Evaluating Urban Community Sustainability by Integrating Housing, Ecosystem Services, and Landscape Configuration

Faculty of Geomatics, Lanzhou Jiaotong University, Lanzhou 730070, China State Key Laboratory of Resources and Environmental Information System, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, CAS, Beijing 100101, China National-Local Joint Engineering Research Center of Technologies and Applications for National Geographic State Monitoring, Lanzhou 730070, China Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, CAS, Lanzhou 730000, China Gansu Provincial Engineering Laboratory for National Geographic State Monitoring, Lanzhou 730070, China


Introduction
Cities are hubs for ideas, science, culture, commerce, productivity, social development, etc. [1,2], which were deemed as sustainability problems rather than solutions in the last few decades [3,4]. Nowadays, cities have become a core to ensuring a sustainable future and human well-being [5,6]. Some of the largest economies in the world, such as the US, the UK, and Japan, have already developed their sustainable community rating framework while lacking in China [7,8]. Rapid urbanization has caused increasing social-environmental problems, such as uneven income, unfair housing cities poverty, and environmental deterioration, which exhibit a substantial negative impact on urban and regional sustainable development [9,10]. erefore, it urgently needs to launch a sustainable community evaluation system in China.
Currently, the evaluation of sustainable community relies typically on the construction industry [11,12], and more industries such as information and communication, and energy are joining in the sustainable assessment of urban communities [13]. As building sustainable cities and communities was defined as one of the sustainable development goals (SDGs) by the United Nations in the 2030 agenda, the selection of urban development orientation will face more severe challenges, especially for developing countries [14,15]. Additionally, SDGs 11.1 explicitly proposes informal housing and slum renovation and SDGs 11.3 proposes to enhance the planning and management capacity of sustainable human settlements. A good understanding of the complexity and dynamics of sustainable urban development under different development pathways is necessary for cities to achieve SDGs [16,17]. ence, it is particularly important to combine SDGs with the perspective of academia.
Academia believes that the key to urban sustainability is economics, environment, and society [18,19].
ere has been some classical and innovative work on quantifying mechanisms for translating urban elements into sustainability [20,21]. However, utilizing the timeliness of remote sensing data to evaluate sustainability at the community scale is still rare. e different definition of urban sustainability is "adaptive processes that promote and sustain the virtual cycle between ecosystem services and human wellbeing in a coordinated manner [22]." While varying in certain aspects, the definition of urban sustainability incorporates environment, economic, and human well-being. Successful sustainable communities require consideration of additional dimensions [23]. For instance, urban planning scholars applied livability to a sustainable evaluation in urban communities [24]. Livability encompasses the overall perception of the city by its inhabitants, and from this vague perception, we can identify key issues such as compactness, housing, and ecological health. Ecosystem services contribute directly and indirectly to human well-being, and landscape design harmonizes the man-land relationship and guarantees the long-term development of mankind.
Some studies establish a comprehensive indicator system by statistics data to evaluate sustainability in communities [25,26]. However, community sustainability evaluation must flexibly and timely adapt to the city's distinguishing feature [8,27]. With the establishment of the Earth Observation System (EOS), which has a finer spatial resolution than statistical data, and the development of machine learning, flexibly, and timely evaluating sustainability in communities has transformed from an idea into a reality [28].
e EOS is conducive to information mining and expressions, such as mapping informal settlements [29], urban phenology, and heat island [30,31], and quantifying environmental quality and risk [32,33]. erefore, we can find a new path to achieve sustainability evaluation by EOS from the perspective of housing, ecosystem services, and landscape configuration in communities. Among them, housing, which includes storied buildings, informal housing, and villas, represents different economic and social strata. e ecosystem services and landscape configuration represent different ecological and environments. ese indicators meet the requirements of urban sustainability evaluation. Land use and land cover classification, which provides a potential basis for sustainable evaluation, is an ordinary task in EOS. e ecosystem service values (ESVs) can be calculated with a clear, operational mechanism by land cover, and sustainability indicators such as housing and landscape configuration can be transformed by land use in urban communities [34,35]. To this end, combined with the concept of sustainable development, we designed an efficient, cloud-based, and data-driven evaluation framework. Sustainable evaluation is typically related to the value judgment of people [36]. We classify levels of community sustainability by combine data and value judgment of people.
e achievement of SDGs needs science, technology, and innovation. It is indispensable to integrate Earth observation data and machine learning methods to develop a data-driven sustainable evaluation scheme.
e study was based on fusing optical and SAR images and machine learning methods by OBPR to classify urban land cover into eight categories, especially storied buildings, informal housing, and villas (Section 4.1). en, it converts this land use and land cover into housing, ESV (Section 4.2), and landscape configuration (Section 4.3) according to the connotation of sustainability. Finally, we obtained three rating levels to evaluate sustainability in urban communities (Section 4.4). In summary, we made full use of remote sensing to reduce the impact of human factors and carried out a real-time, efficient, and sustainable evaluation in urban communities.

Study Area and Datasets
2.1. Study Area. Guangzhou, located at the north Pearl River Delta, is the central city of South China. As the capital of Guangdong province, Guangzhou is the center of politics, economy, science, and education in South China (see Figure 1). is study mainly talks about some subcities or districts, including Yuexiu, Tianhe, Haizhu, Liwan, and Panyu (see Figure 1(a)). At the end of 2018, the urban population accounted for 86.38% in Guangzhou, and the per capita disposable income of urban residents was $8478.76 in each city. In May 2012, Guangzhou initiated the "multiple-plan integration" [37] to explore the future development of megacities in China. Nowadays, high-density population, economic pressures, and ecological requirements pose challenges to sustainable development in Guangzhou [38,39].

RS Data and Sample Collections.
e study selected 27 Sentinel-2 MSI spectral images from May 1st to September 20th, 2019, and operated cloud processing in the QA60 band of the data. e research data were obtained by mean synthesis after removing opaque clouds and cirrus clouds, and the preprocessing of Sentinel-1 images and SAR images were operated on the GEE platform. e preprocessing includes the following: (1) removal of thermal noise, lowintensity noise, and invalid data on scene edges; (2) radiometric calibration; (3) conversion of data from ground range geometry to backscatter coefficient using the 30-Meter SRTM or the ASTER DEM for the high latitude, and the synthesized data are resampled to a resolution of 10 meters.
Urban land use is divided into the following eight types (see Table 1), namely, storied building (SB), informal housing (IH), villas (V), industry (I), bare land (BL), trees (T), lawn and crop (LC), and water (W) (see Figure 2). Among them, SB consists of concrete buildings and regular shape, IH is made of colour steel composite panels which are easily broken, and the distinction among V is mainly through its characteristics and red roof. e three dwelling places represent distinct personal financial levels and social status. e samples of eight types were obtained by visual sampling on GEE while borrowing Sentinel-2 and objectoriented results.

Traffic Community.
e traffic community is a scheme, which is proposed to reduce the complexity of traffic control and management systems to improve system reliability and system development.
e traffic community is obtained under three principles: (1) homogeneity-land use, economy, society, and other characteristics within the communities are as consistent as possible; (2) partition boundary is natural barriers (high-grade roads, railways, and rivers); (3) the areas of the city center are smaller, while the suburbs are larger. In this study, traffic community data are derived from the China Academy of Urban Planning and Design (http:// www.caupd.com).

Methods
e framework of sustainability evaluation in urban communities is presented in Figure 3. First, we have classified land use and land cover by fused on optical and SAR employ machine learning in GEE (Figure 2(a)). A sustainable- oriented land use scheme has been built. en, we transform land use and land cover into housing, ESV, and landscape configuration. Finally, we divide three levels of community sustainability using k-means by a data-driven method ( Figure 2(b)).

Support Vector Machine and Random
Forest. Support vector machine (SVM) [40] is a kind of supervised learning with associated learning algorithms. In the case of linear inseparability, SVM first completes the calculation in lowdimensional space and maps the input space to the high-dimensional feature space than through the kernel function. Finally, the optimal separating hyperplane is constructed in the high-dimensional feature space. is study uses the radial basis function kernel, which is a prevalent kernel function in machine learning.
Random forest (RF) [41] is a method for discriminating and classifying data using multiple classification trees. e method randomizes the row and column data selections, generates some classification trees, and summarizes the results of the classification tree then. RF improves prediction accuracy without significantly increasing the amount of computation. Its results are robust to lost and unbalanced  4 Complexity data and can well predict the effects of up to several thousand explanatory variables, which are still widely used today [42,43].

OBPR.
OBPR [44] is employed after pixel-based image analysis (PBIA) and object-based image segmentation (OBIS). After the pixel classification, each pixel x gets a classification result T, which is the type of land use classification. On the assumption of correct OBIS results, the pixels in the same object O should be the same classification is the ratio of T k in the object patch O, and then the predicted object type O can be calculated as R represents the classification risk of the dominant category in the object.

Ecosystem Service.
Ecosystem services contribute to human well-being, both directly and indirectly, and represent part of the total economic value of the planet [45,46]. e ESV method acquired adaptive improvement to fit situations in China [47]. e basic equivalent of ESV function per unit area refers to the annual average value equivalent of various service functions per unit area of different types of ecosystems. ESV was calculated through T and LC in this study. Considering the complex urban system and associating with the previous research results, the ecosystem service functions were divided into regulating services, support services, and cultural services. e basis weight and the net primary production (NPP) spatiotemporal adjustment factor were designed with reference to the evaluation of ESV by Xie in this study. Annual NPP is derived from the sum of all 8-day net photosynthesis (PSN) products (MOD17A2H) from the given year [48]. Finally, the adjusted NPP spatiotemporal adjustment factor is calculated as where B ij is the PSN sum in month j within the ecosystem region i and B represents the annual average PSN of each ecosystem nationwide. We calculated p ij with MODIS data, where Guangzhou was used as a spatial reference, and the time span of spectral data was used as a time reference.
us, the equivalent coefficient of ESV per unit area was revised (see Table 2). e product of the equivalent coefficient and the corresponding land cover areas is the ESV for different ecological service functions.

Landscape Indices.
According to the experimental needs, we select nine landscape indicators to express the overall structural characteristics of the traffic community, which are the number of patches (NP), patch density (PD), largest patch index (LPI), landscape shape index (LSI), contagion (CONTAG), landscape division index (LDI), splitting index (SI), Shannon's diversity index (SHDI), and Shannon's evenness index (SHEI). e fact that the landscape indices are not completely independent of each other, which will result in a repetitive description of the information, whilst some researchers point out that the correlation of the landscape indices does not indicate that an index ought to be eliminated [18,49]. Accordingly, principal component analysis (PCA) was used to select two principal Complexity components of nine landscape indicators in this study. PCA is one of the most useful methods for studying urban sustainability indicators [50], and cumulative contributions in each component beyond 80% are favorable for sustainability assessment.

House-Oriented Land Use Classification
Results. e object patch is segmented from the optical and SAR images using eCognition's multiresolution segmentation (MRS) algorithm. Based on visual interpretation, the appropriate scale parameter is set to 30, the tightness parameter is 0.8, and the shape parameter is 0.1. After MRS completed, the traffic community was used to cut MRS results apart into 188,437 object patches. Finally, we used the OBPR method which combined PBIA and OBIS results to obtain the final land use classification then.
e classification results are shown in Table 3, and the accuracy of SVM and RF on eight land use types improved significantly after using OBPR. For OBPR-RF results, the accuracy of I and W increases to 100%, while T accuracy reduces and SB and BL remain unchanged. e OBPR-RF achieves a higher classification accuracy (OA is 92.79%, and k is 0.92) than RF (OA is 90.17%, and k is 0.88). For OBPR-SVM results, the accuracy of W increases to 100%, while the accuracy of V decreases, and I remains unchanged.
After OBPR, most ground objects are well classified. e classification results of SB and IH have reached the experimental requirements with appearing in the form of a contiguous area, which is in line with actual surface features (e.g., in Figures 4(a2) and 4(b2)). Dense ground objects blend various pixels, which contains more land use categories but difficultly classifies in machine learning. e risk map (e.g., in Figures 5(a) and 5(b)) shows that the classification risks of W, T, and SB are low, and IH is high, which because W, T, and SB are all continuous and homogeneous, and the difference in spectral features is small. Simultaneously, the map indicates that the more complex ground object accompanied with the higher classification risk.

ESV for Community.
In this study, the ESV shows differences in traffic communities (see Figure 5(a)). We talk about the ratio of different land use types of IH (see Figure 5(b)), SB (see Figure 5(c)), and V (see Figure 5(d)) in the traffic community to assess urban ecological sustainability. We excluded the farmland-based traffic community because it contributes little significance to urban sustainability. e results show the obvious differences exist in ESV of the dominant land use types. e lower ESV in the traffic community with a higher ratio of SB. e IH mostly distributes in areas with low ESV. V has a high proportion beside the river and mainly distributed in high ESV areas. is fact is consistent with the general ideas of municipal developers, which proves that the quality of the urban social environments is strongly related to socioeconomic status in developed regions [51,52]. is definite spatial distribution and quantification methods are beneficial to urban planning and sustainable development, whilst urban renewal in units of traffic communities may be a good option. e average ratio of land use types in the traffic communities of different districts is shown in Figure 6. Liwan, Yuexiu, and Haizhu are older towns in Guangzhou. e proportion of SB in Yuexiu has reached 70%, approximately one million people live here, and trees have a significant contribution to regulate ecosystem services. Liwan holds a higher proportion of SB and IH than other older towns, and the proportion of urban green space is small and dominated by grassland. Although the ratio of IH is the highest in Haizhu, it shows a high ESV brought by the surrounding river. Considering that these older towns are mainly residential places, IH transformation, and ecosystem service enhancement are in the focus field of urban renewal, and it is the inevitable problem faced by people-oriented urban sustainable development. Panyu is one of the top investment potential areas in Guangzhou. LC is mainly cropland and less diverse than T, and considerable land will be transformed into SB and V in the future. Tianhe is regarded as a representative of commercial prosperity in Guangzhou, and SB is mainly commercial places. Built on land use results, it can be found that urban green spaces are dominated by trees, a positive relationship between plant diversity and human wealth in evidence [53].

Landscape Configuration for Community.
PCA was carried out after the normalizing of the landscape index in each traffic area, with the cumulative contribution rate of PC1 and PC2 reaching 81% (see Table 4), of which CON-TAG, LPI, SPLIT, SHDI, SHEI, and DIVISION mainly contribute to PC1, NP, and LSI mainly contribute to PC2 (see Figure 7). Among them, Figure 7(a) shows that positive correlations exist between three landscape indices and two principal components, respectively, in the first quadrant. e two landscape indices in the second quadrant are negatively correlated with PC1while a positive correlation with PC2, and the four landscape indices in the fourth quadrant are positively correlated with PC1 while a negative correlation with PC2. LSI contributes the most to PCA, and PD contributes the least to PCA. A higher correlation exists between indices that contribute more to the same principal component (see Figure 7(b)).
ere were some correlations between the original landscape indicators, such as NP and   LSI, LPI and CONTAG, DIVISION, SPLIT, SHDI, and SHEI, as well as high correlations between the four indicators and high contributions to PC1. erefore, we consider the principal component of PCA as a more comprehensive index to evaluate the sustainability of the landscape. Landscape sustainability is a key approach to achieving sustainable development goals [54]. Integrating the contribution of different landscape indices to the principal components increases statistical and landscape significance. e results (see Figure 8) indicate that in the areas with a small value of PC1, the landscape diversity is low, the land use information is not rich, the patches appear contiguous, and dominant patches are forming good connectivity.
Referring to land use and requirement of landscape sustainability, it is found that these areas are mainly distributed on the SB, where the value of ecosystem services is low, and the sustainability is weak. For the area with high PC1 value, the patch types are evenly distributed with significant diversity and abundant land use information. Meanwhile, many small blocks exist in the landscape, the degree of landscape configuration aggregation is low, and the degree of separation between patches is high. For PC2, the result is different from that of PC1. is is because the landscape index giving the dominant contribution is different, in which indices are calculated by the same traffic community. e larger patch has an impact on the calculation of the   with the Scikit-learn library is executed on Python 3.6, which sets five centroids, and the initialization method is k-means ++, the maximum number of iterations of the k-means algorithm is 500, the random number initialized by the centroid is 0, and the number of times of running under different centroid seed is 3. e input data involved in the calculation are PC1, PC2, ESV, SB, IH, and V. According to these parameters, the urban sustainability is divided into 5 levels (see Figure 9(b)). However, we found that 3 and 4 are shared green spaces that are excluded in the evaluation system of sustainable communities. erefore, on a datadriven basis, we combine value judgments to obtain a sustainable urban community development rating, which is divided into three categories: 0 (low), 1 (medium), and 2 (high). e spatial features of urban sustainability levels are shown in Figure 9(a). e visualization of principal components with sustainability levels is illustrated in Figure 9(b). Urban sustainability levels are significantly positively correlated with PC1. As PC1 increases, the sustainability level rises. At the same time, urban sustainability shows a negative correlation with PC2. According to the landscape implications of PC1, community land use types with a high level of sustainability are rich and dispersed. e significant synergy between the two indicates that the landscape is an important factor in determining the community sustainability level. Figure 9(c) indicates that the transition from low sustainable to medium sustainable communities is not only an alteration in landscape configuration but also a dramatic change in ESV. Low sustainability level community is dominated by IH and SB with low ESV. Communities of high sustainability levels are V-dominated and accompanied by a high level of landscape sustainability and ESV. e results found that different sustainability levels are dominated by different factors and show significant spatial distribution. In distribution spatial of ESV and landscape configuration in combination with the above housing, most of 253 communities of high sustainability level are located in rivers and emerging urban areas, accompanied by high landscape sustainability. Compared with lower-level communities, 276 communities of the medium sustainability level located in areas with higher ecosystem services, and 127 communities of low sustainability level are mainly distributed in older urban areas with poor housing such as Yuexiu. Sustainable evaluation through a data-driven approach that does not require much intervention from human parameters is particularly important for objective evaluation, and research must make a clear distinction between sustainable and unsustainable development and not be confused in policy formulation [55]. Simultaneously, existing cities worldwide are aging and much in need of infrastructure replacement [56].

Discussion
Sustainability assessments are increasingly regarded as an important tool to help transform sustainable urban ecosystems [57]. Nowadays, ecological protection and urbanization seem to be two contradictory concerns. But in fact, rapid urbanization does not mean to say that at the expense of ecosystem damage, policymakers should regard urban development and ecological benefits as mutually reinforcing drivers of sustainable urban development [58]. Each city needs to find its sustainable development path on the way forward. Besides, the connotation of urban sustainability is not confined to ecology, but also economic and social levels. It is pointed out that different economic and social levels have different abilities to transform nature, resulting in different land cover and land use. erefore, we can retrieve the land use information to obtain the corresponding economic and social levels, and combine land cover to present ecology and environments. ere are two considerations to note regarding the risk R of land use and land cover classification. e first situations: when a common machine learning algorithm is difficult to classify RS mixed pixels well, R represents a risk. e second situation is as follows: when the state-of-the-art algorithm classifies correctly, R represents a ground complexity, such as cartographic-generalization, and it can summarize and merge features. In this study, the classification of housing, which cannot accurately classify, using Sentinel 10 m resolution exists mixed pixels [59]. is place R can be considered as a risk assessment indicator. is paper takes full advantage of the timeliness of remotely sensed data, which can be extended to other regions or countries where other statistics are lacking. Socioeconomic disparities usually shape different land use schemes. e scheme design of land use classification is of great application value to the dynamic monitoring of urban sustainability, which can highlight the contradictions in urban development, explore distinct urban characteristics [60], and complement the global sustainable urban evaluation framework. We provide a sustainable solution to be a viable route based on EOS. At the same time, the timeliness and spatial resolution of EOS possess incomparable advantages over statistical data, and the value of the method in urban sustainability is gradually being paid attention to and adopted by researchers.
In future research, multiple source spatial data (e.g., point of interest, location-based service, and trajectory data) can be used to classify urban land use, and more land use attributes can be added to ensure urban sustainable evaluation on the premise of ensuring spatial resolution of RS data, and we can further analyze sustainability from the perspective of urban vitality based on open big data (e.g., Dianping and Baidu heat map data). Simultaneously, quantitative sustainable indicators can be established directly in the context of integrated ecosystem services and landscape sustainability. We need to advance the ecosystem services and human well-being of our cities by taking advantage of the enormous potential offered by data science and technology.

Conclusion
Although various definitions of urban community sustainability exist, they all focus on long-term development, which reflected in housing, ecosystem services, and landscape. is study evaluates the sustainability of 702 communities in a data-driven manner through quantitating the interrelationship among housing, ecosystem services, and landscape configuration. e main conclusions are as follows: (1) e synergy effects of housing, ecosystem services, and landscape configuration are significant, among which landscape configuration has the greatest impact on sustainability. Housing is highly related to ecosystem services. Especially, informal housing proportion is negatively related to ESV, which reflects the contradiction between ecological conditions and human housing well-being. (2) e community sustainable level presents significant spatial heterogeneity. Most of 253 communities of high sustainability level are located in rivers and emerging urban areas, accompanied by high landscape sustainability, while 276 communities with medium sustainability level are located in areas with high ecosystem services and 127 communities with low sustainability level are mainly distributed in older urban areas with poor housing such as Yuexiu.
(3) e negative synergy between the older city and sustainability unveils the hidden dangers of early urban planning in China. Compared with the new urban areas, the older urban areas are less sustainable. Urban renewal and sustainable transformation plans should be different among communities with different development levels.
A data-driven sustainable framework that combines housing, landscape configuration, and ecosystem services can quantitatively evaluate the sustainability level of the community and provide a specific and effective data-based reference for urban renewal. e transition towards a sustainable community should be based on scientific urban planning accompanied by sustainable landscape configuration, and for the transition of communities of low sustainability level, priority should be given to housing reconstruction and then improving ecological conditions.

Conflicts of Interest
e authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.