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Urban Green Cover and Land Surface Temperature in Ho Chi Minh City: A Remote Sensing Analysis of Vegetation Cooling Effects Across Historical Development Rings, 1990–2025
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Abstract
Ho Chi Minh City's 11.3 million residents live in a landscape shaped by four political regimes — French colonial, wartime, socialist, and market-era — each of which built the city it needed and left the green space debt for the next. Using Sentinel-2 and Landsat satellite imagery from 1990 to 2025, we map vegetation cover and surface temperature across the city at 100-meter resolution and trace how each historical layer lost its green. The city shed 130 km² of vegetation between 2000 and 2020. Today, 36 wards forming a contiguous concrete belt — home to 3.5 million people — have critically low canopy cover, and three wards are true "green deserts" where 327,000 residents cannot walk to adequate vegetation in any direction. Dense green areas are over 4°C cooler than concrete surfaces. The results show that HCMC's heat burden is not random — it is a map of planning decisions made decades ago.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.31223/X5NJ4B
Subjects
Environmental Monitoring
Keywords
urban heat island, land surface temperature, NDVI, fractional vegetation cover, Ho Chi Minh City, Sentinel-2, Landsat, green space accessibility, urban green space, temporal analysis
Dates
Published: 2026-03-26 21:58
Last Updated: 2026-03-26 23:04
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License
CC BY Attribution 4.0 International
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Conflict of interest statement:
None
Data Availability:
Sentinel-2 and Landsat source imagery are publicly available via Google Earth Engine (https://earthengine.google.com). Derived datasets and analysis code will be made available on GitHub upon publication.
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