Holly Lodge Girls' College - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 20
About This Presentation
Title:

Holly Lodge Girls' College

Description:

Street patterns established before cars invented ... warehouses have been turned into luxury apartments and bars, restaurants and clubs ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:125
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 21
Provided by: hollylod
Category:
Tags: college | girls | holly | lodge

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Holly Lodge Girls' College


1
Holly Lodge Girls' College Geography
Department Revision Materials Settlement
2
Settlements
  • Settlements are places where people live and work
  • Settlement Site the physical piece of land the
    settlement is built on
  • Settlement Situation the settlement in relation
    to its surrounding area
  • Site Factors
  • Water Supply a river, lake, pond, well, spring
    etc needed for drinking, washing etc. These are
    called wet-point sites. Some areas were marshy so
    villages had to be built on mounds. These were
    called dry-point sites
  • Aspect/Shelter south facing slopes (adret) are
    warmer with more sunshine and sheltered from
    northerly winds
  • Defence more important in years gone by.
    Forts/castles to protect from neighbouring tribes
    etc
  • Resources food supply was vital so fertile
    soils were needed, wood supply for fuel and
    building,
  • Communications settlements often grew at
    bridging points over rivers. Others grew as a
    route focus which attracted trade from other
    places

3
Settlement Hierarchy
  • A settlement hierarchy arranges settlements in
    order of the size of its population, the range
    and number of services, the sphere of influence.
  • Sphere of Influence (SOI) the distance that
    people will travel to that settlement. The larger
    the settlement the larger the SOI
  • Convenience goods small goods like bread, milk
    newspaper etc. Available in smaller settlements
  • Comparison goods larger, expensive goods e.g.
    cars, TVs etc usually only found in larger
    settlements
  • Threshold Population the amount of people
    needed for a shop/service to stay
  • Range of a Good the max. distance that people
    will travel to use a shop/service

4
Settlement Functions
The function of a settlement is its purpose why
it is there and the work that it does
5
Settlement Functions
  • Many settlements in the UK have changed their
    function over time
  • Most began with farming but over time
    mechanization (more farm machines) reduced the
    need for farm workers so people sought employment
    in towns. Therefore these villages now tend to
    house people who travel (commute) to nearby
    cities
  • Case Study Shincliffe in County Durham
  • Began life as a farming village with fertile
    soils in the Middle Ages
  • As the population rose the mine opened with many
    workers moving to the area to find jobs in the
    mines
  • By the 1990s many local coal mines had been
    closed down. This meant that jobs were lost.
    People moved out and services closed down
  • Eventually the area was modernised and people
    moved out to the village and commute to the city
    for their jobs. Shincliffe is now a commuter
    settlement

6
Urban Morphology
Urban land uses are the shops, industries,
offices, housing, parks and open space found in
larger settlements. Each type of land use tends
to cluster together to give urban zones e.g. the
CBD. Morphology is the term given to the pattern
of the internal structure of a city An Urban
Model for Cities in MEDCs The Burgess Model
  • Based on 2 main ideas
  • Cities grow outwards so it is younger on the
    outskirts and older in the middle. The original
    site is often where the CBD is found
  • Land costs are highest in the CBD where land is
    in short supply and usually easy access. Away
    from the centre costs decrease allowing more
    housing

Most British cities dont fully conform there
are many differences e.g. tourist resorts with
strips of hotels and shops behind the beach
7
Urban Morphology
An Urban Model for Cities in LEDCs
  • Features
  • CBD is located centrally as with all models
  • Industrial zone along transport link e.g. railway
  • Less regular than the MEDC model and more zones

4. There is only a very small sector of high
class housing usually next to the CBD or other
prime sites such as near the beach 5. No
extensive areas of middle class housing as in
MEDCs 6. Largest zone is that of the shanty towns
that stretch vast distances on the outskirts of
town. They often occupy wasteland, swamps or
steeper slopes that can be very unstable
8
Transect Through a City
9
The Central Business District (CBD)
  • The CBD is not static, it is dynamic (it
    changes). It grows and it declines. Some areas
    look smart while other areas look run down
  • Main Functions of the CBD
  • Shops The CBD is at the top of the shopping
    hierarchy. Widest range of shops selling
    comparison goods (see earlier slide). In the
    middle (core) of the CBD we find the large chain
    and dept. stores. On the edge (frame) of the CBD
    we find the smaller locally owned independent
    shops.
  • Offices we find banks, building societies,
    solicitors, company HQs and government offices in
    high rise office blocks
  • Culture and Entertainment parts of the CBD come
    alive at night. Theatres, clubs, cinemas, bars
    and restaurants can be found in the CBD. Certain
    parts of cities have become famous for its
    nightlife e.g. Londons West End

10
Problems and Solutions in the CBD
11
The Inner City
Wealthy workers moved out of the inner city to
the suburbs and commuter villages as a result of
the problems outlined below
12
Improving Inner Cities
  • Attitudes of planners are changing!
  • More Brownfield sites (land already built upon)
    being redeveloped
  • Less Greenfield Sites (land never built upon
    being developed
  • Local Communities now involved in the decision
    process
  • Tower blocks have been refurbished
  • Case Study Inner City Manchester
  • Hulme City Challenge launched in 1992 tried to
    provide 3000 low rise homes accompanied by more
    local services
  • Gentrification the movement of wealthy people
    back into areas of former urban decay
  • This has happened in areas like the Salford Quays
    and Castlefield where old warehouses have been
    turned into luxury apartments and bars,
    restaurants and clubs

13
The Rural-Urban Fringe
  • Urban Sprawl the unchecked growth of towns into
    the countryside
  • Motorways and Bypasses
  • Car ownership and road building encouraged in
    1980s. Result congestion and noise pollution
  • Solution was to build even more roads! But these
    schemes often caused much opposition from
    conservationists and local people
  • By late 90s public opinion and government policy
    had changed and more emphasis was placed on plans
    to reduce traffic and increase use of public
    transport e.g. tolls on motorways, cheaper public
    transport, increased cost of fuel and car parking
  • Many new road schemes have now been delayed or
    scrapped
  • Conservation and Green Belts
  • These are areas of land around cities designed to
    protect the countryside. Their aims are to
  • Check the sprawl of large urban areas and prevent
    towns from merging
  • Safeguard surrounding countryside
  • Assist in urban regeneration by encouraging
    re-use of derelict land

14
The Rural-Urban Fringe
  • Commercial and Industrial Development
  • More developments have seen increases in
    out-of-town shopping areas
  • They offer cheaper land and lower rates
  • Plenty of space for large one storey buildings
  • Open space easy to landscape
  • Cleaner and less congested
  • Easier access to motorways for deliveries etc
  • Pressures and Issues
  • The rural-urban fringe is a very attractive
    location for new housing and commercial
    developments
  • You get the benefit of the countryside and the
    town facilities
  • Farmers are willing to sell land as they can get
    10x more money for it. Farming is now becoming
    more unprofitable
  • Farmers suffer problems such as crop trampling,
    sheep worrying and vandalism when their farms are
    on the rural-urban fringe

15
Urbanisation
  • Urbanisation urban growth which leads to an
    increase in the percentage of people living in
    urban areas
  • Urban Growth in MEDCs
  • Happened after the industrial revolution. People
    left countryside to get jobs in factories in
    towns
  • Town populations increased rapidly but is now
    slowing down some cities are now experiencing
    de-population
  • Urban Growth in LEDCs Huge growth rates due to
  • Rural-urban migration
  • High rates of natural increase among the youthful
    population of these cities
  • Concentration of industries making the cities a
    natural magnet for young people looking for work
  • This has led to the distribution of the largest
    cities now being found in the LEDCs. By 2000
    there were 18 megacities (population of more than
    10million) and 12 of them are found in Asia

16
Urbanisation
  • Advantages from Urbanisation
  • For the economy
  • Big cities attract investment
  • More value is added by manufacturing than by
    exporting raw materials
  • For peoples incomes
  • Variety of employment opportunities increases
    more chance of regular paid work
  • Self help work in informal sector brings more
    money than farming
  • More commercial opportunities for farmers to sell
    their produce at market
  • For Peoples Quality of life
  • Safe water supply, sanitation and electricity
    more likely to occur
  • Often secondary education is only available in
    the cities
  • Opportunities for Improvement
  • Improvements in shanty towns, jobs can provide
    more skills for people
  • Possibilities are present that dont exist in
    rural areas

17
Problems of Growth in LEDCs Shanty Towns
  • Environmental Problems
  • Huge amounts of traffic congestion even though
    car ownership is low
  • Pollution leads to health problems like asthma
    and bronchitis
  • In Beijing smog pollution can reduce visibility
    to 200 metres
  • Rivers and seas used as dustbins
  • Economic Problems
  • Unemployment and poverty are big problems
    mainly finding work
  • Most shanty town dwellers are underemployed
    very few hours and earning very little
  • A few may find jobs in the industrial zones but
    travelling there may be very expensive

18
Problems of Growth in LEDCs Shanty Towns
  • Social Problems
  • Social problems are mainly to do with housing and
    the effects on health
  • Most big cities in LEDCs are surrounded by
    squatter/shanty towns. Called favelas in Brazil,
    bidonvilles in North Africa and bustees in
    Calcutta (India)
  • Found on any spare land that the migrants can
    find including steep slopes, swamps and rubbish
    tips. They are avoided by other people as they
    are often prone to landslides, flooding and
    pollution
  • The shelters are homemade from any materials that
    can be found e.g. cardboard, steel drums etc.
    They typically only have 1or2 rooms and lack
    basic amenities like clean running water and
    electricity
  • Sewage often runs down the street in the gutters
    leading to diseases like cholera which spread
    really quickly not helped by lack of refuse
    collection. As a result, infant mortality rates
    are VERY high as they are vulnerable
  • Many families, especially children are
    malnourished due to poor quality and low quantity
    foods
  • The underlying cause of all the problems is
    poverty!

19
Solving Problems in Shanty Towns
  • Cairo Case Study
  • Traffic Congestion
  • The Cairo Metro is a great success. The trains
    are clean, cool, and well run
  • The metro is used by about 2 million commuters a
    day
  • Sewage
  • The Greater Cairo Sewage project helps to repair
    the citys crumbling system. The main aim is to
    extend sanitation to areas without any
  • Cairo has an efficient rubbish collection system
    in the Zabbaleen. They often reuse/resell the
    refuse. They have official licence from the
    government to do this
  • Housing
  • This is the biggest problem but there are no
    shanty towns. Brick houses are built illegally on
    fertile growing soils next to the Nile. These
    illegal houses cover 80 of the city
  • 2-3 million people set up home in the City of
    the Dead
  • Urban sprawl has been combated by new cities such
    as Sixth of October city. A car factory is found
    there which provides jobs and therefore attracts
    more migrants. The government provides incentives
    for people wishing to move there

20
Self-Help Schemes
  • How to solve the shanty town problems? Bulldoze
    them? But then we would have more homeless
    people! Aided Self-Help (ASH) is an organisation
    that hopes to speed up the process of improving
    homes in shanty towns. It involves
  • Giving shanty town dwellers legal rights to the
    land
  • Connecting them to essential services such as
    water, electricity and roads
  • Providing building materials, technical help and
    lloans
  • Changes in Squatter Settlements Over Time
  • Poor migrants from rural areas
  • Squatter settlements poor shacks
  • Gain work, have some income to improve houses
  • Shanty town self-built houses
  • Regular work, community action, ASH, legal
    titles, public services provided
  • Low income residential district
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com