Skip to main content

LUP Student Papers

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Developing a GIS model for the assessment of outdoor recreational facilities in new cities : case study : Tenth of Ramadan City, Egypt

Eissa, Raghdaa LU (2017) In Master Thesis in Geographical Information Science GISM01 20171
Dept of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science
Abstract
With population that exceeds 90 million inhabitants, Egypt is one of the large Arab developing countries where the government policies headed towards constructing new urban communities to absorb the vast increase in population. Although the physical planning of the new urban settlements took into consideration the existence of outdoor recreational services and facilities, the quality and adequacy of these services cannot be measured only by their presence. The study develops a Geographical Information Systems (GIS) model that acts as a decision support tool for the assessment of recreational facilities in new urban communities based on the dimension of physical geography. The model focuses on: sufficiency, accessibility and equity as... (More)
With population that exceeds 90 million inhabitants, Egypt is one of the large Arab developing countries where the government policies headed towards constructing new urban communities to absorb the vast increase in population. Although the physical planning of the new urban settlements took into consideration the existence of outdoor recreational services and facilities, the quality and adequacy of these services cannot be measured only by their presence. The study develops a Geographical Information Systems (GIS) model that acts as a decision support tool for the assessment of recreational facilities in new urban communities based on the dimension of physical geography. The model focuses on: sufficiency, accessibility and equity as indicators on their quality; Sufficiency (Ratio Model) based on national and international standards; Accessibility (LCPA Model) through pedestrians and mass transportation routes; and Equity Analysis Model based on the different residential classes. The study uses the capabilities of GIS especially the network analysis tools that enable measuring the pedestrian and mass transportation accessibility areas from a realistic approach. The model is applied on Tenth of Ramadan City, one of the first generation of new communities with a population of 430,000 inhabitants and can accommodate up to more than one million. The results show that the city suffers from lack of recreational facilities where the recreational facilities are sufficient for only one sixth of its population. The accessibility model implied that the number and distribution of recreational facilities in Tenth of Ramadan City (10RC) is inconvenient for users in addition to the high concentration of uses other than the residential use within the service areas of recreational facilities. The equity model implied that there is inequity in the distribution of the recreational facilities and that the low residential class buildings are in high need of new mass transportation routes in order to access the recreational facilities. The findings highlight a serious need to consider aspects of sufficiency, accessibility, and equity in the planning of future recreational facilities in Egypt’s new cities. (Less)
Popular Abstract
With population that exceeds 90 million inhabitants, Egypt is one of the large Arab developing countries where the government policies headed towards constructing new urban communities to absorb the vast increase in population. Although the physical planning of the new urban settlements took into consideration the existence of outdoor recreational services and facilities, the quality and adequacy of these services cannot be measured only by their presence. The study develops a Geographical Information Systems (GIS) - a system that stores, manages, and analyses geographical data - model that acts as a decision support tool for the assessment of recreational facilities in new urban communities based on the dimension of physical geography.... (More)
With population that exceeds 90 million inhabitants, Egypt is one of the large Arab developing countries where the government policies headed towards constructing new urban communities to absorb the vast increase in population. Although the physical planning of the new urban settlements took into consideration the existence of outdoor recreational services and facilities, the quality and adequacy of these services cannot be measured only by their presence. The study develops a Geographical Information Systems (GIS) - a system that stores, manages, and analyses geographical data - model that acts as a decision support tool for the assessment of recreational facilities in new urban communities based on the dimension of physical geography. The model focuses on: sufficiency, accessibility and equity as indicators on their quality. Sufficiency is measured through a Ratio Model that measures if there are enough recreational facilities for the population in the city based on national and international standards. Accessibility is measured through a Least Cost Path Analysis Model that measures the actual distance people walk to reach a recreational facility or a bus stop that leads them to it through mass transportation. Equity Analysis Model measures the percentages of different residential classes inside service areas. The study uses the capabilities of GIS especially the network analysis tools that enable measuring the pedestrian and mass transportation accessibility areas from a realistic approach. The model is applied on Tenth of Ramadan City, one of the first generation of new communities with a population of 430,000 inhabitants and can accommodate up to more than one million. The results show that the city suffers from lack of recreational facilities where the recreational facilities are sufficient for only one sixth of its current population. The accessibility model implied that the number and distribution of recreational facilities in Tenth of Ramadan City (10RC) is inconvenient for users in addition to the high concentration of uses other than the residential use within the service areas of recreational facilities. The equity model implied that there is inequity in the distribution of the recreational facilities and that the low residential class buildings are in high need of new mass transportation routes in order to access the recreational facilities. The findings highlight a serious need to consider aspects of sufficiency, accessibility, and equity in the planning of future recreational facilities in Egypt’s new cities. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Eissa, Raghdaa LU
supervisor
organization
course
GISM01 20171
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
accessibility, physical geography, GIS, recreation, geography, geographical Information Systems
publication/series
Master Thesis in Geographical Information Science
report number
68
language
English
additional info
External supervisor: Dr. Safaa Ghoneim, Associate Professor, Faculty of Urban and Regional Planning, Cairo University, Egypt
id
8904143
date added to LUP
2017-03-06 16:55:12
date last changed
2017-03-06 16:55:12
@misc{8904143,
  abstract     = {{With population that exceeds 90 million inhabitants, Egypt is one of the large Arab developing countries where the government policies headed towards constructing new urban communities to absorb the vast increase in population. Although the physical planning of the new urban settlements took into consideration the existence of outdoor recreational services and facilities, the quality and adequacy of these services cannot be measured only by their presence. The study develops a Geographical Information Systems (GIS) model that acts as a decision support tool for the assessment of recreational facilities in new urban communities based on the dimension of physical geography. The model focuses on: sufficiency, accessibility and equity as indicators on their quality; Sufficiency (Ratio Model) based on national and international standards; Accessibility (LCPA Model) through pedestrians and mass transportation routes; and Equity Analysis Model based on the different residential classes. The study uses the capabilities of GIS especially the network analysis tools that enable measuring the pedestrian and mass transportation accessibility areas from a realistic approach. The model is applied on Tenth of Ramadan City, one of the first generation of new communities with a population of 430,000 inhabitants and can accommodate up to more than one million. The results show that the city suffers from lack of recreational facilities where the recreational facilities are sufficient for only one sixth of its population. The accessibility model implied that the number and distribution of recreational facilities in Tenth of Ramadan City (10RC) is inconvenient for users in addition to the high concentration of uses other than the residential use within the service areas of recreational facilities. The equity model implied that there is inequity in the distribution of the recreational facilities and that the low residential class buildings are in high need of new mass transportation routes in order to access the recreational facilities. The findings highlight a serious need to consider aspects of sufficiency, accessibility, and equity in the planning of future recreational facilities in Egypt’s new cities.}},
  author       = {{Eissa, Raghdaa}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  series       = {{Master Thesis in Geographical Information Science}},
  title        = {{Developing a GIS model for the assessment of outdoor recreational facilities in new cities : case study : Tenth of Ramadan City, Egypt}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}