Abstract:Urban green space is the main part of urban green infrastructure, regarded as the important spatial basis for urban sustainable development, and can provide ecological, recreational and social-cultural functions. Since 1980s, the urban planners and policy-makers widely took the urban green space area per capita, public green space area per capita, urban park area per capita, the ratio of urban green space, and green space cover ratio, etc. as the key indexes to guide planning and management in China. However, only a few indexes reflecting the spatial allocation and structure of urban green space are used, and few policy-makers and planners pay attention to the spatial equity of urban green space service functions.Since the Reform and Open Policy were initiated in the 1980s, Chinese cities have been facing rapid urban sprawl, but most of the cities implemented green space planning in the 1990s. So, the number of patches and area of urban green space in Chinese cities could not satisfy the increasing demands of citizens. With socio-economic development, Chinese people and governments are paying much more attention to urban green space, and more and more citizens have the desire for contact with nature, and are willing to live close to urban green space. Consequently, governments plan to develop and optimize urban green space allocation to meet these demands. Quantification of accessibility and equity of urban green space is a prerequisite to assess them as a tool for decision-making in planning. However, GIS-based accessibility and equity analysis has not yet been used to evaluate the accessibility and equity of urban green space in China. Chinese planners have been unable to give spatial accessibility and equity of urban green space a comprehensive evaluation, so their plans based on their experience could be arbitrary.In this paper, supported by GIS, the new study frame for assessing the social function of urban green space is established, within which, the accessibility and equity indexes are used to analyze the rationality of the urban green space spatial structure, through a case study of Shanghai and Qingdao city, China. Results demonstrate that: (1) the accessibility and equity indexes are effective to appraise the structure of urban green space, and using the new study frame to guide the planning and management of urban green space is feasible; (2) when the indexes are used, the study area and scale, especially the data resolution need to be defined to compare the temporal data series in the study area or with the other cities. The new frame in this paper will enrich the key index system for assessing the urban green space in China, and can provide planners and policy-makers with important and valuable information that can be used in urban green space planning and assessment.