Urban Regions Under Stress: The Case of Madrid After the Lockdown

Barros Guerton, Javier and Ezquiaga Domínguez, José María ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6666-5070 (2025). Urban Regions Under Stress: The Case of Madrid After the Lockdown. En: "29th Conference of the International Seminar on Urban Form-ISUF", SEP 06-11, 2022. pp. 311-334. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-77752-3_16.

Descripción

Título: Urban Regions Under Stress: The Case of Madrid After the Lockdown
Autor/es:
  • Barros Guerton, Javier
  • Ezquiaga Domínguez, José María https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6666-5070
Tipo de Documento: Ponencia en Congreso o Jornada (Artículo)
Título del Evento: 29th Conference of the International Seminar on Urban Form-ISUF
Fechas del Evento: SEP 06-11, 2022
Título del Libro: Urban Morphology versus Urban Redevelopment and Revitalisation
Título de Revista/Publicación: Urban Book Series
Fecha: 1 Enero 2025
ISSN: 2365757X
Volumen: Part F
Materias:
ODS:
Palabras Clave Informales: Resilience; Urban regions; Madrid; COVID-19; Urban density; Open data
Escuela: E.T.S. Arquitectura (UPM)
Departamento: Urbanística y Ordenación del Territorio
Licencias Creative Commons: Reconocimiento

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Resumen

Urban density, mobility, and revenue disparity are relevant factors in terms of urban analysis and project. The COVID-19 pandemic declared in March 2020 has meant a stress test for urban regions, as the alteration of mobility patterns led to changes in social dynamics. This paper investigates the correlations between the evolution of the disease and these three factors. The analysis focuses on the Madrid Urban Region, in Spain, and uses open data available from cadastral, census, and health-related official websites. This use of public information also provides a test on how such inputs could fit in a regional digital twin and can help replication. The analysis shows that overall, the basic structure of regional urban centralities, those with more people at day than at night, keeps stable in the central city and relevant economic areas. There are signs of temporary relocations to low-density areas, to holiday homes, which decreased in 2021. And there is no mathematical correlation between density and disease at the end of the period; figures show, however, of significative correlation during the initial stages, so density, at the household level (housing overcrowding) more than at the neighborhood level (dwellings per hectare), appears as an initial driver for disease expansion whose influence has been dampened progressively over time.

Más información

ID de Registro: 93742
Identificador DC: https://oa.upm.es/93742/
Identificador OAI: oai:oa.upm.es:93742
URL Portal Científico: https://portalcientifico.upm.es/es/ipublic/item/10384287
Identificador DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-77752-3_16
URL Oficial: https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-03...
Depositado por: iMarina Portal Científico
Depositado el: 09 Feb 2026 09:15
Ultima Modificación: 09 Feb 2026 09:15