CHARACTERIZING THE URBAN GROWTH FROM 1975 TO 2003 OF HANOI CITY USING REMOTE SENSING AND A SPATIAL METRIC
Abstract
This study explores an approach of combining remote sensing and a spatial metric to characterize land use
change in Hanoi, Vietnam. The work is based on the land cover information of 4 different times derived from Landsat
and ASTER data from 1975 to 2003. This study adopted the spatial metrics; the percentage of like adjacency
(PLADJ), which calculates the number of like adjacencies involving the focal class, divided by the focal number of cell
adjacencies involving the focal class, multiplied by 100 to convert to a percentage. The result successfully showed proportions
of the fragmented and the aggregated areas in urbanization for each development time. During the rapid urbanization
periods in 1975 – 1984 and 1984 – 1992, a large proportion of the interior non developed and aggregated non
developed was converted to developed landscape, whereas fragmented non developed to developed markedly happened in
2001 – 2003. The study provided intuitive description and separation of three urbanization patterns such as infill,
expansion, and outlying. Quantitative assessment revealed that the proportion of the expansion and infill steadily
increased, whereas the proportion of the outlying decreased in past 30 years. The combined approach using remote
sensing and a spatial metric is an effective method to improve understanding of urbanization patterns and to provide
visualization of spatial – temporal change due to urbanization.