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28 pages, 146959 KiB  
Article
An Integrated Remote Sensing and Near-Surface Geophysical Approach to Detect and Characterize Active and Capable Faults in the Urban Area of Florence (Italy)
by Luigi Piccardi, Antonello D’Alessandro, Eutizio Vittori, Vittorio D’Intinosante and Massimo Baglione
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(15), 2644; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17152644 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 217
Abstract
The NW–SE-trending Firenze-Pistoia Basin (FPB) is an intermontane tectonic depression in the Northern Apennines (Italy) bounded to the northeast by a SW-dipping normal fault system. Although it has moderate historical seismicity (maximum estimated Mw 5.5 in 1895), the FPB lacks detailed characterization of [...] Read more.
The NW–SE-trending Firenze-Pistoia Basin (FPB) is an intermontane tectonic depression in the Northern Apennines (Italy) bounded to the northeast by a SW-dipping normal fault system. Although it has moderate historical seismicity (maximum estimated Mw 5.5 in 1895), the FPB lacks detailed characterization of its recent tectonic structures, unlike those of nearby basins that have produced Mw > 6 events. This study focuses on the southeastern sector of the basin, including the urban area of Florence, using tectonic geomorphology derived from remote sensing, in particular LiDAR data, field verification, and high-resolution geophysical surveys such as electrical resistivity tomography and seismic reflection profiles. The integration of these techniques enabled interpretation of the subdued and anthropogenically masked tectonic structures, allowing the identification of Holocene activity and significant, although limited, surface vertical offset for three NE–SW-striking normal faults, the Peretola, Scandicci, and Maiano faults. The Scandicci and Maiano faults appear to segment the southeasternmost strand of the master fault of the FPB, the Fiesole Fault, which now shows activity only along isolated segments and cannot be considered a continuous active fault. From empirical relationships, the Scandicci Fault, the most relevant among the three active faults, ~9 km long within the basin and with an approximate Late Quaternary slip rate of ~0.2 mm/year, might source Mw > 5.5 earthquakes. These findings highlight the need to reassess the local seismic hazard for more informed urban planning and for better preservation of the cultural and architectural heritage of Florence and the other artistic towns located in the FPB. Full article
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20 pages, 8292 KiB  
Article
Landscape Zoning Strategies for Small Mountainous Towns: Insights from Yuqian Town in China
by Qingwei Tian, Yi Xu, Shaojun Yan, Yizhou Tao, Xiaohua Wu and Bifan Cai
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 6919; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17156919 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 234
Abstract
Small towns in mountainous regions face significant challenges in formulating effective landscape zoning strategies due to pronounced landscape fragmentation, which is driven by both the dominance of large-scale forest resources and the lack of coordination between administrative planning departments. To tackle this problem, [...] Read more.
Small towns in mountainous regions face significant challenges in formulating effective landscape zoning strategies due to pronounced landscape fragmentation, which is driven by both the dominance of large-scale forest resources and the lack of coordination between administrative planning departments. To tackle this problem, this study focused on Yuqian, a quintessential small mountainous town in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province. The town’s layout was divided into a grid network measuring 70 m × 70 m. A two-step cluster process was employed using ArcGIS and SPSS software to analyze five landscape variables: altitude, slope, land use, heritage density, and visual visibility. Further, eCognition software’s semi-automated segmentation technique, complemented by manual adjustments, helped delineate landscape character types and areas. The overlay analysis integrated these areas with administrative village units, identifying four landscape character types across 35 character areas, which were recategorized into four planning and management zones: urban comprehensive service areas, agricultural and cultural tourism development areas, industrial development growth areas, and mountain forest ecological conservation areas. This result optimizes the current zoning types. These zones closely match governmental sustainable development zoning requirements. Based on these findings, we propose integrated landscape management and conservation strategies, including the cautious expansion of urban areas, leveraging agricultural and cultural tourism, ensuring industrial activities do not impact the natural and village environment adversely, and prioritizing ecological conservation in sensitive areas. This approach integrates spatial and administrative dimensions to enhance landscape connectivity and resource sustainability, providing key guidance for small town development in mountainous regions with unique environmental and cultural contexts. Full article
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52 pages, 3733 KiB  
Article
A Hybrid Deep Reinforcement Learning and Metaheuristic Framework for Heritage Tourism Route Optimization in Warin Chamrap’s Old Town
by Rapeepan Pitakaso, Thanatkij Srichok, Surajet Khonjun, Natthapong Nanthasamroeng, Arunrat Sawettham, Paweena Khampukka, Sairoong Dinkoksung, Kanya Jungvimut, Ganokgarn Jirasirilerd, Chawapot Supasarn, Pornpimol Mongkhonngam and Yong Boonarree
Heritage 2025, 8(8), 301; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8080301 - 28 Jul 2025
Viewed by 636
Abstract
Designing optimal heritage tourism routes in secondary cities involves complex trade-offs between cultural richness, travel time, carbon emissions, spatial coherence, and group satisfaction. This study addresses the Personalized Group Trip Design Problem (PGTDP) under real-world constraints by proposing DRL–IMVO–GAN—a hybrid multi-objective optimization framework [...] Read more.
Designing optimal heritage tourism routes in secondary cities involves complex trade-offs between cultural richness, travel time, carbon emissions, spatial coherence, and group satisfaction. This study addresses the Personalized Group Trip Design Problem (PGTDP) under real-world constraints by proposing DRL–IMVO–GAN—a hybrid multi-objective optimization framework that integrates Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) for policy-guided initialization, an Improved Multiverse Optimizer (IMVO) for global search, and a Generative Adversarial Network (GAN) for local refinement and solution diversity. The model operates within a digital twin of Warin Chamrap’s old town, leveraging 92 POIs, congestion heatmaps, and behaviorally clustered tourist profiles. The proposed method was benchmarked against seven state-of-the-art techniques, including PSO + DRL, Genetic Algorithm with Multi-Neighborhood Search (Genetic + MNS), Dual-ACO, ALNS-ASP, and others. Results demonstrate that DRL–IMVO–GAN consistently dominates across key metrics. Under equal-objective weighting, it attained the highest heritage score (74.2), shortest travel time (21.3 min), and top satisfaction score (17.5 out of 18), along with the highest hypervolume (0.85) and Pareto Coverage Ratio (0.95). Beyond performance, the framework exhibits strong generalization in zero- and few-shot scenarios, adapting to unseen POIs, modified constraints, and new user profiles without retraining. These findings underscore the method’s robustness, behavioral coherence, and interpretability—positioning it as a scalable, intelligent decision-support tool for sustainable and user-centered cultural tourism planning in secondary cities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue AI and the Future of Cultural Heritage)
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49 pages, 21554 KiB  
Article
A Disappearing Cultural Landscape: The Heritage of German-Style Land Use and Pug-And-Pine Architecture in Australia
by Dirk H. R. Spennemann
Land 2025, 14(8), 1517; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14081517 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 272
Abstract
This paper investigates the cultural landscapes established by nineteenth-century German immigrants in South Australia and the southern Riverina of New South Wales, with particular attention to settlement patterns, architectural traditions and toponymic transformation. German immigration to Australia, though numerically modest compared to the [...] Read more.
This paper investigates the cultural landscapes established by nineteenth-century German immigrants in South Australia and the southern Riverina of New South Wales, with particular attention to settlement patterns, architectural traditions and toponymic transformation. German immigration to Australia, though numerically modest compared to the Americas, significantly shaped local communities, especially due to religious cohesion among Lutheran migrants. These settlers established distinct, enduring rural enclaves characterized by linguistic, religious and architectural continuity. The paper examines three manifestations of these cultural landscapes. A rich toponymic landscape was created by imposing on natural landscape features and newly founded settlements the names of the communities from which the German settlers originated. It discusses the erosion of German toponyms under wartime nationalist pressures, the subsequent partial reinstatement and the implications for cultural memory. The study traces the second manifestation of a cultural landscapes in the form of nucleated villages such as Hahndorf, Bethanien and Lobethal, which often followed the Hufendorf or Straßendorf layout, integrating Silesian land-use principles into the Australian context. Intensification of land use through housing subdivisions in two communities as well as agricultural intensification through broad acre farming has led to the fragmentation (town) and obliteration (rural) of the uniquely German form of land use. The final focus is the material expression of cultural identity through architecture, particularly the use of traditional Fachwerk (half-timbered) construction and adaptations such as pug-and-pine walling suited to local materials and climate. The paper examines domestic forms, including the distinctive black kitchen, and highlights how environmental and functional adaptation reshaped German building traditions in the antipodes. Despite a conservation movement and despite considerable documentation research in the late twentieth century, the paper shows that most German rural structures remain unlisted and vulnerable. Heritage neglect, rural depopulation, economic rationalization, lack of commercial relevance and local government policy have accelerated the decline of many of these vernacular buildings. The study concludes by problematizing the sustainability of conserving German Australian rural heritage in the face of regulatory, economic and demographic pressures. With its layering of intangible (toponymic), structural (buildings) and land use (cadastral) features, the examination of the cultural landscape established by nineteenth-century German immigrants adds to the body of literature on immigrant communities, settler colonialism and landscape research. Full article
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34 pages, 11148 KiB  
Article
Research on Construction of Suzhou’s Historical Architectural Heritage Corridors and Cultural Relics-Themed Trails Based on Current Effective Conductance (CEC) Model
by Yao Wu, Yonglan Wu, Mingrui Miao, Muxian Wang, Xiaobin Li and Antonio Candeias
Buildings 2025, 15(15), 2605; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15152605 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 314
Abstract
As the cradle of Jiangnan culture, Suzhou is home to a dense concentration of historical architectural heritage that is currently facing existential threats from rapid urbanization. This study aims to develop a spatial heritage corridor network for conservation and sustainable utilization. Using kernel [...] Read more.
As the cradle of Jiangnan culture, Suzhou is home to a dense concentration of historical architectural heritage that is currently facing existential threats from rapid urbanization. This study aims to develop a spatial heritage corridor network for conservation and sustainable utilization. Using kernel density estimation, this study identifies 15 kernel density groups, along with the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP), to pinpoint clusters of historical architectural heritage and assess the involved resistance factors. Current Effective Conductance (CEC) theory is further applied to model spatial flow relationships among heritage nodes, leading to the delineation of 27 heritage corridors and revealing a spatial structure characterized by one primary core, one secondary core, and multiple peripheral zones. Based on 15 source points, six cultural relics-themed routes are proposed—three land-based and three waterfront routes—connecting historical sites, towns, and ecological areas. The study further recommends a resource management strategy centered on departmental collaboration, digital integration, and community co-governance. By integrating historical architectural types, settlement forms, and ecological patterns, the research builds a multi-scale narrative and experience system that addresses fragmentation while improving coordination and sustainability. This framework delivers practical advice on heritage conservation and cultural tourism development in Suzhou and the broader Jiangnan region. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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44 pages, 15871 KiB  
Article
Space Gene Quantification and Mapping of Traditional Settlements in Jiangnan Water Town: Evidence from Yubei Village in the Nanxi River Basin
by Yuhao Huang, Zibin Ye, Qian Zhang, Yile Chen and Wenkun Wu
Buildings 2025, 15(14), 2571; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15142571 - 21 Jul 2025
Viewed by 338
Abstract
The spatial genes of rural settlements show a lot of different traditional settlement traits, which makes them a great starting point for studying rural spatial morphology. However, qualitative and macro-regional statistical indicators are usually used to find and extract rural settlement spatial genes. [...] Read more.
The spatial genes of rural settlements show a lot of different traditional settlement traits, which makes them a great starting point for studying rural spatial morphology. However, qualitative and macro-regional statistical indicators are usually used to find and extract rural settlement spatial genes. Taking Yubei Village in the Nanxi River Basin as an example, this study combined remote sensing images, real-time drone mapping, GIS (geographic information system), and space syntax, extracted 12 key indicators from five dimensions (landform and water features (environment), boundary morphology, spatial structure, street scale, and building scale), and quantitatively “decoded” the spatial genes of the settlement. The results showed that (1) the settlement is a “three mountains and one water” pattern, with cultivated land accounting for 37.4% and forest land accounting for 34.3% of the area within the 500 m buffer zone, while the landscape spatial diversity index (LSDI) is 0.708. (2) The boundary morphology is compact and agglomerated, and locally complex but overall orderly, with an aspect ratio of 1.04, a comprehensive morphological index of 1.53, and a comprehensive fractal dimension of 1.31. (3) The settlement is a “clan core–radial lane” network: the global integration degree of the axis to the holy hall is the highest (0.707), and the local integration degree R3 peak of the six-room ancestral hall reaches 2.255. Most lane widths are concentrated between 1.2 and 2.8 m, and the eaves are mostly higher than 4 m, forming a typical “narrow lanes and high houses” water town streetscape. (4) The architectural style is a combination of black bricks and gray tiles, gable roofs and horsehead walls, and “I”-shaped planes (63.95%). This study ultimately constructed a settlement space gene map and digital library, providing a replicable quantitative process for the diagnosis of Jiangnan water town settlements and heritage protection planning. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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26 pages, 6526 KiB  
Article
Typo-Morphology as a Conceptual Tool for Rural Settlements: Decoding Harran’s Vernacular Heritage with Reflections from Alberobello
by Ozge Ogut
Land 2025, 14(7), 1463; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14071463 - 14 Jul 2025
Viewed by 471
Abstract
Typo-morphology, as interpreted by the Italian School of Planning, provides an approach to investigate the relationship between built form and socio-cultural patterns in vernacular settlements. This study examines Harran, a heritage site in southeastern Türkiye known for its distinctive conic domed dwellings, to [...] Read more.
Typo-morphology, as interpreted by the Italian School of Planning, provides an approach to investigate the relationship between built form and socio-cultural patterns in vernacular settlements. This study examines Harran, a heritage site in southeastern Türkiye known for its distinctive conic domed dwellings, to explore how typo-morphological analysis can inform culturally sensitive design and adaptive reuse approaches. Despite its historical significance and inclusion in the UNESCO tentative list, Harran faces insufficient documentation, fragmented governance, limited conservation, and increasing pressure from urbanization and natural disasters. Using multiple sources and fieldwork, the research reconstructs the morphological evolution of Harran through diachronic maps across compound, district, and town scales. Reflections from Alberobello, Italy, i.e., the sister city of Harran and a UNESCO-listed town with a similarly unique vernacular fabric, provide a comparative view to explore different heritage management approaches. Harran evolved through informal, culture-driven growth, whereas Alberobello followed a regulated path. While Alberobello benefits from planned development and institutional preservation, Harran faces partial abandonment and neglect. By positioning typo-morphology as a conceptual planning tool, this paper emphasizes the need for context-responsive, ethically grounded, and inclusive approaches to heritage planning and conservation. It argues for planning practices that are not only technically competent but also attuned to place-based knowledge, local identities, and the long-term sustainability of living heritage. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Urban Morphology: A Perspective from Space (Second Edition))
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31 pages, 7121 KiB  
Article
Bidirectional Adaptation of Shared Autonomous Vehicles and Old Towns’ Urban Spaces: The Views of Residents on the Present
by Sucheng Yao, Kanjanee Budthimedhee, Sakol Teeravarunyou, Xinhao Chen and Ziqiang Zhang
World Electr. Veh. J. 2025, 16(7), 395; https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj16070395 - 14 Jul 2025
Viewed by 332
Abstract
The integration of shared autonomous vehicles into historic urban areas presents both opportunities and challenges. In heritage-rich environments like very old Asian (such as Suzhou old town, which serves as a use case example) or European (especially Mediterranean coastal cities) areas—characterized by narrow [...] Read more.
The integration of shared autonomous vehicles into historic urban areas presents both opportunities and challenges. In heritage-rich environments like very old Asian (such as Suzhou old town, which serves as a use case example) or European (especially Mediterranean coastal cities) areas—characterized by narrow alleys, dense development, and sensitive cultural landscapes—shared autonomous vehicle adoption raises critical spatial and social questions. This study employs a qualitative, user-centered approach based on the ripple model to examine residents’ perceptions across four dimensions: residential patterns, parking land use, regional accessibility, and street-level infrastructure. Semi-structured interviews with 27 participants reveal five key findings: (1) public trust depends on transparent decision-making and safety guarantees; (2) shared autonomous vehicles may reshape generational residential clustering; (3) the short-term parking demand remains stable, but the long-term reuse of space is feasible; (4) shared autonomous vehicles could enhance accessibility in historic cores; (5) transport systems may evolve toward intelligent, human-centered designs. Based on these insights, the study proposes three strategies: (1) transparent risk assessment using explainable artificial intelligence and digital twins; (2) polycentric development to diversify land use; (3) hierarchical street retrofitting to balance mobility and preservation. While this study is limited by its qualitative scope and absence of simulation, it offers a framework for culturally sensitive, small-scale interventions supporting sustainable mobility transitions in historic urban contexts. Full article
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13 pages, 2300 KiB  
Review
Research on Heritage Conservation and Development of Chinese Ancient Towns and Historic Districts Based on Knowledge Graph Analysis
by Wu Jin and Hiroatsu Fukuda
Buildings 2025, 15(14), 2459; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15142459 - 14 Jul 2025
Viewed by 395
Abstract
Historic districts of ancient towns serve as significant carriers of historical and cultural heritage while also being popular tourist destinations. Within the context of urbanization and organic renewal, the protection and development of historic districts have become crucial research topics. This study collects [...] Read more.
Historic districts of ancient towns serve as significant carriers of historical and cultural heritage while also being popular tourist destinations. Within the context of urbanization and organic renewal, the protection and development of historic districts have become crucial research topics. This study collects literature from the Web of Science database and applies manual screening to ensure relevance to the research theme. Using CiteSpace as an analytical tool, the study conducts a visual analysis from multiple perspectives, including keywords, writing time, authors, centrality, keyword clustering analysis, and timeline visualization. By constructing a knowledge graph, this research explores the key pathways and knowledge nodes in the organic renewal of spatial environments in historic districts of ancient towns. Based on literature clustering, the study categorizes research into four major aspects: heritage conservation, cultural and tourism development, spatial planning and design, and environmental enhancement. Based on this, universal strategies for the cultural and tourism development of historic districts in ancient towns are proposed. The research focus shifts from emphasizing cultural heritage preservation to the integrated development of culture and tourism. In the spatial development of historic districts, everyday life scenes should be incorporated while new technologies should be utilized to enhance environmental comfort. This paper summarizes the current research frontiers in this field and proposes future research trends, providing valuable references for scholars in related areas. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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24 pages, 18130 KiB  
Article
Designing the Future of Cultural Heritage: From a Primary School and Mansion to the Towns’ Memory Museum in Zara, Central Anatolia
by Gamze Kaymak Heinz
Buildings 2025, 15(14), 2419; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15142419 - 10 Jul 2025
Viewed by 336
Abstract
The preservation of historical monuments is vital, especially in societies that do not have a rich written history. One method to ensure the preservation and transmission of cultural heritage is to reuse abandoned historical buildings. “On-site documentation” is fundamental for effective adaptive reuse. [...] Read more.
The preservation of historical monuments is vital, especially in societies that do not have a rich written history. One method to ensure the preservation and transmission of cultural heritage is to reuse abandoned historical buildings. “On-site documentation” is fundamental for effective adaptive reuse. During this process, the plans and construction phases of many historical buildings are obtained for the first time. This study goes beyond theoretical boundaries and focuses on approaching the documentation, evaluation, reuse and preservation of cultural heritage from an operational perspective. The historical building in question was built as a primary school by Armenian craftsmen at the end of the 19th century in the town of Zara, Sivas. After changing hands, it became a mansion and is currently abandoned. This study discusses and proposes the buildings’ reuse as an urban memory museum by means of CAD-supported on-site analytical surveys based on classical, laser, and total station measurements. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Materials, and Repair & Renovation)
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29 pages, 8947 KiB  
Article
Cultural Heritage and Lacustrine Landscape Conservation: The Case of “Procession of The Wise Men” in Cajititlán, Jalisco
by David Fabricio Alvarado-Ramírez, Pedro Lina Manjarrez, José Teodoro Silva García, Gustavo Cruz-Cárdenas and Paloma Gallegos Tejeda
Sustainability 2025, 17(13), 6047; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17136047 - 2 Jul 2025
Viewed by 486
Abstract
Although lagoons are sites of water accumulation and runoff where a variety of animal species and plant varieties inhabit, they have also been positioned as spaces where rituals and religious practices take place, from which the transmission of knowledge emanates, and social activities [...] Read more.
Although lagoons are sites of water accumulation and runoff where a variety of animal species and plant varieties inhabit, they have also been positioned as spaces where rituals and religious practices take place, from which the transmission of knowledge emanates, and social activities are strengthened. The Laguna de Cajititlán (Cajititlán Lagoon) in the town of Tlajomulco de Zúñiga, Jalisco, México is a lacustrine landscape that faces a state of fragility due to incessant processes of urbanization along with basin desiccation and wastewater pollution. However, the community of Cajititlán has managed to protect its lacustrine landscape through the rescue of the religious tradition of the Procesión Los Santos Reyes (Procession of the Wise Men). Therefore, the objective of this article is to analyze how this tradition, as cultural heritage, has influenced the conservation of the lacustrine landscape. We conclude that cultural heritage and the lacustrine landscape are bidirectionally correlated because fostering Indigenous traditions like the Procesión in Cajititlán, as a manifestation of devotion and faith, enhances identity, promotes tourism, and supports conservation practices and the sustainability of the lacustrine landscape. At the same time, conservation of the lacustrine landscape enables the preservation of cultural heritage, generating an interdependent relationship between these elements. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cultural Heritage Conservation and Sustainable Development)
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29 pages, 7229 KiB  
Article
The Non-Destructive Testing of Architectural Heritage Surfaces via Machine Learning: A Case Study of Flat Tiles in the Jiangnan Region
by Haina Song, Yile Chen and Liang Zheng
Coatings 2025, 15(7), 761; https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings15070761 - 27 Jun 2025
Viewed by 594
Abstract
This study focuses on the ancient buildings in Cicheng Old Town, a typical architectural heritage area in the Jiangnan region of China. These buildings are famous for their well-preserved Tang Dynasty urban layout and Ming and Qing Dynasty roof tiles. However, the natural [...] Read more.
This study focuses on the ancient buildings in Cicheng Old Town, a typical architectural heritage area in the Jiangnan region of China. These buildings are famous for their well-preserved Tang Dynasty urban layout and Ming and Qing Dynasty roof tiles. However, the natural aging, weathering, and biological erosion of the roof tiles seriously threaten the integrity of heritage protection. Given that current detection methods mostly depend on manual checks, which are slow and cover only a small area, this study suggests using deep learning technology for heritage protection and creating a smart model to identify damage in flat tiles using the YOLOv8 architecture. During this research, the team used drone aerial photography to collect images of typical building roofs in Cicheng Old Town. Through preprocessing, unified annotation, and system training, a damage dataset containing 351 high-quality images was established, covering five types of damage: breakage, cracks, the accumulation of fallen leaves, lichen growth, and vegetation growth. The results show that (1) the model has an overall mAP of 73.44%, an F1 value of 0.75 in the vegetation growth category, and a recall rate of 0.70, showing stable and balanced detection performance for various damage types; (2) the model performs well in comparisons using confusion matrices and multidimensional indicators (including precision, recall, and log-average miss rate) and can effectively reduce the false detection and missed detection rates; and (3) the research team applied the model to drone images of the roof of Fengyue Painted Terrace Gate in Cicheng Old Town, Jiangbei District, Ningbo City, Zhejiang Province, and automatically detected and located multiple tile damage areas. The prediction results are highly consistent with field observations, verifying the feasibility and application potential of the model in actual heritage protection scenarios. Full article
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21 pages, 4948 KiB  
Article
Spatial Reconstruction and Economic Vitality Assessment of Historical Towns Using SDGSAT-1 Nighttime Light Imagery and Historical GIS: A Case Study of Suburban Shanghai
by Qi Hu and Shuang Li
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(13), 2123; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17132123 - 20 Jun 2025
Viewed by 406
Abstract
Historical towns embody the origins and continuity of urban civilization, preserving distinctive spatial fabrics, cultural lineages, and latent economic value within contemporary metropolitan systems. Their integrated conservation directly aligns with SDG 11.4, and advances the holistic preservation objectives of historic urban landscapes (HULs). [...] Read more.
Historical towns embody the origins and continuity of urban civilization, preserving distinctive spatial fabrics, cultural lineages, and latent economic value within contemporary metropolitan systems. Their integrated conservation directly aligns with SDG 11.4, and advances the holistic preservation objectives of historic urban landscapes (HULs). However, achieving these objectives cannot be solely dependent on modern remote sensing technologies; it necessitates the integration of historical geographic information system (HGIS) theoretical frameworks and methodological approaches. Leveraging HGIS and multisource data—including SDGSAT-1 nighttime light imagery, textual documents, and historical maps—this study reconstructed the spatial extent of historical towns in suburban Shanghai and assessed their present-day economic vitality through light-based spatial proxies. Key results comprised the following. (1) Most suburban historical towns are small, yet nighttime light intensity varies markedly. Jiading County, Songjiang Prefecture, and Jinshan Wei rank highest in both spatial extent and brightness. (2) Town area exhibits a strong positive relationship (R2 > 0.80) with the total nighttime light index, indicating that larger settlements generally sustain higher economic activity. (3) Clusters of “low area–low light” towns showed pronounced intra-regional disparities in economic vitality, underscoring the need for targeted revitalization. (4) Natural setting, historical legacy, policy interventions, and transport accessibility jointly shape development trajectories, with policy emerging as the dominant driver. This work demonstrates a transferable framework for multidimensional assessment of historical towns, supports differentiated conservation strategies, and aids the synergistic integration of heritage preservation with regional sustainable development. Full article
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27 pages, 2126 KiB  
Article
Unveiling Taurasi’s Hidden Potential: A Wine Culture-Centered Framework for Sustainable Development and Circular Economy Transition in Historic Small Towns
by Cristina Ciliberto, Grazia Calabrò, Giuseppe Caristi, Roberta Arbolino and Giuseppe Ioppolo
Sustainability 2025, 17(13), 5704; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17135704 - 20 Jun 2025
Viewed by 360
Abstract
This study presents a novel methodological framework for analyzing circular economy potential in historic small towns, using Taurasi as an illustrative case to demonstrate framework applicability rather than providing a comprehensive quantitative assessment. The primary contribution is methodological: developing an integrated analytical framework [...] Read more.
This study presents a novel methodological framework for analyzing circular economy potential in historic small towns, using Taurasi as an illustrative case to demonstrate framework applicability rather than providing a comprehensive quantitative assessment. The primary contribution is methodological: developing an integrated analytical framework that combines urban metabolism analysis, stakeholder engagement theory, and heritage preservation strategies. The framework addresses the specific challenges of implementing circular economy principles in heritage-rich contexts where traditional data collection methods may be insufficient. This research provides a replicable methodology for future comprehensive empirical studies in similar contexts. Full article
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30 pages, 10806 KiB  
Article
Understanding the Influence of Environmental Elements on Spatial Attractiveness in a Jiangnan Water Town Through Computer Vision Techniques
by Chenpeng Xu, Hongshi Cao, Zhengwei Xia, Xinjie You and Zixuan Wang
Buildings 2025, 15(12), 2091; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15122091 - 17 Jun 2025
Viewed by 327
Abstract
Traditional Jiangnan water towns in China serve as important cultural heritage sites and tourist destinations. Existing studies have revealed a potential connection between environmental elements and spatial perception in these towns. However, there remains a lack of research systematically investigating whether and how [...] Read more.
Traditional Jiangnan water towns in China serve as important cultural heritage sites and tourist destinations. Existing studies have revealed a potential connection between environmental elements and spatial perception in these towns. However, there remains a lack of research systematically investigating whether and how these environmental elements influence subjective evaluation indicators, such as spatial attractiveness, and the mechanisms underlying the interactions between these elements. To further understand these mechanisms, we used Nanxun Old Town as our study site, employed computer vision techniques to perform semantic segmentation on street-view images, extracted the visual proportions of environmental elements, and conducted quantitative correlation analysis with subjective attractiveness evaluations. The findings indicate that different environmental elements in water towns shape spatial imagery in diverse ways, thereby influencing perceived attractiveness. Firstly, though space-defining elements such as buildings and water generally contribute positively to perceived attractiveness, their proportions should be controlled within a reasonable range to maintain a spatial scale that aligns with the traditional imagery of water towns. Secondly, foreground elements like boats and lanterns, although occupying a smaller proportion, can effectively enhance the space when properly combined. Finally, the influence of elements such as bridges and buildings depends on the specific viewing distance and angle. These findings, based on an interpretable analytical framework, reveal that the effects of environmental elements on spatial attractiveness are context-dependent and nonlinear, varying with their proportions, combinations, and perspectives. This approach offers a more comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms by which environmental elements shape spatial attractiveness, providing a scientific foundation for regulating key visual components and optimizing spatial composition for sustainable traditional water town environment management. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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