Multimodal Data-Driven Visual Sensitivity Assessment and Planning Response Strategies for Streetscapes in Historic Districts: A Case Study of Anshandao, Tianjin

The landscape visual sensitivity (LVS) assessment is recognized as a critical tool for identifying areas most sensitive to landscape changes and for informing multi-resource optimization and allocation strategies. However, conventional large-scale LVS assessment criteria and methodologies developed...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ya-Nan Fang, Aihemaiti Namaiti, Shaoqiang Zhang, Tianjia Feng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-05-01
Series:Land
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/14/5/1036
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Summary:The landscape visual sensitivity (LVS) assessment is recognized as a critical tool for identifying areas most sensitive to landscape changes and for informing multi-resource optimization and allocation strategies. However, conventional large-scale LVS assessment criteria and methodologies developed for natural landscapes do not satisfy the precision-oriented assessment requirements of streetscape visual sensitivity (SVS) in historic districts, nor do they facilitate the operational linkage between assessment outcomes and planning applications. This study proposes an innovative SVS–PAP assessment methodology, which is a systematic integration of the SVS assessment and public esthetic perception (PAP) evaluation. The SVS assessment criteria framework was first improved through the integration of enriched multi-modal datasets. Subjective weights were obtained via the analytic hierarchy process (AHP), incorporating expert and public judgments, while objective weights were derived through the entropy weight method (EWM) based on data information entropy. The integration of both approaches enhances the methodological rigor and scientific validity of SVS weight determination. An SVS–PAP analytical matrix was subsequently constructed through integration of SVS assessments and PAP-based scenic beauty estimation (SBE), enabling the derivation of planning strategies. An empirical validation conducted in Anshandao Historic District yielded four key findings: (1) The SVS–PAP methodology, which integrates subjective–objective evaluation factors and incorporates broad public participation, demonstrates strong scientific validity and reliability, establishing a novel paradigm for SVS assessment and strategic planning; (2) The technical framework—leveraging multi-modal data and GIS spatial analysis techniques—improves assessment precision, operability, and replicability; (3) The planning and management strategies formulated by the SVS–PAP analytical matrix were verified as reasonable, demonstrating effective planning-transition capability; (4) Notably, historical and cultural influences showed significantly higher weighting coefficients across assessment criteria compared to non-historic streetscape assessments. Overall, these research results address the persistent undervaluation of the esthetic and spiritual values of historic landscapes in multi-resource value trade-off and decision-making processes, demonstrating both theoretical and practical significance through a systematic methodological advancement.
ISSN:2073-445X