1. Stratification of a cityscape using census and land use variables for inventory of building materials
- Author
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Thomas L. Johnson, Katherine Fitzpatrick-Lins, and George H. Rosenfield
- Subjects
Land use ,business.industry ,Metropolitan statistical area ,Environmental resource management ,General Social Sciences ,Land cover ,Census ,Livelihood ,Unit (housing) ,Geography ,Geological survey ,Cityscape ,business ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
A cityscape (or any landscape) can be stratified into environmental units using multiple variables of information. For the purposes of sampling building materials, census and land use variables were used to identify similar strata. In the Metropolitan Statistical Area of a cityscape, the census tract is the smallest unit for which census data are summarized and digitized boundaries are available. For purposes of this analysis, census data on total population, total number of housing units, and number of singleunit dwellings were aggregated into variables of persons per square kilometer and proportion of housing units in single-unit dwellings. The level 2 categories of the U.S. Geological Survey's land use and land cover data base were aggregated into variables of proportion of residential land with buildings, proportion of nonresidential land with buildings, and proportion of open land. The cityscape was stratified, from these variables, into environmental strata of Urban Central Business District, Urban Livelihood Industrial Commercial, Urban Multi-Family Residential, Urban Single Family Residential, Non-Urban Suburbanizing, and Non-Urban Rural.
- Published
- 1987
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