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Measuring Urban Growth in New Jersey

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Measuring Urban Growth in New Jersey John Hasse, Ph.D. Rowan University Richard G. Lathrop, Ph.D. Center for Remote Sensing and Spatial Analysis Rutgers University – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Measuring Urban Growth in New Jersey


1
Measuring Urban Growth inNew Jersey
  • John Hasse, Ph.D.
  • Rowan University
  • Richard G. Lathrop, Ph.D.
  • Center for Remote Sensing and Spatial Analysis
  • Rutgers University

2
Analyzing Landscape Change with Satellite Remote
Sensing andGeographic Information Systems
3
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4
Essex Union
5
Recent Landscape Changes in New Jersey
6
Forest Loss (11 FF/day)
7
Wetlands Impact (7 FF/day)
8
Farmland Loss (26 FF/day)
9
Mullica Hill NJ 1986 to 1995 growth
10
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11
Rural Exurban Sprawl
12
Types of Urban Growth in Acres
Residential, Rural, Single Unit
45,448 ac
Other Urban or Built-Up Land
22,696 ac
Residential, Single Unit, (Low Density)
21,434 ac
Residential, Single Unit, (Medium Density)
20,194 ac
Residential, High Density, (Multiple Dwelling)
11,099 ac
Commercial / Services
9,137 ac
Recreational Land
6,146 ac
Industrial
5,352 ac
4,977 ac
Transportation / Communication
13
Hunterdon County, ex urban sprawl Rural ,
Single Unit Residential
1140 Single Unit Rural Res 58 units built, 88
land consumption
All other residential 41 units built, 12 land
consumption
14
Inner City Decay
15
Smart GrowthVersusSprawl
16
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17
Ecological Footprint of a Housing Unit
Sprawl patterns of development impart a far
greater impact to a landscape per housing unit
than Smart Growth patterns of development.
18
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19
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20
Impervious Surface (11 ff/day)
21
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22
Hydrological Function of a Watershed
DEGRADED
IMPACTED
23
New Jersey Watershed Conditions and Impervious
Surface
IMPERVIOUS INCREASE
TOTAL IMPERVIOUS COVER
24
Urban Growth and the State Plan
25
Urban Growth and the Pine Barrens
Slide Under Construction
26
Remaining Available Lands
27
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28
Findings Conclusions
  • Rapid landscape change in NJ
  • NJ 1st to build out
  • Sprawl more impacting than Smart Growth
  • Impervious Surface a key indicator
  • Pinelands demonstrated effective growth control
  • Land Management Policies will be designing NJs
    Final Landscape

29
Acknowledgements
  • Dr. Richard G. Lathrop, Rutgers University
  • Dr. Marjorie Kaplan, NJDEP
  • Larry Thornton, and the entire GIS team at NJDEP
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