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A team of environmental engineers and city planners from University College London, the University of Sydney, and École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne has discovered that cities grow in ways similar to the development of cancerous tumors. In their paper published in Journal of the Royal Society Interface, the group used mathematical models to explain how the city of London grew into its current state, and then applied the models to Sydney, Australia.
Prior research has shown that most modern cities began as small towns and grew over time to become much larger. In this new effort, the researchers wanted to learn more about the ways that cities grow and why they grow as they do. To that end, they used a number of mathematical models to describe how the city of London grew from a small town into a major city.
They found that London started as a small town, just a square mile in size. That size, they found, suited the people that lived there, as it allowed them to visit all parts of the town with the types of transportation available at the time—namely, walking and going on horseback. But with the arrival of train transport, people in the city began moving to its edge, hoping for a less crowded environment. And that led to more growth.