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As a novel urban leisure activity, Citywalk is reshaping the spatial organization of urban tourism resources and spatial experience patterns. This phenomenon provides a crucial entry point for understanding new tourist–destination relationships from the perspective of spatial behavior. This paper takes Harbin, an Internet-Famous City (IFC), as a case study and integrates multi-source data, including pedestrian trajectories, social media texts, and urban infrastructure. A cross-modal analytical framework for Citywalk networks is constructed to examine the structural evolution of Citywalk networks and the relationship between digital-space and physical-space in the context of IFCs. The results indicate that: (1) During its rise as an IFC, Harbin’s Citywalk network transformed from a single-core agglomeration structure to a multi-nodal radial structure, exhibiting a pattern of core reinforcement and outward expansion. (2) Online visibility was associated with the emergence of new nodes and network expansion, but a structural misalignment was observed between digital-space association and physical-space linkage. (3) Emotional differentiation among newly visible nodes further reflected the uneven development of the Citywalk network, while concentrated digital attention was accompanied by persistent structural imbalance. This study highlights the digital–physical misalignment in urban tourism networks, suggests the important role of social media in shaping tourists’ route imagination and emotional evaluation, and provides references for the spatial optimization and sustainable management of urban tourism resources in the new development stage.
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Yue Wang
Donghua Li
Wenyu Zhou
ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information
Tongji University
East China Normal University
Henan Normal University
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Wang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a095bdd7880e6d24efe1b3a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi15050214