DOI: 10.3390/land15071119 ISSN: 2073-445X

Does Facility Provision Translate into Vitality? Video-Based Evidence from Renovated Public Open Spaces in Old Communities

Guiwen Liu, Yipin Huang, Hongjuan Wu, Heng Zhang

Public open spaces (POS) in old communities are important settings for daily neighborhood life, yet many renovated POS remain underused after physical upgrading. Existing evaluations often rely on subjective perceptions, providing limited evidence on how facilities are associated with vitality. This study analyzes the associations between facility provision and POS vitality in 63 renovated POS across 11 old communities in Jiulongpo District, Chongqing, China. POS vitality is operationalized through two behavioral dimensions, use frequency and stay duration, derived from video detection and tracking using YOLOv8 and ByteTrack. Facility provision was then classified by facility type and examined in relation to the vitality indicators through descriptive analysis and Generalized Estimating Equations models. Descriptive evidence indicates substantial heterogeneity in both facility provision and POS vitality. Resting amenities and landscape elements are more commonly provided, whereas children’s facilities show the lowest provision and greater spatial selectivity. Higher use frequency and longer stay duration are concentrated in some POS. The Generalized Estimating Equations analysis further indicates that facilities are not associated with vitality in a uniform way. Children’s facilities show the strongest positive associations with both use frequency and stay duration despite their limited provision, supporting their key role in POS vitality. Landscape elements and lighting facilities are more closely associated with stay duration, highlighting the role of environmental support in sustaining longer use. In contrast, the negative associations for fitness facilities, together with the non-significant results for resting and sanitation amenities, suggest that not all facility provision translates into stronger vitality. Taken together, renovation performance should be judged not by the quantity of upgraded facilities alone, but by whether facilities support the behavioral dimensions of vitality that a POS is expected to achieve.

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