Skip to main content
Dryad

Data from: Resilience of self-organised and top-down planned cities—a case study on London and Beijing street networks

Cite this dataset

Wang, Jiaqiu (2016). Data from: Resilience of self-organised and top-down planned cities—a case study on London and Beijing street networks [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.c0s22

Abstract

The success or failure of the street network depends on its reliability. In this article, using resilience analysis, the author studies how the shape and appearance of street networks in self-organised and top-down planned cities influences urban transport. Considering London and Beijing as proxies for self-organised and top-down planned cities, the structural properties of London and Beijing networks first are investigated based on their primal and dual representations of planar graphs. The robustness of street networks then is evaluated in primal space and dual space by deactivating road links under random and intentional attack scenarios. The results show that the reliability of London street network differs from that of Beijing, which seems to rely more on its architecture and connectivity. It is found that top-down planned Beijing with its higher average degree in the dual space and assortativity in the primal space is more robust than self-organised London using the measures of maximum and second largest cluster size and network efficiency. The article offers an insight, from a network perspective, into the reliability of street patterns in self-organised and top-down planned city systems.

Usage notes

Location

UK
China