JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2017

講演情報

[EE] 口頭発表

セッション記号 H (地球人間圏科学) » H-TT 計測技術・研究手法

[H-TT20] [EE] Geographic Information Systems and Cartography

2017年5月20日(土) 13:45 〜 15:15 106 (国際会議場 1F)

コンビーナ:小口 高(東京大学空間情報科学研究センター)、村山 祐司(筑波大学大学院生命環境科学研究科地球環境科学専攻)、若林 芳樹(首都大学東京大学院都市環境科学研究科)、座長:小口 高(東京大学空間情報科学研究センター)、座長:若林 芳樹(首都大学東京大学院都市環境科学研究科)

14:30 〜 14:45

[HTT20-04] Urban and Green Volume Estimation Using Remote Sensing-GIS Techniques: A Case Study of Surabaya, Indonesia

*Hepi Hapsari Handayani1,2 (1.Spatial Information Science University of Tsukuba、2.Geomatics Department, Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember)

キーワード:Urban Volume, Green Ratio, Remote Sensing, Geographic Information Systems

Surabaya is the second largest city of Indonesia, a center of business, commerce, and industry. Thus, this city continues growing. Geographically, Surabaya is located in the east-northern part of Java island. Therefore, Surabaya becomes a center of trade traffic between islands in eastern Indonesia, due to an average economic growth of 7% per year (Surabaya Government, 2015). However, the growth of building is not equivalent to the growth of green spaces. The city government has developed a garden in several parts but it seems that it does not meet the ideal condition. Thus, the study on green volume and the proportion are becoming important. The study area is the Core Unit Development in Surabaya, including the CBD area. Remote sensing and Geographic Information System (GIS) method are applied in this study.
This study uses ALOS AVNIR-2 and WorldView-2 as remote sensing data for determining land use/cover (LU/LC). The maximum likelihood classification technique is applied for the first satellite image, then object based classification is applied for the second one. DSM from ALOS-PRISM is employed to calculate the surface feature height. While for filtering the green area, I perform in two different methods, based on NDVI and LU/LC.
The results show that the total urban (built-up) volume of the study area is 395.670.112 m3. The total green volume based on NDVI filtering is 37.083.997 m3. It yields the green ratio around 9.37%. While the total green volume based on LULC filtering is 35,589,309 m3 then it yields the green ratio about 9%. The difference of the green volume from the two methods is about 4.03%, not significant in comparing with the urban volume. However, for the both green ratio, it indicates that the green portion still does not meet the ideal condition.