Measuring Spatial Accessibility of Water Points in Dodoma City Council: Adaptation of the Two-step Floating Catchment Area Method

Context and background Conventional methods for measuring water point accessibility based on threshold demand or distance, result in uniform indices that may be inflated/deflated at different dwelling places within administrative units. Goal and Objectives: This study aims to increase the accuracy o...

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Main Authors: Frank Edward Mahuve, Beatrice Christopher Tarimo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EL-AYACHI 2024-03-01
Series:African Journal on Land Policy and Geospatial Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revues.imist.ma/index.php/AJLP-GS/article/view/44102
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author Frank Edward Mahuve
Beatrice Christopher Tarimo
author_facet Frank Edward Mahuve
Beatrice Christopher Tarimo
author_sort Frank Edward Mahuve
collection DOAJ
description Context and background Conventional methods for measuring water point accessibility based on threshold demand or distance, result in uniform indices that may be inflated/deflated at different dwelling places within administrative units. Goal and Objectives: This study aims to increase the accuracy of estimated spatial accessibility of water points by adapting the Two-step Floating Catchment Area method which is based on both threshold demand and distance. Methodology: The two-step floating catchment area method was examined and its limitations were illustrated using the hypothetical scenario. Then, the two-step floating catchment area method was refined by introducing a demand-balancing factor in its first step and proposing weighted averaging instead of unweighted summing of supply-to-demand ratios in its second step. The conventional and refined two-step floating catchment area methods were implemented using QGIS 3.28 to quantify the spatial accessibility of water points in Dodoma City Council. The latter method was based on the disaggregated population at grids of 200 m by 200 m.   Results: Regardless of threshold distance, the conventional method generated a uniform accessibility index for each Ward. Meanwhile, the refined floating catchment area method resulted in heterogeneous accessibility indices above zero within the threshold distance and zero beyond the threshold distance. The study further revealed the preservation of demand and supply by the refined two-step floating catchment area method in the hypothetical scenario and Dodoma City Council. Thus, accessibility indices estimated by the refined two-step floating catchment area might be more accurate, realistic and reliable for water supply professionals and decision-makers.
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spelling doaj.art-be80fecaa4004210b6ff6faffab36b0e2024-03-05T10:57:16ZengEL-AYACHIAfrican Journal on Land Policy and Geospatial Sciences2657-26642024-03-017110.48346/IMIST.PRSM/ajlp-gs.v7i1.44102Measuring Spatial Accessibility of Water Points in Dodoma City Council: Adaptation of the Two-step Floating Catchment Area MethodFrank Edward Mahuve0Beatrice Christopher Tarimo1The University of DodomaArdhi UniversityContext and background Conventional methods for measuring water point accessibility based on threshold demand or distance, result in uniform indices that may be inflated/deflated at different dwelling places within administrative units. Goal and Objectives: This study aims to increase the accuracy of estimated spatial accessibility of water points by adapting the Two-step Floating Catchment Area method which is based on both threshold demand and distance. Methodology: The two-step floating catchment area method was examined and its limitations were illustrated using the hypothetical scenario. Then, the two-step floating catchment area method was refined by introducing a demand-balancing factor in its first step and proposing weighted averaging instead of unweighted summing of supply-to-demand ratios in its second step. The conventional and refined two-step floating catchment area methods were implemented using QGIS 3.28 to quantify the spatial accessibility of water points in Dodoma City Council. The latter method was based on the disaggregated population at grids of 200 m by 200 m.   Results: Regardless of threshold distance, the conventional method generated a uniform accessibility index for each Ward. Meanwhile, the refined floating catchment area method resulted in heterogeneous accessibility indices above zero within the threshold distance and zero beyond the threshold distance. The study further revealed the preservation of demand and supply by the refined two-step floating catchment area method in the hypothetical scenario and Dodoma City Council. Thus, accessibility indices estimated by the refined two-step floating catchment area might be more accurate, realistic and reliable for water supply professionals and decision-makers. https://revues.imist.ma/index.php/AJLP-GS/article/view/44102Spatial accessibilitywater pointstwo-step floating catchment areapopulation disaggregationDodoma City Council
spellingShingle Frank Edward Mahuve
Beatrice Christopher Tarimo
Measuring Spatial Accessibility of Water Points in Dodoma City Council: Adaptation of the Two-step Floating Catchment Area Method
African Journal on Land Policy and Geospatial Sciences
Spatial accessibility
water points
two-step floating catchment area
population disaggregation
Dodoma City Council
title Measuring Spatial Accessibility of Water Points in Dodoma City Council: Adaptation of the Two-step Floating Catchment Area Method
title_full Measuring Spatial Accessibility of Water Points in Dodoma City Council: Adaptation of the Two-step Floating Catchment Area Method
title_fullStr Measuring Spatial Accessibility of Water Points in Dodoma City Council: Adaptation of the Two-step Floating Catchment Area Method
title_full_unstemmed Measuring Spatial Accessibility of Water Points in Dodoma City Council: Adaptation of the Two-step Floating Catchment Area Method
title_short Measuring Spatial Accessibility of Water Points in Dodoma City Council: Adaptation of the Two-step Floating Catchment Area Method
title_sort measuring spatial accessibility of water points in dodoma city council adaptation of the two step floating catchment area method
topic Spatial accessibility
water points
two-step floating catchment area
population disaggregation
Dodoma City Council
url https://revues.imist.ma/index.php/AJLP-GS/article/view/44102
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