The scaling structure of the global road network

Because of increasing global urbanization and its immediate consequences, including changes in patterns of food demand, circulation and land use, the next century will witness a major increase in the extent of paved roads built worldwide. To model the effects of this increase, it is crucial to under...

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Main Authors: Emanuele Strano, Andrea Giometto, Saray Shai, Enrico Bertuzzo, Peter J. Mucha, Andrea Rinaldo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2017-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170590
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spelling doaj-8d755b74fc344c89baff557890fa20fa2020-11-25T04:02:57ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032017-01-0141010.1098/rsos.170590170590The scaling structure of the global road networkEmanuele StranoAndrea GiomettoSaray ShaiEnrico BertuzzoPeter J. MuchaAndrea RinaldoBecause of increasing global urbanization and its immediate consequences, including changes in patterns of food demand, circulation and land use, the next century will witness a major increase in the extent of paved roads built worldwide. To model the effects of this increase, it is crucial to understand whether possible self-organized patterns are inherent in the global road network structure. Here, we use the largest updated database comprising all major roads on the Earth, together with global urban and cropland inventories, to suggest that road length distributions within croplands are indistinguishable from urban ones, once rescaled to account for the difference in mean road length. Such similarity extends to road length distributions within urban or agricultural domains of a given area. We find two distinct regimes for the scaling of the mean road length with the associated area, holding in general at small and at large values of the latter. In suitably large urban and cropland domains, we find that mean and total road lengths increase linearly with their domain area, differently from earlier suggestions. Scaling regimes suggest that simple and universal mechanisms regulate urban and cropland road expansion at the global scale. As such, our findings bear implications for global road infrastructure growth based on land-use change and for planning policies sustaining urban expansions.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170590spatial networksglobal land useurbanizationglobal road network
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emanuele Strano
Andrea Giometto
Saray Shai
Enrico Bertuzzo
Peter J. Mucha
Andrea Rinaldo
spellingShingle Emanuele Strano
Andrea Giometto
Saray Shai
Enrico Bertuzzo
Peter J. Mucha
Andrea Rinaldo
The scaling structure of the global road network
Royal Society Open Science
spatial networks
global land use
urbanization
global road network
author_facet Emanuele Strano
Andrea Giometto
Saray Shai
Enrico Bertuzzo
Peter J. Mucha
Andrea Rinaldo
author_sort Emanuele Strano
title The scaling structure of the global road network
title_short The scaling structure of the global road network
title_full The scaling structure of the global road network
title_fullStr The scaling structure of the global road network
title_full_unstemmed The scaling structure of the global road network
title_sort scaling structure of the global road network
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Because of increasing global urbanization and its immediate consequences, including changes in patterns of food demand, circulation and land use, the next century will witness a major increase in the extent of paved roads built worldwide. To model the effects of this increase, it is crucial to understand whether possible self-organized patterns are inherent in the global road network structure. Here, we use the largest updated database comprising all major roads on the Earth, together with global urban and cropland inventories, to suggest that road length distributions within croplands are indistinguishable from urban ones, once rescaled to account for the difference in mean road length. Such similarity extends to road length distributions within urban or agricultural domains of a given area. We find two distinct regimes for the scaling of the mean road length with the associated area, holding in general at small and at large values of the latter. In suitably large urban and cropland domains, we find that mean and total road lengths increase linearly with their domain area, differently from earlier suggestions. Scaling regimes suggest that simple and universal mechanisms regulate urban and cropland road expansion at the global scale. As such, our findings bear implications for global road infrastructure growth based on land-use change and for planning policies sustaining urban expansions.
topic spatial networks
global land use
urbanization
global road network
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170590
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