Urban Sprawl Is Associated with Reduced Access and Increased Costs of Water and Sanitation
Rafael Prieto-Curiel, Pavel Luengas-Sierra, Christian Borja-Vega

TL;DR
This study examines how urban sprawl affects water and sanitation access, showing that compact growth improves infrastructure access and reduces costs, based on analysis of over 100 cities across multiple continents.
Contribution
It introduces new metrics for urban form and models the impact of different expansion scenarios on water and sanitation access.
Findings
Less remote areas have higher income and better infrastructure access.
Sparser cities face higher water tariffs and lower service access.
Compact urban growth significantly improves water and sanitation coverage.
Abstract
Many cities are expanding in areas with scarce rainfall and limited water retention capacity, and are also becoming elongated and sprawled, making it harder to deliver services. This study quantifies the impact of urban form on access to water. We craft comparable urban forms for over 100 cities in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. For each city, we analyse the distance to the centre, one of the most critical features of cities. We introduce two metrics: remoteness, which quantifies the distance of any location to the city centre, and sparseness, a population-weighted average of all locations. We find that less remote areas have higher average income, are closer to critical infrastructure and have higher access to sewage and piped water. Sparser cities have higher water tariffs, lower proximity to critical infrastructure, and lower access to sewage and piped water. Finally, we model…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRemote Sensing and Land Use · Land Use and Ecosystem Services
