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How Do External Environments Shape the Cultural Ecosystem Services of Urban Parks to Promote Sustainable Urban Development? An Empirical Study of Multi-Travel Scenes in 15-Min Living Circles in Chengdu, China

Author

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  • Qidi Dong

    (School of Art and Design, Xihua University, Chengdu 610039, China)

  • Binzhu Wang

    (School of Art and Design, Xihua University, Chengdu 610039, China)

  • Mingming Chen

    (School of Art and Design, Xihua University, Chengdu 610039, China)

  • Jiaxi He

    (School of Art and Design, Xihua University, Chengdu 610039, China)

  • Yingyin Yang

    (Deyang City Territorial Spatial Planning Compilation and Research Center, Deyang 618099, China)

Abstract

In light of the accelerating process of global urbanization, the quality of cultural ecosystem services (CES) in urban parks has become a core metric for efforts to promote urban livability and sustainable cities. However, previous research has failed to consider the differential impacts of the external environment across various travel scenes. In this study, 32 parks in Chengdu serve as the empirical data, and public CES perception data are extracted from social media comments via text mining. Based on a unified 15 min time threshold, we delineate the service scope for four travel scenes and employ geographically weighted regression and piecewise regression models to analyze the spatial heterogeneity, driving mechanisms and threshold effects associated with the relationship between external environmental factors and park CES. The findings indicate that the external environment’s influence on CES exhibits a “scene-factor-scale” adaptation pattern. Walking scenes are influenced primarily by land-use and population factors; in contrast, cycling scenes rely on the availability of shared bicycle facilities, and public transport and driving scenes are driven by economic vitality and traffic-support factors, respectively. Five critical thresholds are identified, including a 40% impervious surface area. This research proposes scene-based optimization strategies and helps enhance the “external environment–travel behavior–spatial characteristics” coupling framework, thereby serving as a scientific reference for efforts to improve 15 min living circles.

Suggested Citation

  • Qidi Dong & Binzhu Wang & Mingming Chen & Jiaxi He & Yingyin Yang, 2026. "How Do External Environments Shape the Cultural Ecosystem Services of Urban Parks to Promote Sustainable Urban Development? An Empirical Study of Multi-Travel Scenes in 15-Min Living Circles in Chengdu, China," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(9), pages 1-32, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:9:p:4177-:d:1926182
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