Salkic, N. M., Lorenz, W., Hensel, M. U., & Wurzer, G. (2026). Urban Transformation Between Built and NaturalSystems by Means of an Adapted Wave FunctionCollapse Approach. Journal of Digital Landscape Architecture (JoDLA), 11–2026, 411–422.
E259-01 - Forschungsbereich Digitale Architektur und Raumplanung E057-16 - Fachbereich Center for Geometry and Computational Design
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Journal:
Journal of Digital Landscape Architecture (JoDLA)
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ISSN:
2367-4253
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Date (published):
1-Jun-2026
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Number of Pages:
12
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Publisher:
VDE Verlag GmbH
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Peer reviewed:
Yes
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Keywords:
Wave-Function-Collapse; System Dynamics; Cellular Automata; Urban Transformation; Built Environment; natural systems; Sustainability
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Abstract:
In practice, urban transformation is often carried out at the outskirts or in between existing areas of a city. In that context, important questions are: How can one imagine a transition between different urban structures? What if, additionally, we aim for including not only the development from innermost to outermost but also vice versa – letting nature into the city rather than the other way around? What are the implications of interventions on the surroundings? Addressing these questions requires a modelling approach that links local morphological compatibility between urban structures with macroscale socio-economic feedback driving development, vacancy and ecological change. To that end, we combine complementary modelling components. A cellular-automaton (CA) grid provides the spatial representation and hosts rule-based land-use transitions over time. Within this structure, an adapted Wave Function Collapse (WFC) operator infers context-sensitive land-use changes from learned adjacency relations, ensuring morphological compatibility of infill and transformation. A system-dynamics (SD) layer generates macro-scale pressures in households, jobs and capital that drive development, vacancy and decline across the grid. Evolution over time emerges from the CA rule system and from vacancy-driven transformations derived from previous work on urban cell grammars, extending WFC from a static pattern generator to a dynamic operator of urban change. Our framework is intended for use in planning, but also in education and policy making (“What-If”-Scenarios). The system supports both conventional development trajectories and their inversion: not only densification and infill, but also decline, abandonment, and ecological succession where nature re-enters under conditions of sustained vacancy.
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Research Areas:
Mathematical and Algorithmic Foundations: 20% Modeling and Simulation: 80%