DOI: 10.3390/land15071122 ISSN: 2073-445X

Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Peri-Urban Expansion and Land Use/Land Cover Transformation: A Case Study of Izmir, Türkiye

Sena Aydemir, Figen Akpınar, Yasin Paşa, Mehmet Ali Çelik

This study investigates the spatiotemporal dynamics of peri-urban expansion and land use transformation in Izmir, Türkiye, over 36 years (1986–2022) using an integrated GIS-based Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) framework. Multi-source datasets, including Landsat imagery, CORINE land cover (CLC) data, demographic statistics, and spatial variables (slope, transportation proximity, and distance to the city center), were combined to delineate urban, peri-urban, and rural zones. Results reveal a substantial percentage increase in urban areas from 2.8% in 1986 to 10.48% in 2022, corresponding to an expansion of approximately 7.6% (≈908.56 km2). In contrast, agricultural land declined by 5.8%, while forest areas experienced a more severe reduction of 19.1%, indicating significant environmental degradation. Population dynamics further support this transformation, with peri-urban districts exhibiting growth rates exceeding the metropolitan core average of 1.8% (1986–2010), followed by a relative slowdown to 0.5% after 2010, accompanied by outward migration-driven expansion. Spatial analysis demonstrates that peri-urban growth is strongly influenced by accessibility and topography, with development concentrated within 30–50 km of the city center and along major transportation corridors (500–1000 m buffers). Land Surface Temperature (LST) analysis indicates increasing urban heat island intensity, with surface temperatures ranging from 12 °C to 46 °C, particularly in densely built inner peri-urban zones. The MCDA-based classification identifies distinct inner and outer peri-urban belts, characterized by contrasting density, land use patterns, and environmental pressures. Overall, the findings highlight that Izmir’s peri-urbanization is a heterogeneous and rapidly evolving process driven by demographic, spatial, and policy-related factors. The study provides a replicable methodological framework and emphasizes the urgent need for integrated, sustainability-oriented planning strategies to mitigate ecological loss and uncontrolled urban sprawl.

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