A study of open spaces of urban bays in Qingdao, China: from the perspective of fractal order
Article
Guan, R., Peng, Z., Lu, J., Deng, W., Chen, G. and Yang, T. 2025. A study of open spaces of urban bays in Qingdao, China: from the perspective of fractal order. Journal of Asian Architecture and Building Engineering. https://doi.org/10.1080/13467581.2025.2605753
| Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Title | A study of open spaces of urban bays in Qingdao, China: from the perspective of fractal order |
| Authors | Guan, R., Peng, Z., Lu, J., Deng, W., Chen, G. and Yang, T. |
| Abstract | Urban bays in coastal cities like Qingdao play a pivotal role in fostering sustainable human-nature symbiosis amid rapid urbanization. However, economic-driven development has led to fragmented spatial hierarchies and heterogeneous open space distributions, limiting their capacity to meet diverse user demands. Despite their importance for localized human-environment interactions, small-scale bays have received limited scholarly attention. This study addresses this gap by employing fractal theory to analyze the hierarchical structure, scale transitions, and spatial organization of open spaces in two contrasting bays: Qingdao Bay (historically evolved) and Fushan Bay (modern development). Using grid fractal dimension analysis, box-counting methods, and GIS tools, we quantify fractal characteristics, identify scale discontinuities, and evaluate spatial balance. Results reveal that Qingdao Bay exhibits a fractal dimension of 1.784 (R2 = 0.998), aligning closely with ideal urban fractal patterns, while Fushan Bay’s higher fractal dimension (1.839, R2 = 0.999) indicates excessive spatial fragmentation. Key issues include oversized coastal parks disrupting scale continuity, insufficient human-scale interaction spaces, and homogeneous functional zoning. To address these, we propose a fractal-optimized hierarchical framework emphasizing multi-scale integration, transitional spaces, and mixed-use planning. This research advances the application of fractal theory to small-scale coastal systems in Qingdao, offering actionable insights for enhancing spatial quality within similar urban bay contexts. |
| Sustainable Development Goals | 9 Industry, innovation and infrastructure |
| Middlesex University Theme | Creativity, Culture & Enterprise |
| Publisher | Taylor & Francis (Routledge) |
| Journal | Journal of Asian Architecture and Building Engineering |
| ISSN | 1346-7581 |
| Electronic | 1347-2852 |
| Publication dates | |
| Online | 23 Dec 2025 |
| Publication process dates | |
| Submitted | 04 Jun 2025 |
| Accepted | 15 Dec 2025 |
| Deposited | 09 Jan 2026 |
| Output status | Published |
| Publisher's version | License File Access Level Open |
| Copyright Statement | © 2025 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group on behalf of the Architectural Institute of Japan, Architectural Institute of Korea and Architectural Society of China. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The terms on which this article has been published allow the posting of the Accepted Manuscript in a repository by the author(s) or with their consent. |
| Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1080/13467581.2025.2605753 |
https://repository.mdx.ac.uk/item/32x9q5
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Publisher's version
| A study of open spaces of urban bays in Qingdao China from the perspective of fractal order.pdf | ||
| License: CC BY-NC 4.0 | ||
| File access level: Open | ||
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