Affiliated Open Spaces (AOS) constitute vital public assets within high-density vertical cities. However, prevailing scholarship remains largely confined to two-dimensional horizontal perspectives, overlooking the quantitative impact of vertical built environment characteristics on spatial distribution and human behavior. Focusing on four high-density districts in Guangzhou typified by distinct three-dimensional morphologies, this study integrates field surveys, 3D geospatial data acquisition, and 621 valid questionnaires to empirically analyze the impact of 3D spatial features on user behavior and the mediating role of accessibility. Utilizing the ArcGIS 3D Analyst for vertical accessibility measurement and Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling (PLS-SEM) for path analysis, the study tests the hypothesized relationships using multi-source data. The results indicate that (1) a user’s vertical location exerts a significant negative impact on both accessibility and human behavior; (2) building density and building functional diversity indirectly promote user engagement primarily by significantly enhancing accessibility, thereby confirming accessibility as a critical mediator; and (3) significant spatial heterogeneity exists, revealing distinct correlation patterns across varying built environments. This research elucidates the pivotal constraint of “vertical location” and validates the mediating efficacy of accessibility, offering empirical insights for human-centric vertical urban planning.
Jiang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.