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Keywords = case study—Seoul

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26 pages, 17934 KB  
Article
Computational Mapping of Linguistic Landscape Transformation in an At-Risk Urban Cultural Landscape: A 17-Year Street-View Study of Daerim-Dong, Seoul
by Yu Gu, Rui Kang and Ha Wang
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2026, 15(6), 266; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi15060266 - 12 Jun 2026
Viewed by 178
Abstract
Urban ethnic enclaves are historically layered cultural landscapes whose public signage encodes community vitality, power relations, and cultural identity in ways that conventional land-use inventories cannot capture. Addressing the absence of scalable, longitudinal computational methods for monitoring such at-risk landscapes, this study develops [...] Read more.
Urban ethnic enclaves are historically layered cultural landscapes whose public signage encodes community vitality, power relations, and cultural identity in ways that conventional land-use inventories cannot capture. Addressing the absence of scalable, longitudinal computational methods for monitoring such at-risk landscapes, this study develops a reproducible digital-mapping pipeline that operationalises linguistic-landscape analysis as a cultural-heritage monitoring tool for heritage-sensitive land-use planning. Taking Daerim-dong—Seoul’s primary Joseonjok (Korean Chinese) enclave—as a case, we process 38,640 Kakao Map Road View images across 17 annual cross-sections (2008–2024). The pipeline integrates four methodological components: a bounded Spatial Weighting Correction that adjusts for uneven historical coverage; zero-shot semantic sign-function classification using the Qwen2-7B-Instruct model; an exploratory Difference-in-Differences design probing the 2016–2017 THAAD geopolitical disruption; and a Boundary Permeability Ratio (BPR) for tracking enclave edge dynamics. The results document a three-phase trajectory—rapid bilingual expansion (2008–2016), stabilisation (2016–2019), and a COVID-period contraction (2019–2024)—and show that raw sign-count metrics can systematically overstate minority-language decline during economic crises once crisis-period signage is isolated. The BPR is presented as a candidate leading indicator of enclave contraction whose operational thresholds remain to be calibrated through multi-enclave validation. As a methodological proof-of-concept, the study illustrates how computational street-view analysis can support cultural-landscape governance, offering urban planners and heritage managers an actionable, transparent baseline for monitoring at-risk multicultural urban landscapes. Full article
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23 pages, 4893 KB  
Article
Sustainable Lifecycle Management of Urban Rail Rolling Stock: A Data-Driven Approach to Optimal Replacement Timing
by Kwang-Kyun Lim and Gyeong-Cheol Yun
Sustainability 2026, 18(10), 4956; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18104956 - 14 May 2026
Viewed by 389
Abstract
This study investigates the optimal service life of urban Electric Multiple Units (EMUs) by integrating two complementary evaluation methods: economic service life and maintenance limit life. Using a comprehensive dataset from Seoul Metro—including 498 trainsets and 3554 overhaul records—this research examines the relationship [...] Read more.
This study investigates the optimal service life of urban Electric Multiple Units (EMUs) by integrating two complementary evaluation methods: economic service life and maintenance limit life. Using a comprehensive dataset from Seoul Metro—including 498 trainsets and 3554 overhaul records—this research examines the relationship between long-term maintenance costs, depreciation, and residual values. The economic service life is derived by minimizing the average equivalent annual cost (AEC), while maintenance limit life is assessed based on government guidelines that define cost-inefficiency thresholds. The analysis finds that the average economic service life for EMUs on Lines 1–4 is approximately 39 years—substantially exceeding the traditional 25-year benchmark used in past replacement policies. Maintenance limit life, based on permissible cost ratio thresholds, extends up to 47 years in some cases. Sensitivity analysis indicates that maintenance cost variations exert a greater influence on optimal service life than discount rate assumptions, highlighting the importance of strategic maintenance management. The proposed dual-framework approach demonstrates the limitations of rigid, statutory-based replacement planning and supports a transition toward data-driven, line-specific decision-making. The findings provide actionable insights for transit authorities and policymakers seeking to improve capital investment efficiency and optimize lifecycle management of urban rail assets. Beyond economic efficiency, the study contributes to sustainability by supporting resource-efficient asset utilization, reducing premature disposal of serviceable rolling stock, and lowering lifecycle carbon emissions associated with manufacturing new vehicles. The proposed framework thus offers a practical basis for integrating economic and environmental considerations in sustainable urban rail asset management. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Management)
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17 pages, 2550 KB  
Article
Urban Greenspace Governance in Three Asian Cities—Seoul, Taipei, and Tokyo—from Actor-Centered Power Perspectives
by Lankyung Kim, Chul Jeong and Min-Hui Chang
Urban Sci. 2026, 10(5), 269; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci10050269 - 13 May 2026
Viewed by 778
Abstract
This study applies the Actor-Centered Power (ACP) framework to analyze urban green-space governance in three Asian cities, focusing on how power is distributed and exercised among actors in the management of their representative multipurpose parks: Seoul Forest in Seoul, Da’an Forest Park in [...] Read more.
This study applies the Actor-Centered Power (ACP) framework to analyze urban green-space governance in three Asian cities, focusing on how power is distributed and exercised among actors in the management of their representative multipurpose parks: Seoul Forest in Seoul, Da’an Forest Park in Taipei, and Yoyogi Park in Tokyo. Conventionally used in large-scale forest governance in the Global South, ACP is extended here to East Asian cities of the Global North. This can provide nascent insight into how coercion, (dis)incentives, and information operate across different institutions. The study found that the initial formation of the parks was driven by potent actors through coercive measures in all three cities. While Seoul maintains centralized statutory governance under the national act, Taipei adopts a decentralized governance model that foregrounds subordinate actors, notably exemplified by the higher education-oriented foundation. This organization promotes citizen science involvement and community-based stewardship. Tokyo, by contrast, uses a public–private partnership model that supports private sector commercial collaboration. This comparative case study demonstrates that the ACP framework is well-suited for analyzing urban green-space governance, as it distinguishes between power subjects (potentates and subordinates) and power sources (coercion, incentives, and information), providing theoretical and managerial implications. Through the lens of the ACP framework, this study argues that distinct institutional arrangements produce divergent power configurations for urban green-space management even within similarly developed urban contexts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Urban Governance in the 21st Century: Emerging Models and Challenges)
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19 pages, 4320 KB  
Article
Personal PM2.5 Exposure Using Time-Weighted Average Scenarios in the Seoul Metropolitan Area
by Jae-Won Choi, Shin-Young Park and Cheol-Min Lee
Toxics 2026, 14(5), 426; https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics14050426 - 12 May 2026
Viewed by 439
Abstract
Personal exposure assessment is essential in environmental and epidemiological studies. However, conventional methods often do not adequately reflect individuals’ spatiotemporal activity characteristics. This study evaluates the suitability of personal exposure assessment methods using PM2.5 as a case study, comparing measured personal exposure [...] Read more.
Personal exposure assessment is essential in environmental and epidemiological studies. However, conventional methods often do not adequately reflect individuals’ spatiotemporal activity characteristics. This study evaluates the suitability of personal exposure assessment methods using PM2.5 as a case study, comparing measured personal exposure concentrations with three exposure estimation scenarios (S1–S3). S1 relies on fixed-site monitoring data, S2 incorporates location-based outdoor concentrations and a single indoor measurement, and S3 integrates individual location with microenvironment-specific concentrations. Using personal PM2.5 measurements and time–activity data (TAD) from adults in the Seoul metropolitan area, exposure levels showed substantial variation depending on activity patterns and time spent in different microenvironments. Time-weighted average (TWA)-based estimates differed across scenarios; among them, the one integrating microenvironmental concentrations and TAD showed the closest agreement with measured exposure. In contrast, S1 and S2 generally overestimated exposure. Although S3 slightly underestimated short-term high-concentration events, it showed high correlation (r = 0.78) and low errors (RMSE = 4.79, MAE = 3.70), effectively capturing relative variability in personal exposure. These results suggest that integrating time–activity patterns with microenvironmental concentrations improves the accuracy and reliability of personal exposure assessment and is expected to further enhance the reliability of personal exposure assessment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Atmospheric Emissions, Exposure, Monitoring and Prediction)
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17 pages, 1511 KB  
Article
A Study on the Influence of Tourist Comfort in Museum Agglomerations on the Sustainable Development of Urban Tourism: Evidence from Jongno-gu, Seoul, from the Perspective of Chinese Tourists
by Hang Zhang, Jinghao Zhao, Xiaolong Zhao, Eunkil Cho and Heangwoo Lee
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 3819; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18083819 - 12 Apr 2026
Viewed by 697
Abstract
This study examines how perceived tourist comfort in museum agglomerations influences tourist satisfaction, museum agglomeration vitality, and the cultural sustainability of urban tourism, focusing on Jongno-gu, Seoul, based on the experiences of Chinese tourists. Moving beyond facility-centered evaluations of individual museums, the study [...] Read more.
This study examines how perceived tourist comfort in museum agglomerations influences tourist satisfaction, museum agglomeration vitality, and the cultural sustainability of urban tourism, focusing on Jongno-gu, Seoul, based on the experiences of Chinese tourists. Moving beyond facility-centered evaluations of individual museums, the study conceptualizes museum agglomerations as continuous tourism environments shaped by movement, guidance, congestion, waiting, rest, and overall usability. Four latent constructs—Tourist Comfort, Tourist Satisfaction, Museum Agglomeration Vitality, and Cultural Sustainability of Urban Tourism—were tested using structural equation modeling. The results show that Tourist Comfort significantly enhances both Tourist Satisfaction and Museum Agglomeration Vitality, while Tourist Satisfaction further strengthens Museum Agglomeration Vitality. In addition, both Tourist Satisfaction and Museum Agglomeration Vitality have significant positive effects on the Cultural Sustainability of Urban Tourism. Tourist Comfort also exerts an indirect influence on cultural sustainability through the mediating pathways of Tourist Satisfaction and Museum Agglomeration Vitality. These findings contribute a demand-side, cluster-level explanation of how museum districts become experientially activated for tourists, while also indicating that the results should be interpreted as case-based evidence for Chinese tourists in Jongno-gu rather than as a universally generalizable model. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cultural Heritage and Sustainable Urban Tourism)
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12 pages, 224 KB  
Article
Turning Constraints into Adaptive Behavior: Secondary Pre-Service Teachers’ Bricolage and Agency in Physical Education
by Hyeyoun Park
Behav. Sci. 2026, 16(4), 515; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs16040515 - 29 Mar 2026
Viewed by 609
Abstract
As secondary educational environments face increasing volatility due to systemic resource constraints and pedagogical uncertainty, understanding the behavioral mechanisms of teacher agency has become paramount. While traditional teacher education has emphasized the execution of standardized curricula, the current era demands a fundamental shift [...] Read more.
As secondary educational environments face increasing volatility due to systemic resource constraints and pedagogical uncertainty, understanding the behavioral mechanisms of teacher agency has become paramount. While traditional teacher education has emphasized the execution of standardized curricula, the current era demands a fundamental shift toward adaptive expertise and psychological resilience. This study investigates the processes by which 28 secondary pre-service physical education teachers (PSTs) navigate instructional resource deficits through the lens of adaptive behavior (bricolage) and ecological teacher agency. Utilizing a qualitative case study design, I collected data from two universities in Seoul, South Korea, through reflective journals, revised lesson plans, and micro-teaching video analysis reports over a full 15-week semester. The results identified five coordinates of an adaptive instructional design compass: (1) Facing Constraints, (2) Resource Mining, (3) Contextual Engineering, (4) Simulation, and (5) Reflective Participation. These coordinates represent a transformative behavioral process where PSTs convert environmental deficits into professional assets. The findings reveal distinct adaptation styles based on psychological dispositions: the analytically oriented group (Group A) prioritized structural redesign through digital tools, while the narratively oriented group (Group B) utilized human-centric somatic metaphors and virtual rehearsals to bridge the epistemic void. Crucially, this research suggests that teacher adaptation is not a mere technical adjustment but a dynamic behavioral achievement of agency that ensures the long-term instructional quality of physical education. I propose that teacher education programs should incorporate “Safe Deficit” simulations—carefully calibrated instructional constraints—to trigger adaptive behavior and ensure that future educators can thrive in unpredictable pedagogical contexts without the risk of professional burnout. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Educational Psychology)
15 pages, 344 KB  
Article
Prevalence and Risk Factors of Anal Human Papillomavirus and Anal–Cervical Concordance Among Women of Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
by Zizipho Z. A. Mbulawa, Laston Gonah, Lindiwe M. Faye and Charles B. Businge
Microbiol. Res. 2026, 17(3), 62; https://doi.org/10.3390/microbiolres17030062 - 20 Mar 2026
Viewed by 862
Abstract
Anal human papillomavirus (HPV) and cancer prevalence are increasing. Therefore, this study investigated the prevalence of anal HPV and associated risk factors, as well as HPV genotype-specific concordance at cervical and anal sites and associated risk factors among women of Eastern Cape Province, [...] Read more.
Anal human papillomavirus (HPV) and cancer prevalence are increasing. Therefore, this study investigated the prevalence of anal HPV and associated risk factors, as well as HPV genotype-specific concordance at cervical and anal sites and associated risk factors among women of Eastern Cape Province, South Africa. A total of 326 women aged 18–60 were recruited from an Eastern Cape community health facility. HPV DNA was detected in cervical and anal specimens using the Seegene Anyplex™ and Allplex™ II HPV28 assay (Seegene Inc., Seoul, Republic of Korea), respectively. Anal HPV was detected in 68.1% (95% CI: 62.9–72.9) and independent predictors were cervical HPV positivity (AOR: 2.40, 95% CI: 1.39–4.14, p = 0.002), abnormal cytology (AOR: 3.12, 95% CI: 1.29–7.55, p = 0.012), single marital status (AOR: 3.55, 95% CI: 1.24–10.17, p = 0.018), and having more than three lifetime sexual partners (AOR: 1.75, 95% CI: 1.03–2.98, p = 0.039). Anal high risk (HR)-HPV types were detected in 50.9%, with HPV-58 (13.2%), HPV-68 (11.0%) and HPV-52 (9.2%) being the most dominant types. HPV genotype-specific cervical and anal concordance was observed in 33.5% of cases, with HPV-58 (7.1%), HPV-68 (4.9%), and HPV-35 (4.6%) being the most dominant. Women who were positive for cervical HPV infection (AOR: 3.24, 95% CI: 2.36–4.45, p < 0.001), anal HPV infection (AOR: 2.70, 95% CI: 2.01–3.63, p < 0.001) and abnormal cervical cytology (AOR: 2.01, 95% CI: 1.36–2.96, p < 0.001) had substantially higher odds of anal–cervical HPV concordance compared to those who were negative. High anal HPV prevalence and HPV genotype-specific anal and cervical concordance were observed among Eastern Cape women. Understanding anal HPV, HPV genotype-specific anal–cervical concordance, and associated factors can contribute to strategies towards anal HPV and associated disease prevention. These findings warrant further longitudinal investigation in future studies. Full article
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23 pages, 2213 KB  
Article
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)-Supported Participatory Playground Regeneration: Social Value Creation Through Child Participation in Seoul, Korea
by Younsun Heo
Sustainability 2026, 18(6), 3000; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18063000 - 18 Mar 2026
Viewed by 542
Abstract
Urban playgrounds are vital public spaces that support children’s play, social interaction, and well-being. However, many playgrounds in socially disadvantaged or aging urban areas experience physical deterioration, limited play diversity, and declining use. Although corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives have increasingly supported playground [...] Read more.
Urban playgrounds are vital public spaces that support children’s play, social interaction, and well-being. However, many playgrounds in socially disadvantaged or aging urban areas experience physical deterioration, limited play diversity, and declining use. Although corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives have increasingly supported playground regeneration, many projects continue to emphasize short-term physical improvements rather than participatory processes and social value creation. This study conceptualizes CSR-supported, child-participatory playground regeneration as a social value creation process and examines how CSR enables process continuity through a structured six-stage participatory approach spanning planning, design, construction, and post-opening use. Two cases were selected from the “Save the Playground” program in Seoul, Korea: Saerok Children’s Park in a stable residential neighborhood and Mukjeong Children’s Park in a high-mobility, multicultural commercial district. Using a qualitative multiple-case study design, the study triangulates workshop outputs, observational records, facilitator field notes, and official program documents through thematic and cross-case analyses. The findings indicate that CSR support primarily ensured process continuity and facilitated multi-actor coordination across project stages. By securing implementation continuity and stabilizing governance arrangements, CSR support allowed participatory outputs to be iteratively translated into design development and post-opening evaluation. Post-opening outcomes differed by urban context; nevertheless, both cases showed social value creation through strengthened place attachment, responsibility-oriented use, and inclusive mixed-group play. This study advances a cross-case analytical framework linking urban context, participatory mechanisms, and post-opening social value outcomes, contributing to a more context-sensitive understanding of CSR-supported participatory design processes and their implications for sustainable urban public space development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Urban and Rural Development)
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16 pages, 2768 KB  
Article
The Effects of Different Intraoral Scanners, Scan Levels and Splinting Techniques on the Accuracy of Digital Impressions: An In Vitro Study
by Selin Atay and Ayşegül Kurt
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(6), 2872; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16062872 - 17 Mar 2026
Viewed by 796
Abstract
The accuracy of digital impressions in fully edentulous cases is limited by the lack of anatomical reference structures, potentially affecting passive fit. The effects of scanner type, impression level, and scan body splinting on accuracy remain insufficiently elucidated. This in vitro study aimed [...] Read more.
The accuracy of digital impressions in fully edentulous cases is limited by the lack of anatomical reference structures, potentially affecting passive fit. The effects of scanner type, impression level, and scan body splinting on accuracy remain insufficiently elucidated. This in vitro study aimed to evaluate the effects of different intraoral scanners, scanning levels, and scan body splinting methods on digital impression accuracy. A fully edentulous mandibular model with four implants (All-on-4) was fabricated, and scan bodies were connected at either the implant or multi-unit abutment level. Five splinting methods (nonsplinted, floss, orthodontic elastomeric, chain attachments, and single attachments) were applied, creating 10 experimental groups. Each group was scanned using three intraoral scanners: iTero Lumina (Align Technology, Tempe, AZ, USA), TRIOS 3 (3Shape A/S, Copenhagen, Denmark), and Medit i700 (Medit Corp, Seoul, Republic of Korea), with four repeated scans per scanner (120 scans total). Trueness and precision were assessed based on linear and angular deviations using Geomagic Control X (3D Systems, Rock Hill, SC, USA). Scanner type and scanning level significantly affected accuracy (p < 0.05), with TRIOS 3 showing higher deviations, while multi-unit abutments reduced deviations. Splinting methods showed no significant effect on accuracy, and precision did not differ among groups. Scanner type and scanning level significantly influenced digital impression accuracy; however, splinting methods yielded no significant effect. Precision remained comparable among groups. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Digital Dentistry and Oral Implantology)
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12 pages, 1586 KB  
Article
Characterizing Visual Field Defects with Tangent Screen Perimetry in Organic Versus Non-Organic Pathologies
by Hyunmin Na, Jeong-Min Hwang, Hee Kyung Yang and Sang Beom Han
Diagnostics 2026, 16(6), 842; https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics16060842 - 12 Mar 2026
Viewed by 460
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Tangent screen perimetry is a valuable tool for detecting functional visual loss (FVL), which is suspected when the visual field fails to expand as expected with distance. However, there is currently a lack of research documenting the specific tangent screen patterns [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Tangent screen perimetry is a valuable tool for detecting functional visual loss (FVL), which is suspected when the visual field fails to expand as expected with distance. However, there is currently a lack of research documenting the specific tangent screen patterns produced by patients with organic visual loss (OVL), defined as visual field loss caused by identifiable structural or neurologic pathology. This study aims to characterize the visual field patterns observed in patients with organic and functional pathologies during tangent screen perimetry and evaluate its diagnostic efficacy in confirming FVL. Methods: Medical records of patients from Seoul National University Bundang Hospital between August 2009 and August 2019 were reviewed. All subjects underwent a comprehensive neuro-ophthalmologic examination with additional testing to confirm the diagnosis of OVL or FVL. A total of 126 eyes from 76 patients exhibiting visual field constriction within 30 degrees were included. The tangent ratio (TR) was defined as the average visual field (in radians) at a far distance (e.g., 2 m) divided by the average visual field at a near distance (e.g., 1 m). The visual field patterns and TR were analyzed, and the diagnostic value of TR in detecting FVL was determined. Results: The clover leaf pattern and reversal pattern were observed in 8.8% and 12.7% of FVL cases, respectively, whereas no such patterns were found in OVL cases (p = 0.002, p < 0.001). The TR varied from 0.50 to 1.06 (mean 0.77 ± 0.16) in OVL and from 0.33 to 1.03 (mean 0.65 ± 0.15) in FVL (p < 0.001). Younger age, a clover leaf pattern or reversal pattern on tangent screen perimetry, and a lower TR were significantly associated with FVL. Conclusions: Tangent screen perimetry is an effective adjunct for differentiating functional from organic visual field loss, particularly in cases of visual field constriction. Full article
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16 pages, 1559 KB  
Article
Analysis of Policy Effectiveness for Curbing Real Estate Speculation in Korea—Seoul City Areas Subject to Permission of Land Transaction
by Kyung-Hyun Park, Seung-Ho Cha and Chang-Moo Lee
Land 2026, 15(3), 415; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15030415 - 3 Mar 2026
Viewed by 700
Abstract
This study empirically examines the impact of the Areas subject to permission of transaction (ASPLT) implemented by Seoul City on local real estate markets. Focusing on the case of the Seoul International District (MICE project area), where the regulated area (the geo-graphical districts [...] Read more.
This study empirically examines the impact of the Areas subject to permission of transaction (ASPLT) implemented by Seoul City on local real estate markets. Focusing on the case of the Seoul International District (MICE project area), where the regulated area (the geo-graphical districts subject to ASPLT) was initially designated, lifted, and later re-imposed, the analysis employs a modified repeat sales Difference-in-Differences (DID) methodology to assess its policy effect on housing price stabilization. The results indicate that the regulated areas experienced more subdued transaction volumes and price increases compared to non-regulated areas, suggesting the policy was effective in curbing short-term speculative demand. Additionally, neighboring areas exhibited signs of spillover effects due to displaced investment interest. The findings highlight both the utility and limitations of localized real estate controls and offer empirical insights for future policy design. Full article
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26 pages, 3920 KB  
Article
A Benefit-Cost Analysis of Multifunctional Performance: Comparative Assessment of Low-Impact Development Facilities in Seoul, South Korea
by Amjad Khan, Yoonkyung Park, Jongpyo Park and Reeho Kim
Sustainability 2026, 18(5), 2313; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18052313 - 27 Feb 2026
Viewed by 524
Abstract
Conventional centralized drainage systems exacerbate urban flooding, pollution, and water stress. Low-impact development (LID) is a decentralized alternative; however, its multifunctional benefits, which go beyond the control of stormwater, are often undervalued in planning. This study fills this gap by developing an integrated [...] Read more.
Conventional centralized drainage systems exacerbate urban flooding, pollution, and water stress. Low-impact development (LID) is a decentralized alternative; however, its multifunctional benefits, which go beyond the control of stormwater, are often undervalued in planning. This study fills this gap by developing an integrated benefit valuation framework to systematically quantify and estimate the economic value of the co-benefits of five widely implemented LID facilities (vegetated swale, green roof, in-filtration ditch, infiltration trench, and permeable pavement) in Seoul, South Korea. The framework combines annual benefits in four key sectors: water management (runoff reduction), energy savings (building cooling/heating demands), air quality (pollutant deposition and avoided emissions) and climate change (carbon sequestration and mitigation). Applying a transparent, localized spreadsheet model, the results indicate significant multifunctional value for LID systems. While water management provides the primary benefit, there is substantial added value in energy, air quality, and climate co-benefits. In the case of green roofs, such ancillary benefits can exceed hydrological values. The analysis further reveals a consistent scale-benefit relationship and a clear trade-off between the magnitude of benefits and the cost of implementation. This provides evidence of the need for context-sensitive, portfolio-based LID planning. The proposed framework is a practical decision support tool for urban planners and policymakers to consider LID not only as a stormwater solution but also as multifunctional green infrastructure that simultaneously promotes urban water security, energy efficiency, environmental quality, and climate resilience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Water Management)
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13 pages, 600 KB  
Article
Hospital Surgical Volume and Regional Disparities in Congenital Heart Surgery Outcomes: Analysis of Korean National Health Insurance Claims Data, 2002–2021
by Ji-Sook Kim, Hyeong-taek Woo, Jong-Yeon Kim, Hang-Me Nam and Hye-Jin Lee
Medicina 2026, 62(2), 355; https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina62020355 - 11 Feb 2026
Viewed by 595
Abstract
Background and Objectives: The volume–outcome relationship in congenital heart surgery (CHS) has been widely reported internationally, but systematic nationwide evidence from Korea remains limited. Given the concentration of high-volume centers in the Seoul Capital Area (SCA), we aimed to examine whether hospital [...] Read more.
Background and Objectives: The volume–outcome relationship in congenital heart surgery (CHS) has been widely reported internationally, but systematic nationwide evidence from Korea remains limited. Given the concentration of high-volume centers in the Seoul Capital Area (SCA), we aimed to examine whether hospital surgical volume was associated with short-term mortality and to what extent regional disparities could be explained by differences in surgical volume. Materials and Methods: We conducted a nationwide retrospective cohort study of 31,150 patients who underwent CHS in 91 hospitals in Korea between 2002 and 2021 using National Health Insurance claims data. Hospitals were classified by location (SCA vs. non-SCA). Annual surgical volume was defined using two approaches, (i) above vs. below the overall mean annual volume (17.1 cases per hospital), and (ii) three categories (≤20, 21–40, and >40 cases/year). The primary outcome was 30-day mortality. Multivariable logistic regression adjusted for case mix, including J-STAT category, sex, hospital type, age, prematurity, and low birth weight. Hospital-level variation was further evaluated using generalized linear mixed models with random hospital intercepts, and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) were estimated to quantify between-hospital variation and the explanatory contribution of surgical volume. Results: Overall 30-day mortality was 1.99%, with higher mortality observed in non-SCA hospitals compared with SCA hospitals (3.19% vs. 1.57%). After adjustment, lower annual surgical volume was strongly associated with higher 30-day mortality. Compared with hospitals performing >40 cases/year, the adjusted odds ratios were 4.13 (95% CI, 3.30–5.17) for hospitals performing 21–40 cases/year and 4.95 (95% CI, 3.98–5.95) for those performing ≤20 cases/year. In multilevel analyses, annual surgical volume accounted for 54% of the between-hospital variation in 30-day mortality. Adjustment for surgical volume substantially attenuated the regional disparity, with the odds ratio for non-SCA versus SCA hospitals decreasing from 2.12 (95% CI, 1.80–2.49) to 1.14 (95% CI, 0.95–1.37). Conclusions: A strong volume–outcome relationship exists in congenital heart surgery in Korea, with excess mortality concentrated in low-volume hospitals rather than regional location itself. Regional disparities in outcomes appear largely attributable to the uneven distribution of surgical volume. Strategies focused on service consolidation and strengthened referral to high-volume centers may be effective in reducing inter-hospital variation and improving national outcomes in pediatric cardiac surgery. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Pediatrics)
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17 pages, 1250 KB  
Article
Users’ Willingness to Shift According to Interregional Bus Type Based on the Latent Class Mixed Logit Model: A Case Study in Seoul Metropolitan Area
by Hwan-Seung Lee, Seung-Min Kim, Jun-Young Kim and Ho-Chul Park
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(4), 1757; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16041757 - 10 Feb 2026
Viewed by 537
Abstract
In the Seoul Metropolitan Area of Korea, ongoing urban expansion continuously increases commuting demand toward Seoul, resulting in severe congestion in the urban core due to the large inflow of interregional buses. In response, the government proposed the introduction of a transfer-type interregional [...] Read more.
In the Seoul Metropolitan Area of Korea, ongoing urban expansion continuously increases commuting demand toward Seoul, resulting in severe congestion in the urban core due to the large inflow of interregional buses. In response, the government proposed the introduction of a transfer-type interregional bus system as an alternative to alleviate downtown congestion. Transfer-type buses terminate at the Seoul boundary and rely on passenger transfers to other modes for access to the urban core. By shortening route lengths, this system enables reduced headways and increased service frequency. This approach can mitigate urban congestion. However, required transfers may generate user resistance, highlighting the need to analyze users’ willingness to shift. This study applies a latent class mixed logit model to stated preference survey data collected from 502 interregional bus users in order to capture heterogeneous preferences. As a result, users are grouped into three classes: transfer-avoidant, cost-sensitive, and time-sensitive. In all segments, more than half of respondents express a willingness to shift, with the highest level observed in the cost-sensitive group (64.3%). The class-specific choice models reveal that heterogeneity exists not only across segments but also within each segment. These findings indicate that a transfer-type interregional bus policy cannot operate uniformly across all users. Instead, a targeted strategy that simultaneously improves travel time and travel cost for subgroups with conversion potential is required. By systematically identifying users’ willingness to shift and heterogeneous response structures prior to implementation, this study provides empirical evidence to support the design of effective policies and operational strategies for transfer-type interregional buses. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Transportation and Future Mobility)
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16 pages, 6120 KB  
Article
An Application of the Grid-Based Two-Step Floating Catchment Area Method to Assess the Spatial Accessibility of Green Spaces in Seoul, South Korea
by Jin Shin and Jinwoo Park
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2026, 15(2), 71; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi15020071 - 10 Feb 2026
Viewed by 1205
Abstract
The conventional Two-Step Floating Catchment Area (2SFCA) method treats large-scale facilities as single centroids, leading to systematic under- and overestimation of spatial accessibility measures. To address this limitation, this study proposes a Grid-based G2SFCA methodology that disaggregates supply facilities into grid cells to [...] Read more.
The conventional Two-Step Floating Catchment Area (2SFCA) method treats large-scale facilities as single centroids, leading to systematic under- and overestimation of spatial accessibility measures. To address this limitation, this study proposes a Grid-based G2SFCA methodology that disaggregates supply facilities into grid cells to better capture their shape and assigns them as multiple access points. Using green spaces in Seoul, South Korea, as a case study, we compared the measures from the proposed method with the conventional centroid-based approach using descriptive statistics and spatial inequality indices. The results indicate that the grid-based method significantly stabilized the distribution, nearly halving the standard deviation and reducing the Gini coefficient. In addition, our proposed method corrected the centroid-induced overestimation of accessibility and provided a more precise identification of underserved areas. By resolving the supply-side centroid problem, our study provides a more robust and realistic foundation for assessing spatial equity in urban planning and resource allocation. Full article
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