Urban Settlements Achievement Standard Year 12 Geography

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Presentation transcript:

Urban Settlements Achievement Standard 91241 2.2 Year 12 Geography NCEA Level 2 Urban Settlements Achievement Standard 91241 2.2

Vocabulary Urban Concentration Rural Function Settlement Hinterland Continuum Cumulative causation Migration Sprawl Gentrification Urbanisation Social Concentration Function Hinterland Characteristics Fortified Civilisation Evolved Land-use Urban renewal Economic

2 Main Ideas Characteristics of an urban settlement –location, size, land-use, form and function, and social, economic and structural patterns Processes that influence an urban settlement: migration, sprawl, urbanisation, planning, gentrification, urban renewal, industrial growth or decline and transport changes

What is an Urban Settlement? Distinct centers of population concentration with a defined form and several functions (with boundaries around it) They perform social and economic functions which influence areas beyond their urban boundaries (they interact with a wider hinterland, e.g. Christchurch and Canterbury) They grow or decline at different times as result of the cultural processes that cause changes Can be towns, cities and mega-cities (megaloplis) Individual farmhouses, hamlets and villages are rural settlements (there are more of these and less of the urban) They are distinctly different from non-populated or sparsely populated areas

The Urban Continuum Hamlets Individual Farmhouses Villages Towns Megalopolis Cities

a location, surrounded by a There is a concentration of people in a location, surrounded by a rural hinterland area

The concentration of people is within borders or confines so that it has a defined form or shape

Social & economic functions are performed within this form, e.g. businesses, factories, schools, transport, housing etc.

A focul point exists in the centre, CBD

Concentration of People Function Focal Point (CBD) Form Concentration of People

Shape and Form Urban Settlements are different sizes, shapes and forms because of natural and cultural factors operating. Physical features such as rivers, mountains and ports limit or determine shape Cultural factors like immigration, natural increase, perception and improvements in technology and accessibility also affect the size

3 main ways Urban patterns are described: - Economic – commercial (shops), business functions, finance centres, industrial areas - Social – residential and institutional functions and patterns of schools, hospitals, parks -Structural – Infrastructural networks and patterns of power, water, gas, rail, roads, ports

Urban Settlements Throughout History 10,000 years ago, the first so called urban settlements developed when humans settled in one place, domesticated animals and began farming crops, ending the hunting/gathering nomadic lifestyle

Permanent dwellings were built, people began to specialise in work and other functions - potters, farmers, carpenters etc, and a system of trade began.

5,500 years ago, first cities developed in Iraq (Babylon, Bam, Ur) and Egypt (Thebes and Memphis)

Hydraulic cities, inland and river based, developed in China (An-Yang) and in the Indus Valley (Mohenjo-Daro) Civilisation began with cities, to be civilised means to have cities

Early cities were usually fortified (castle or Pa style), but also needed access to fresh water & resources, good climate (not too extreme) and trade routes for growth

Later Cities Early cities had a central religious focus, populations of 10,000 – 100,000 people, and were governed by religious leaders or officers appointed by religious leaders

Ancient cities like Athens and Rome were Port based relying on trade and control of other settlements for growth

Medieval Cities in Europe were dominated by the Holy Roman Catholic Church and its associated laws and systems, trade suffered, they were overcrowded, unsanitary, isolated, small (30,000 – 50,000) and few in number

1000s (11th C) large trade cities developed (Hamburg) to trade with larger existing cities like London and Venice. People moved to cities for the opportunity to trade, and for new technologies and foreign trading items with the East. Trade eventually overshadowed the church, new kingdoms emerged and technology led to the Industrial revolution and the Industrial City. Later cities, as we know them, have evolved, becoming larger, more complex and having a lot of functions

Industrial Cities Many were medieval cities that grew larger (1 – 10 million) Others, like Manchester (UK) emerged due to their proximity to resources like iron ore, coal and water Factories attracted workers and populations boomed Hastily built housing developed into slums with unsanitary conditions Crime, pollution and grime increased so wealthy people built on the edges of cities to avoid the worst bits of the city Transport was limited to walking for most (some cars around and rail was underdeveloped) so people lived close to where they worked, working class and merchant class became evident

Edinburgh and older industrial cities maps – wealthy sections and old dirty sections

Cities like Chicago, Auckland and Singapore emerged after the industrial revolution and have grid patterns of streets and blocks and distinct industrial, residential and port zones.

Mega Cities / Megalopolis A recent development where large cities sprawl into each other like BosNYWash (Boston, New York and Washington) or Tokohama (Tokyo and Yokohama)

Mexico City has a population of 16 million people and together with other third world huge cities and the megacities, are the most recent developments of human urban settlement development

Characteristics of Urban Settlements All urban settlements are different, but people have come up with models as a guide to understanding urban settlement characteristics. Characteristics can include shape, form, interactions, functions and economical, social and structural patterns The hinterland is the area surrounding the urban settlement

Christaller – Central Place Model Urban Settlements influence and are influenced by their hinterlands An economic model that relies on the maximum distance people will travel to trade (range) and the minimum amount of trade a business needs to survive (threshold) A larger urban settlement like a city is more accessible to more people (people will travel far to go to one) and it also has more functions (tertiary education, hospital etc) than a smaller urban settlement, such as a town. Smaller towns often make up the hinterland of a larger city (Christchurch has Rangiora, Kaiapoi, Rolleston as satellite towns that provide smaller functions to a rural community, but for larger functions (hospitals, shopping malls etc ) people will travel to Christchurch)

Christaller Diagram

Urban Hierarchy Develops Christaller’s model further The larger the place the more services and functions it provides therefore the more important it is There are less large cities with a full range of specialist services (luxury car showrooms, specialist shops, range of healthcare options etc) and more smaller towns that offer low order, (dairy, butcher, garage but no high school or hospital for e.g.) People will travel much further even if it is not very often in order to gain access to a specialist service than they will for a lower order service like a bottle of milk A large city can have several towns as its hinterland or it can have whole regions (as Canterbury is to Christchurch), or nations (Auckland interacts with the rest of NZ) or even an international hinterland

Urban Hierarchy Diagram

Rank Size Countries rank their cities in terms of size (population) There is a rule which suggests that when you have ranked cities form highest to lowest (population) then the 2nd city should be half the size of the 1st one, the 3rd should be 1/3 the size of the 1st and the 4th one ¼ of the size and so on, which implies that a lower ranked city has fewer functions This rule works best in industrialised, developed countries with large populations Primacy A primate city is one that dominates all others in terms of size, function, socially and economically. Auckland is a primate city, it has over 1,000,000 people & then Wellington has less than 500,000 people Often occurs in developing countries, small countries & or when a country has a colonial past

Rank Size Diagram

Linearity Not all relationships between cities are centrally based A linear pattern can occur when port cities are settled first and then more settlements are developed as people push inland A line pattern develops as a result of roads, telephone and rail lines & is often influenced by physical features such as mountains or rivers A transfer city is often settled between the port and the other linear towns to distribute goods from the port city to the country (rural settlements) and the raw materials form the rural settlements to the port for export (as Hamilton is the transfer city for Auckland).

Linearity Diagram

Burgess Model - Concentric Zone Model Zones of land use radiating out from the CBD (central business district)

Case Study 1: Christchurch, NZ

Case Study 2: London, UK