Home

arealforbruk

Arealforbruk, or area consumption, is a concept used in geography and urban planning to describe the amount of land that is occupied, converted, or otherwise taken from natural or agricultural use to support human activities. It measures how much land is required to sustain a given population or level of economic activity, and is often used to assess land efficiency, urban growth, and regional sustainability.

The metric can be expressed in various ways, most commonly as hectares per inhabitant (ha per capita)

Applications and interpretation: a higher arealforbruk indicates more land is used per person or per unit of

Limitations: the measure does not capture land productivity, ecological value, or quality of life, and results

Strategies to reduce arealforbruk include densification, infill development, mixed-use zoning, transit-oriented development, brownfield redevelopment, and preserving

or
square
meters
per
person.
It
can
also
be
presented
per
unit
of
economic
output,
such
as
hectares
per
unit
of
GDP.
Calculation
typically
relies
on
land-use
data
that
categorize
built-up
areas,
transportation
infrastructure,
and
other
land
segments,
which
are
then
aggregated
over
a
defined
period
and
divided
by
the
chosen
denominator
(population
or
GDP).
Within
a
city
or
region,
arealforbruk
may
be
broken
down
into
residential,
commercial/industrial,
and
transport-related
land.
output,
which
is
often
associated
with
urban
sprawl,
low-density
development,
and
greater
land
consumption
for
infrastructure.
A
lower
value
can
reflect
higher
density,
efficient
land
use,
or
successful
redevelopment.
Policymakers
use
the
metric
to
monitor
growth
patterns,
set
densification
targets,
and
compare
performance
across
cities
or
regions.
can
be
sensitive
to
boundary
definitions
and
data
quality.
It
should
be
complemented
with
other
indicators
of
sustainability,
such
as
housing
density,
transport
efficiency,
and
environmental
impact.
agricultural
and
green
spaces
through
planning
policies.