Goré in context: Street-network sprawl trends

Gore in context

1.42.12.83.5<19751976–19901991–20052006–2020SNDi of street additions
1.42.12.83.5<19751976–19901991–20052006–2020SNDi of entire street network
GoreLogone Oriental (Region)Chad (Country)

The chart above shows SNDi trends for new street additions (left panel) and the entire network (right panel), with Goré plotted against Logone Oriental and Chad. While Logone Oriental and Chad both rose steadily, Goré's new street additions rose steadily. Most recently, Goré's incremental SNDi rose from 2.41 to 2.67 between 1991-2005 and 2006-2020. In terms of the aggregate network, Goré ranked 2nd out of 3 cities in Logone Oriental and 15th out of 31 in Chad as of 2020.

New Street Additions (2006–2020)

SNDi value
2.67
Rank in Chad
18th of 31
Rank in Logone Oriental
3rd of 3

Entire Network (Aggregate)

SNDi value
1.81
Rank in Chad
15th of 31
Rank in Logone Oriental
2nd of 3

Rankings go from most connected to most disconnected — rank 1 is the most connected.

What about similarly populated cities?

246<19751976–19901991–20052006–2020SNDi of street additions
246<19751976–19901991–20052006–2020SNDi of entire street network
GoreCarmel CommonsPuerto Francisco de Orellana

While Carmel Commons and Puerto Francisco de Orellana both built increasingly disconnected streets from 1975 through 1976-1990, then improved, Goré built increasingly disconnected streets over time in new street additions. For the full network, Goré and Carmel Commons both became progressively more disconnected, while Puerto Francisco de Orellana grew more disconnected from 1975 through 1976-1990, then improved. Goré and Puerto Francisco de Orellana have been converging in their street-network character since 1975.