Exploring the substantive nature of urban morphology: managing the changing character of cities in China

Authors

  • K. Gu School of Architecture and Planning, University of Auckland
  • S. Wang School of Architecture and Planning, University of Auckland
  • J. Zhang School of Architecture, Zhengzhou University
  • S. Chen School of Architecture, Zhengzhou University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51347/UM26.0001

Keywords:

urban landscapes, urban morphology, morphological regions, urban design codes, Zhengzhou

Abstract

The value of identifying and improving the distinctiveness of cultural landscapes as a means of reinforcing place identity and supporting economic development has been widely recognised by both academics and professionals. Despite increasing interest in urban design codes for guiding urban change, their practice, in particular of those concerning the management of landscape forms at the city or regional scale, has hitherto achieved limited success. The idea of urban morphological regions has the potential to strengthen practical reasoning for achieving valued results in managing urban landscape changes. In connection with an investigation of Zhengzhou, one of the most economically dynamic cities in central China, this paper explores the conceptual and practical significance of urban morphological regionalisation for establishing theoretically-informed and evidence-based urban design codes.

Published

2021-05-16

How to Cite

Gu, K., Wang, S., Zhang, J., & Chen, S. (2021). Exploring the substantive nature of urban morphology: managing the changing character of cities in China. Urban Morphology, 26(1), 5–23. https://doi.org/10.51347/UM26.0001