Measurement Of Urban Vitality With Time-Lapsed Street-View Images And Object-Detection For Scalable Assessment Of Pedestrian-Sidewalk Dynamics
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
Abstract
Principles of dense, mixed-use environments and pedestrianisation are influential in urban planning practice
worldwide. A key outcome espoused by these principles is generating “urban vitality”, the continuous use of
street sidewalk infrastructure throughout the day, to promote safety, economic viability and attractiveness of city
neighbourhoods. Vitality is hypothesised to arise from a nearby mixture of primary uses, short blocks, density of
buildings and population and a diversity in the age and condition of surrounding buildings. To investigate this
claim, we use a novel dataset of 2.1 million time-lapsed day and night images at 145 representative locations
throughout the city of Accra, Ghana. We developed a measure of urban vitality for each location based on the
coefficient of variation in pedestrian volume over time in our images, obtained from counts of people identified
using object detection. We also construct measures of “generators of diversity”: mixed-use intensity, building,
block and population density, as well as diversity in the age of buildings, using data that are available across
multiple cities and perform bivariate and multivariate regressions of our urban vitality measure against variables
representing generators of diversity to test the latter’s association with vitality. We find that two or more unique
kinds of amenities accessible within a five-minute walk from a given location, as well as the density of buildings
(of varying ages and conditions) and short blocks, are associated with more even footfall throughout the day. Our
analysis also indicates some potential negative trade-offs from dense and mixed-use neighbourhoods, such as
being associated with more continuous road traffic throughout the day. Our methodological approach is scalable
and adaptable to different modes of image data capture and can be widely adopted in other cities worldwide.
Description
Research Article
Citation
Nathvani, R., Cavanaugh, A., Suel, E., Bixby, H., Clark, S. N., Metzler, A. B., ... & Ezzati, M. (2025). Measurement of urban vitality with time-lapsed street-view images and object-detection for scalable assessment of pedestrian-sidewalk dynamics. ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, 221, 251-264.
