Urban planning succeeds when decisions are grounded in evidence, clarity, and a disciplined understanding of place. The Urban Site Analysis Handbook offers a complete, modular framework for evaluating any site—urban, peri‑urban, or rural—with the rigor expected of professional planners, architects, consultants, and development practitioners.This book transforms the complex process of site assessment into a structured, repeatable method. It guides readers through every dimension of analysis: physical conditions, environmental sensitivities, mobility networks, built form, infrastructure capacity, socioeconomic context, risks, opportunities, and final planning recommendations. Each chapter is designed to function independently or as part of a full evaluation, making the handbook equally valuable for fieldwork, academic training, consultancy assignments, and development feasibility studies.The framework begins with project identification and baseline site attributes, ensuring that every assessment is anchored in clear, verifiable information. It then expands into a detailed examination of physical and environmental characteristics, including microclimate, hydrology, soil conditions, vegetation, biodiversity, and flood vulnerability. These elements establish the site's inherent constraints and ecological value.Access and connectivity are explored through a comprehensive mobility lens—road hierarchy, public transport, pedestrian and cycling conditions, internal circulation, multimodal integration, and accessibility for vulnerable groups. This section equips planners to understand how people and goods move to, from, and within the site, and how mobility influences development potential.The built environment context chapter examines architectural character, land‑use mix, streetscape quality, heritage elements, and urban activity patterns. Infrastructure and utilities are assessed with equal depth, covering water supply, sewerage, electricity, gas, broadband, waste management, and stormwater systems. These insights help determine feasibility, capacity, and required upgrades.Environmental and regulatory constraints are presented clearly, enabling practitioners to identify zoning limitations, hazard exposure, conservation requirements, and statutory obligations early in the planning process. The socioeconomic chapter provides a structured approach to understanding population characteristics, income levels, employment patterns, education, community facilities, local economic activity, and social vulnerabilities.The handbook culminates in a synthesis of opportunities and constraints, followed by a dedicated chapter on professional planning recommendations. Readers learn how to translate raw observations into strategic direction, design guidance, land‑use proposals, infrastructure needs, environmental safeguards, and a final professional opinion.Written in a clear, accessible style, this book is suitable for students learning the foundations of site analysis, early‑career professionals seeking structure, and senior practitioners who require a reliable, field‑ready framework. Its modular design ensures adaptability across geographies, project types, and planning contexts.The Urban Site Analysis Handbook is a practical, authoritative resource for anyone committed to shaping better places through evidence‑based planning.