Chapter 12: Services. Consumer Services Provides services to individual consumers who desire them and can pay for them.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Do Now: Monday Oct. 18th The minimum number of people needed to support a service is hinterland. range. threshold. median. meridian The maximum distance.
Advertisements

CENTRAL PLACE THEORY.
Why Do Services Cluster Downtown?
Key Issue 4. A: p Central Business District Retail Services in the CBD Retail Services with High Threshold Retail Services with a High Range.
With your host Mr. Brooks!! Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Click to begin.
Get homework out and prepare for reading quiz!. 1.Give an example of a type of job in the following categories: - consumer service, - a business service,
Chapter 12 Services.
The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography
Why are Consumer Services Distributed in a Regular Pattern?
Ch. 12 Services Key Issue3-4.
CHAPTER 12: SERVICES In MDCs most workers are employed in the tertiary sector of the economy, which is the provision of goods and services. There is.
Services Chapter 12 An Introduction to Human Geography
Location of Cities Where are cities located and why?
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 12: Services The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography.
CH.12 Services Services generate more than 2/3 of GDP in developed countries, compared to ½ in developing countries.
MDCs have more services In LDCs people work to produce food. A SERVICE is any activity that fulfills a want or need and returns money to those who provide.
Ch. 12 Services Where are they located and why?. Every settlement in a MDC provides consumer services to people in the surrounding market area/hinterland.
Key Issue 1 Where Did Services Originate?
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 12: Services The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography.
Chapter 12: Services. In North America, ¾ of employees work in the service sector. Consumer services: provide services to individual consumers and include.
Presented by Amanda Welch-Alleyne.  A service is any activity that fulfills a human want or need and returns money to those who provide it.  Services.
Large City Medium Town Small Village Match Large.
Why do Services Cluster Downtown? Central Business District (CBD) usually one of the oldest areas of the city where retail and office activities.
AP Human Geography Central Place Theory.
Key Issue 1-Where Did Services Originate
Services Market Area
Why Do Business Services Locate in Large Settlements?
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. H4/12/12 Distribution of Services (Ch – pp )
Chapter 12 Services Key Issue 2. Distribution of Consumer Services  Central place theory  Market-area of a service  Size of market area  Market area.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 12: Services The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography.
Intro to Services Types of Services Origin of Services.
Get out a sheet of notebook paper. Bellringer WITHOUT looking at your notes: 1.List the hierarchy of city types and one characteristic of each 2.Define:
TYPES OF SERVICES AND CENTRAL PLACE THEORY.  Which sector of the economy?  Generate more than 2/3 of GDP in developed countries  Consumer Services.
Service. Three Types of Service 1.Consumer Services Principal purpose is to provide services to individual consumers who desire them and can afford to.
REVISITING SOME CONCEPTS FROM BEFORE.  Write down everything that you remember about the following concepts:  Central Place Theory  Basic vs. nonbasic.
Ws.
Chapter 12 Section 2 Why are consumer services distributed in a regular pattern?
Why Are Consumer Services Distributed in a Regular Pattern? Chapter 12: Services Key Issue 3.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 13 Lecture Urban Patterns The Cultural Landscape Eleventh Edition Matthew Cartlidge University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
TYPES OF SERVICES AND CENTRAL PLACE THEORY.  Which sector of the economy?  Generate more than 2/3 of GDP in developed countries  Consumer Services.
APHG: Chapter 12 -Review. What is a market center for the exchange of services by people attracted from the surrounding area.
Types of Services and Central Place Theory
Cities & Urban Land Settlement: permanent collection of buildings where people reside, work, & obtain services Modern cities developed during the industrial.
Services.
Why Do Services Cluster Downtown?
Why Are Consumer Services Distributed in a Regular Pattern?
Chapter 13: Urban Patterns
Chapter 12 Key Issue 3: Services
Services Chapter 12.
Define it Name that term Clarify the Concept More ch 12 info Potpourri
Types of Services.
AP Human Geography Central Place Theory.
Cities & Urban Land Use Unit 5. Cities & Urban Land Use Unit 5.
Key Issues Where are services distributed? Where are consumer services distributed? Where are business services distributed? Why do services cluster in.
Three Types of Service-Sector Jobs
Key Issue 1: Why Do Services Cluster Downtown?
The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography
The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography
Magic Washing Machine Varignon Frame
The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography
Services and Settlements
Chapter 12 Services.
Andrew Smith & Timothy Tu
The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography
Key Issue 1 Where Did Services Originate?
Services and Settlements
Chapter 12 - Services Business Location Video.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 12: Services

Consumer Services Provides services to individual consumers who desire them and can pay for them.

Business Services Helps other businesses. They diffuse and distribute services Include: –Financial services –Professional services –Transportation –Communication –Utilities services

Business Services

Public Services Includes governmental services at various levels that provide security and protection for citizens and businesses.

Land Use A large percentage of the world’s population still practice Agriculture and live in rural settlements.

Clustered Rural Settlements Families live close to one another and fields surround the houses and farms buildings.

Dispersed Rural Settlements Farmers live on individual farms and are more isolated from their neighbors. These are associated with more recent agricultural settlements in the developed world.

Central Place Theory  Examines the relationship between settlements of different sizes.  Especially their ability to provide various goods and services.  Developed by Walter Chistaller in the 1930’s.  Based on his study of settlement patterns in southern Germany.

The theory consists of two basic concepts: 1) Threshold -- the minimum market needed to bring a firm or city selling goods and services into existence and to keep it in business 2) Range -- the average maximum distance people will travel to purchase goods and services Central Place Theory

Services will have a market area or hinterland

The Gravity Model  Predicts that the best location for a service is directly related to the number of people in the area  And, inversely related to the distance that people must travel for it  A place with more people will have more potential customers  People who are further away from a service will be less likely to use it

Rank Size Rule In many MDC’s there is a hierarchy of settlements from largest to smallest Rank size rule= a country’s nth largest settlement will be 1/nth the population of the largest settlement So the second largest city would be half the size of the largest

Central Place Theory Diagram

Primate City Rule  Many LDC’s as well as some European countries follow the primate city rule  A primate city is much larger and more important than any other city in the country  Buenos Aires, Argentina and Copenhagen Denmark are examples of these

Copenhagen, Denmark Buenos Aires, Argentina

United Nations in NYC NATO and the headquarters of the EU is in Brussels

Specialized producer-service centers Have management, research and development activities associated with specific industries. Detroit is a specialized producer- service center specializing in motor vehicles.

Dependent Centers Depend on decisions made in world cities for their economic well-being They provide relatively unskilled jobs San Diego is an industrial and military dependent center

CBD Central Business District = CBD The center of a city where services have traditionally clustered Three types of retail services have concentrated in the center because they require accessibility –These include services with a high threshold A large department store is a high threshold service

High Range A retail store with a high range are specialized stores that are patronized less frequently –Example: Whole Foods Many high Threshold/high Range stores are moving to the suburbs Services that cater to people who work and/or live in the CBD are actually expanding Business services remain a part of the CBD as well –Banking –Advertising

Shopping in Baltimore’s Inner Harbor!

Built Environment and Social Space Land costs in CBD are high because of competition for accessibility Land use is more intensive in CBD Built character more vertical Infrastructure runs underground Skyscrapers give the central city a distinctive feature Washington DC is the only large US CBD that does not have a skyscraper..why?

No building is allowed to be higher than the U.S. Capitol dome!

What business/service would you run?