Buildings as Species: Competition and Scaling Rules in Cities

Abstract

We look at buildings' competition over space in cities through the lens of ecology. Adopting the convex hull of the building's footprint perimeter as a definition of species yields parallels to forest trees' competition, which we expound on. Their perimeter distribution p(r) follows a power-law behavior beyond a critical threshold of the density of the built environment. In this regime, the species coexistence likelihood p(d), where d is the distance to the nearest competitor, which we define to be a building with a larger r, bifurcates with the buildings' number n. This reveals two different predation laws: a vicious predatory one which is linked spatial homogeneity and segregation, as opposed to another favoring spatial diversity and intermixing between species.

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