Author
Listed:
- Dongqiang Zhang
(School of Architecture & Fine Art, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian 116023, China
School of Art Design & Jewelry, Baoshan University, Baoshan 678000, China)
- Jun Cai
(School of Architecture & Fine Art, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian 116023, China)
- Haiyan Li
(School of Art Design & Jewelry, Baoshan University, Baoshan 678000, China)
- Yishuang Wu
(School of Architecture & Fine Art, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian 116023, China)
Abstract
Conventional tourism planning in ecologically fragile regions often adopts a reductionist perspective, failing to address the synergistic spatial interactions between ecological conservation, resource utilization, and infrastructure. To bridge this gap, this study develops a multi-constraint synergistic assessment framework for the dry-hot valley of Lujiang Dam (LJD) in China. Grounded in the understanding of rural tourism as a complex adaptive system, the framework innovatively integrates the InVEST model, kernel density estimation, and cumulative cost-distance algorithms to identify Natural Spatial Suitability for Tourism Development (NSSTD). Key findings include (1) pronounced spatial heterogeneity in habitat quality, with high-quality zones in the west/southeast requiring strict conservation; (2) a “barbell-shaped” clustering of natural/cultural resources at the valley’s northern and southern extremities, highly congruent with ethnic settlements; and (3) a “concentric layered” accessibility pattern where 88.08% of resources are within a 90 min drive. Crucially, the spatial overlay analysis revealed that NSSTD (54.74 km 2 ) emerges not from single high-value zones but from areas of synergy, such as those with medium habitat quality coupled with high resource endowment and accessibility. These results provide a scientifically robust, spatially explicit layer for China’s “Multi-plan Integration” territorial spatial planning. They enable differentiated strategies—channeling development to southern corridors, implementing niche tourism in northern “structural hole” villages, and enforcing conservation in western habitats—thereby offering a replicable methodology to balance ecological integrity with sustainable rural development.
Suggested Citation
Dongqiang Zhang & Jun Cai & Haiyan Li & Yishuang Wu, 2025.
"Spatial Configuration Mechanism of Rural Tourism Resources Under the Perspective of Multi-Constraint Synergy: A Case Study of the Nujiang Dry-Hot Valley,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 17(24), pages 1-28, December.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:17:y:2025:i:24:p:10962-:d:1812981
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