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Urban Development Building Sustainable Communities
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Rural vs Urban Rural: any area that has a settlement of people LESS than 1,000 people Urban: areas that have MORE than 1,000 people
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Provide services for people Can support major teams, universities, cultural activities Sources of technological innovation Engines of economic growth Why are cities important?
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Locational Factors of Cities Water Fertile Land Trade Routes Resources
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Urbanization in the Developed World Increasing: Why? Most people work in secondary & tertiary sectors of economy = in cities Mechanization of agriculture = fewer jobs Immigrants settle where jobs and ethnic communities available
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Where do Canadians Live? Nearly 80% of Canadians live in urban areas
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Largest Cities in Canada 1)Toronto 2)Montreal 3)Vancouver 4)Ottawa 5)Calgary 6)Edmonton 7)Quebec 8)Winnipeg 9)Hamilton 10)Kitchener-Waterloo
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Settlement Hierarchy Hamlet: population less than 100, few services Village: population ranging from the hundreds to the thousands. Not have many services, maybe a church or a small shop or post office. Town: population of 1,000-20,000 City: population over 100,000
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Goods & Services High Order High Order Good = a good you can only find in the big cities ex: Italian sports High Order Service = a service you can only find in the big cities ex: cancer treatment centre Low Order Low Order Good = a good that you can find anywhere, even in small towns Ex: milk Low Order Service = a service that you can find anywhere, even in small towns Ex: babysitting
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Megalopolis: a chain of adjacent cities Census Metropolitan Area: formed by one or more adjacent municipalities centred on a population centre (known as the core). A CMA must have a total population of at least 100,000 of which 50,000 or more must live in the core.
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Census Metropolitan Areas (CMA) Toronto is Canada`s largest CMA Can you identify 3 municipalities that are part of this?
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What is a Zoning By-Law? A zoning by-law controls the use of land in your community. It states exactly: how land may be used where buildings / structures can be located the types of buildings that are permitted and how they may be used the lot sizes and dimensions, parking requirements, building heights and setbacks from the street.
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Land Use Residential Transportation Commercial Industrial Open Space-Recreational Institutional
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Land Use Breakdown
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http://map.toronto.ca/maps/map.jsp?app=ZBL_CONSULT
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Residential – Low Density Single family homes
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Residential – Medium Density Rowhouses, townhouses
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Residential – Medium Density Low rise apartments
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Residential – High Density Apartment buildings Toronto is second only to New York for the most buildings over 12 storeys in North America. Between the 1950s and 1980s, over 1,000 towers were built around the GTA
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Toronto: High Density Increasing jkhkjhkj
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Industrial Examples: factories, warehouses Factors for determining location -Type of the business e.g. resources needed to create product -Cost of land -Type of transportation: located near water, rail, highways -Generation of smell, noise, pollution
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Institutional Examples: school, university, hospital, church, mosque, police station, fire hall University College, UofT
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Recreation/ Open Space Examples: parks, cemeteries, golf courses
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Transportation Expressways and Roads Parking lots and garages Airport Transit right-of-way Rail lines Stations Docks http://www.toronto.ca/transportation/road_class/index.htm
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Commercial – Shopping Malls
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Offices Central Business District (CBD) : the heart of downtown, tall office buildings
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Major Problems with Cities Pollution Smog, garbage contaminated water Stress Always in a rush … Crime Gangs, gun violence, theft
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High price of gas, insurance and car maintenance Traffic jams, stress, road rage Smog = breathing issues Costs of Commuting by Car
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