5 km distance from the city centre. This is due to the fact that land is often less available for development within city centres and that the majority of land take therefore will occur firstly in the suburbs - By 2050, potential accessibility - as measure of economic opportunities - will be higher in the urban areas of north-western Europe, while it will not improve in lagging European regions. Urban form has a considerable impact on average travelled distances and thus potentially on the energy dependence of transport. - Green infrastructure is mainly located at the periphery of urban areas. Its share per person is generally low or very low in most of the European cities, with few exceptions. Green infrastructure per capita in FUA shows a general trend towards a decrease across the EU-28 (by approximately 13%) between 2010 and 2050. - Larger cities tend to have higher average flood risk, especially due to the higher sensitivity in terms of potential human and physical losses.
Year of publication: |
2015
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Other Persons: | Kompil, Mert (contributor) ; Aurambout, Jean-Philippe (contributor) ; Ribeiro Barranco, Ricardo (contributor) ; Barbosa, Ana (contributor) ; Jacobs-Crisioni, Cris (contributor) ; Pisoni, Enrico (contributor) ; Zulian, Grazia (contributor) ; Vandecasteele, Ine (contributor) ; Trombetti, Marco (contributor) ; Vizcaino, Pilar (contributor) ; Vallecillo, Sara (contributor) ; Batista e Silva, Filipe (contributor) ; Baranzelli, Claudia (contributor) ; Rivero, Ines Mari (contributor) ; PerpiƱa Castillo, Carolina (contributor) ; Polce, Chiara (contributor) ; Maes, Joachim (contributor) ; Lavalle, Carlo (contributor) |
Institutions: | European Commission / Joint Research Centre (issuing body) |
Publisher: |
Luxembourg : Publications Office |
Saved in:
Extent: | 1 Online-Ressource (94 p.) Illustrationen (farbig) |
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Type of publication: | Book / Working Paper |
Language: | English |
Notes: | Bibl. : p. 86-89 |
ISBN: | 978-92-79-54594-8 |
Other identifiers: | 10.2788/737963 [DOI] |
Source: | ECONIS - Online Catalogue of the ZBW |
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10015297088
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