Kraal in Africa. Dispersed Rural Settlement Each settlement has an economic base Basic Services create goods to be distributed outside of the community.

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Presentation transcript:

Kraal in Africa

Dispersed Rural Settlement

Each settlement has an economic base Basic Services create goods to be distributed outside of the community. big industries Paper Mill USAA Insurance QVC Non-Basic Services: serve the community. schools Grocery stores Doctors DMV restaurants

Basic or Non-Basic? 1. Hardees 2. Planters Peanuts 3. Norfolk Naval Base 4. Old Dominion U. 5. Ford Plant 6. U-Haul distributer 7. Landstown High School 8. Smokey Bones 9. The International Port 10. Virginia Beach oceanfront 11. Hall Honda 12. Lipton Tea

Urban Hierarchy Megacity: 10 million people City: Varies throughout the world (urban area) Town Village Hamlet: less than 100 people Urban Specialization (functionality): The larger the urban area, the more specialized services you can receive.

The Central Place Theory Walter Christaller Market area of a service Size of a market area – Range – Threshold

Gravity Model

Back to Central Place Theory Which shape to use?

Hexagon: Central Place

Are the market areas the same size? Are there concentrations of populations in some of the areas, i.e. are the thresholds the same size? Would concentrations of population influence the locations? Would the locations of businesses with large work forces influence the range? Would demographics of population (specifically income) influence the range?

Advantages to Central Place Theory Does a “good enough” job of describing spatial patterns in urbanization Only theory to describe hierarchy of urban centers Describes location of trade and service activity Beneficial to city economic developers to identify what types of services are necessary and will survive in a given community

Problems with Central Place Theory Large areas of flat land are rare and transportation networks often intentionally channel traffic in specific directions Government intervention can dictate the location of industry Perfect competition is an unreal assumption People vary in their shopping trends—personal preference/sales People and resources are not evenly distributed Christaller did not account for changing functions of areas over time

Site: physical characteristics of a place Site: Physical characteristics of a place When you look At a place up close What is the site Of Singapore?

Situation: Relative Location, What is the location in relation to other places? When you look at a place far away, pull back with a satellite.

Mumbai: Site?

Mumbai: Situation

SITE: Located on the northern Highlands in the Guayllabamba river basin on the Eastern slopes of Pichincha Volcano

Situation: 2 nd largest city, political and historical center of Ecuador Guayaquil is the largest city and economic center of Ecuador

1734 map On the eastern slopes of Pichincha Volcano Quito

Primate City and Rank Size Rule Primate City Where the largest city is disproportionately larger than the next sized city. Mexico City Paris Ecuador has two primate cities, very unusual. What are they? Rank Size Rule The second largest city is 1/nth of the largest city. The largest city has 10 million The next city has 5 million The next city has 2.5 million

Central Business Districts vs. The SUBURBS!!! The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly

Central Business Districts - Original Location -Site -Situation

Characteristics of CBDs Charlotte, NC -Vertical Geography -High Rents (bid rents) -Demography -Environmental Concerns -Cultural Amenities -Sense of Place

Services of CBDs: Faneuil Hall Marketplace, Boston -Retail Services with a High Threshold -Retail Services with a High Range -Retail Services Serving Downtown Workers -Business Services

Centralization in CBDs 1. Economic Advantages: -accessibility -location near transportation hubs -agglomeration, clustering of “like” services 2. Social Advantages: -Historical momentum -Prestige -locate near work

Urban Renewal Gentrification Revitalization Zoning Sense of Place?

Granville Island, Vancouver

Who lives in the inner city? Single Yuppies, DINKS=want to be near amenities and walk to work Elderly, retired=want to be near amenities, can’t drive, no kids, downsizing from big house in suburbs Middle-aged, single career women Gay population People with unique careers can only find jobs in big cities People who don’t want to be far from amenities Affordable, high density housing Don’t want to pay transportation costs to CBD jobs

Problems with Decentralization in CBDs Inadequate and run-down housing, redlining, filtering, ethnic and racial segregation Stores shut down Homelessness, underclass, cycle of poverty Services are cut or taxes are raised Crime Pollution Lack of residents

Video made by a geography student in Exeter, England about the CBD

Suburbs: The answer to decentralization - The commuter zone: Counterurbanization, Transportation Corridor -Early Policies that led to suburbanization A. Federal Road Act of 1916, Interstate Hwy Act 1956 B. Federal Housing Administration (FHA) single family homes -FHA loans for repairs were short and small C. GI Bill 1944 D. United States Housing Act provides public housing for the poor E. Zoning Ordinances, Gated Communities 2 effects: 1.Encouraged single family homes away from the central city 2. Magnified segregation of residential areas

Suburbs: The Good Life? -Urban Sprawl -checkerboard development, in-filling -Placelessness -Better Schools -Safer Environment -Large Yards, single homes -Jobs have moved to the suburbs (suburbanization of business) Services have moved to the suburbs, office parks -Redlining, blockbusting -Master-planned communities

Ted Talks on Suburbs

Who wants to live in the Suburbs? Married with families, affordable, single homes Divorced moms who get the family home Widowed women (older People who want safety (less crime), big yards, better schools People who work outside of the city

Urban Sprawl: Suburbs run amok gridlock/video-nowhere-to-grow/3/ gridlock/video-nowhere-to-grow/3/

CBDs in Europe and Latin America How are they similar AND How are they different?

Resources De Blij, Harm, J. (2007). Human Geography People, Place and Culture. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons Inc. Domosh, Mona, Neumann, Roderic, Price, Patricia, & Jordan-Bychkov, The Human Mosaic, A Cultural Approach to Human Geography. New York: W.H. Freeman and Company. Fellman, Jerome, D., Getis, Arthur, & Getis, Judith, Human Geography, Landscapes of Human Activities. Boston, MA: McGraw-Hill Higher Education. Pulsipher, Lydia Mihelic and Alex M. and Pulsipher, World Regional Geography, Global Patterns, Local Lives. W.H. Freeman and Company New York. Rubenstein, James M. (2008). An introduction to human geography The cultural landscape. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall. Benewick, Robert, & Donald, Stephanie H. (2005). The State of China Atlas. Berkeley: University of California Press.