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Chapter 11 - Urban Systems and Urban Structures

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The nature of cities in an urbanizing world: origins, definitions and locations ... 4% world pop lives in cities of 10 million or more (11.5) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 11 - Urban Systems and Urban Structures


1
Chapter 11 - Urban Systems and Urban Structures
  • The nature of cities in an urbanizing world
    origins, definitions and locations
  • The economic base and systems of cities
    functions, hierarchies, and networks
  • Inside the city land uses, social areas, and
    patterns of change
  • World urban diversity cities in Anglo America,
    Europe, and the developing world
  • 11.1, 11.2

2
Megacities and Merging Metropolises
  • Megacity gt 20 million pop. metropolises - from
    personal choice and government investment
    decision. (11.3, 11.4)
  • 4 world pop lives in cities of 10 million or
    more (11.5)
  • Merged to Conurbations- multiple centers.The
    major conurbations in N America Megalopolis
    called BosNyWash.
  • Megalopolis and other Angle American Conurbations
    (11.6).

3
Settlement Roots
  • Most rural people live in village, or hamlet.
    Only W.Europe, Americas (except Mormon Utah and
    Mennonite Manitoba), Australia and New Zealand -
    live apart.
  • Cooperative and utopian community - Oneida (NY),
    Amana (IA), and New Harmony (IN)
  • Rural settlement forms (11.7, 11.8 and 11.9)
  • Trade - tendency for linear clustered houses
    along main streets.

4
Nature of Cities
  • Urban units are not single type, structure or
    size, sharing common characteristics - nucleated
    and nonagricultural settlements.
  • City/Town - with CBD, (11.10)
  • Suburb - functionally specialized segment of a
    larger urban complex. Not self-sufficient.
  • Urbanized area - continuous built-up landscape
    defined by building and population densities with
    no reference to political boundaries.
  • Metropolitan area - large-scale functional
    entity. Current Federal Definition MSAs
    (Metropolitan Statistical Areas) economically
    integrated urbanized areas in one or more
    contiguous counties. (11.11)

5
Location of Urban Settlement
  • Site - absolute location, such as break-of-bulk,
    bayhead, railhead (end of railroad), waterpower
    cities, island, elevated cities,... (1.9, 1.10,
    page 10)
  • Situation - relative location - places a
    settlement in relation to the physical and
    cultural characteristics of surrounding areas.
  • The site or situation originally gave rise to an
    urban unit may not remain the essential
    ingredient for its growth and development for
    very long. Circular and cumulative causation - a
    successful urban unit may acquire new populations
    and functions attracted by the already exiting
    markets, labor force, and urban facilities.

6
Economic Base
  • City support itself or provides services and
    products for its hinterland.
  • Basic Sector - export service/products to
    outsides
  • Nonbasic sector - support themselves in the city.
  • Total economic structure of an urban area
    basicnonbasic
  • Functional specialization of urban areas (11.12)
  • Ratio tends to grow (basic/nonbasic) to 1/2 in a
    1 million city
  • multiplier effect - (11.13)
  • The growth of cities may be self-generating
    circular and cumulative -service industry (bank
    and retailing service, public) - add more labor
    needs to nonbasic sector.
  • declining trend in NE and Midwest (Fig. 11.14 and
    Table 11.1)

7
Urban Hierarchy
  • Ranking of cities based on size and functional
    complexity
  • E.g. 12 million in largest city, then the second
    largest city will have 6 million, and third
    largest will have 4 million (1/3 of the largest
    city).. The difference becomes smaller at lower
    levels of the hierarchy.
  • This rule doesnt apply to countries with
    dominant city such as France and Mexico.
  • Primate City - far more than twice the size the
    second-ranked city - Seoul in Korea and Luanda in
    Angola - express the heritage of their culture or
    colonial imprints. (11.17- primate city
    evolution)
  • World Cities (11.18)
  • Urban Influence Zones - area outside of a city
    that are still affected by it (Baxter, Algood)

8
Central Place Theory - Walter Christaller
  • Assumption - 1) no topographic barriers,
    channelization of traffic and variations in farm
    productivity
  • 2) even population distribution pattern
  • 3) same purchasing power, tastes and demands
  • 4) minimum number of customers
  • 5) shortest distance demand
  • Results - 1) sales monopoly in each polygon 2) no
    userved areas 3) central place at the center of
    hexagon 4) Largest centers provide enough service
    to the largest area 5) size of market area
    proportional to the number of goods and services
    offered from that place 6) smaller hexagon
    serves smaller area (11.18)

9
Christallers Hierarchy of Settlements and
Service AreasTtowns, Ccity,Hhamlet,Vvillage
  • Nesting pattern
  • each larger complementary regions is centered on
    a higher-order urban place
  • Rank-size population

10
Conclusions from Hexagon Model
  • Ranks of urban places do form an orderly
    hierarchy of central places in spatial balance,
    if one removed, new equilibrium will be formed.
  • Same distance apart for the city with same rank
  • Larger cities will be spaced farther from each
    other than smaller towns or villages
  • applicable to agricultural areas, new balanced
    network will form once a node is removed.
  • Supportive evidences found in Europe, N America
    and, North China Plain and Sichuan Basin,
    Midwests square layout confirmed Christallers
    model

11
Network City
  • Two or more cities - Partially complementary in
    functions, developing to a networking pattern
  • Kyoto (cultural capital), Osaka(commercial/industr
    ial) and Kobe (leading port) joining together to
    compete with Tokyo as a major center of commerce
  • Europe - Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and The Hague
    the Raqndstad
  • No true US network city.
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