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Location of Industry and the Central Business District

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Evaluations Against Does not include inner city renewal. Based on limited study of only a few studies not entirely accurate. * * 9 9 The Central Business District ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Location of Industry and the Central Business District


1
The Central Business District
IB Geography II
2
The Central Business District
  • The CBD the commercial and economic core of a
    city
  • The heart of the city
  • the area most accessible to public transport
  • the location with the highest land values.

3
Characteristics
  • Parking.
  • Transport Terminals.
  • Wholesalers/Warehouses.
  • Small Shops.
  • Concentration of Banks/Businesses.
  • Offices.
  • Department/Chain Stores.
  • Car Sales/Services.
  • Medical/Fire Services.

4
Location Of Industry
  • Manufacturing areas are located within the
    inner-city.
  • They are also located along major highways and in
    industrial suburbs.
  • Industries found in cities usually include
    skilled labor, medical instruments, fashion
    accessories and clothes, newspapers etc.
  • Port industries.

5
CBD Main functions
  • Shops top of the shopping hierarchy in a city.
    Widest range and the largest department stores.
    Wide sphere of influence.
  • Offices Banks, building societies, solicitors,
    government offices. Offices occupy high-rise
    blocks or upper floors above shops.
  • Culture and Entertainment Areas of the CBD
    come alive at night. Chicagos clubs, theatres,
    Navy Pier, music, etc.

6
CBD Users
  • One way to begin to understand the role of the
    CBD is to consider who uses it
  • 4 Major Groups
  • Workers Still primary location for many major
    employers, office buildings, govt offices
  • Residents Usually now at extremes of income
    scale
  • Shoppers Many CBDs much smaller role than
    formerly
  • Visitors Renaissance in many CBDs in the hotel
    industry CBD asentertainment and cultural
    center
  • These groups found in CBD in different
    proportions at different times of the day and
    days of the week

7
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8
CBD Problems
  • Traffic congestion Towns grew and street
    patterns were established before the motor car
    was invented. Rush hour traffic grid-lock
  • Pollution Water, land, air and noise pollution
    are all common in city centres. Pollution adds to
    the stresses of living in urban areas and is
    thought to aggravate some diseases such as asthma
    and bronchitis.

9
Lack of space and high cost of land
  • Competition for land extremely high prices.
    Smaller firms and retailers forced away from the
    CBD

10
Land use patterns
  • Towns and cities do not grow in a haphazard way
    but tend to develop recognizable shapes and
    patterns.
  • Each town is unique and will have developed its
    own distinctive pattern, it will also show some
    characteristics shared by other urban
    settlements.

11
Although all towns and cities are different, most
have grown and developed in the same way.
Believe it or not there is a PATTERN to it all !
12
We can show this pattern by using a MODEL a
simplified picture.
This is an URBAN MODEL to show the different land
use within a town or city.
Each different colour sector represents a
different type of land use.
13
Urban Land Use Models
  • Burgess Model
  • Hoyt Model
  • Multiple Nuclei Model
  • Manns Compromise Model

14
Burgess Model
Inner city
Suburbs
15
The Burgess Model The Concentric Zone Model
16
Land use models Concentric Zone Model/Burgess
Model
Burgess based his studies on Chicago. He claimed
that most towns and cities grow outwards from an
old center and equally in all directions.
original settlement
In Britain, many towns grew rapidly in the
nineteenth- and twentieth-centuries. Why do you
think that was the case?
17
Explanation of Burgess Model
  • Having made in depth studies of the morphology of
    Chicago in the 1920's, Burgess concluded that
    city land-use could be identified as a series of
    concentric rings around the CBD.

18
Explanation of Burgess Model
  • Then, we get three rings of housing. The first
    will be high density, poor quality that
    traditionally houses the workers for the
    factories.
  • Next, is slightly lower density, middle class
    housing. These will be semi-detached with
    gardens.
  • Finally, there is a ring of high class housing
    for those who can afford to commute.

19
Burgess Model
  • Timeframe
  • 1920s
  • Class conscious society
  • Housing segregated according to income
  • Lack of transport infrastructure
  • Assumptions
  • Older buildings in city centre
  • Newer buildings at edge of city
  • Land values highest in city centre
  • Strong economic and ethnic segregation
  • Low income groups lack transport and live close
    to city centre.
  • Cities develop on a flat plain with equal access
    to transport

20
Evaluation For
  • If taken as a very broad pattern, then a large
    number of towns and cities follow the pattern
    identified by Burgess.
  • It is good model because it is simple and easy to
    understand.
  • Burgess could not have foreseen the changes in
    transport routes or society yet his model is
    still relevant when identifying the reasons
    behind the urban morphology of a city.
  • It helps us to understand the process involved in
    the growth of a city.

21
Evaluation Against
  • It does not take any physical features into
    account. Burgess' own case study - Chicago - does
    not follow the pattern because it is on the
    coast! The growth of any city will be influenced
    by the physical geography of the area.
  • Transport is much more readily available allowing
    more people to commute Burgess could not have
    foreseen this.
  • Urban renewal and gentrification has meant that
    some of the most expensive property can now be
    found in traditional 'low class' areas.

22
Hoyt
23
Explanation
  • Hoyt's model came nearly twenty years after
    Burgess'.
  • It was based on 142 American cities.
  • He proposed his model after the introduction of
    public transportation.
  • He suggested that the city grew in a series of
    sectors or 'wedges'.
  • An industrial sector would remain industrial as
    the zone would have a common advantage - perhaps
    a railway line or river.
  • Note how the low quality housing is next to the
    industrial zone, middle class next to low class
    and high class as far as possible from industry
    and low class.

24
Hoyt Model
  • Timeframe
  • Late 1930s
  • Income and status divided society
  • Housing areas reflect social segregation
  • Assumptions
  • Settlement develops along transport routes
  • Towns radiate out from the CBD
  • Low-income and industrial areas lie next to each
    other
  • Wealthy people choose the best sites

25
Evaluation For
  • Some cities seem to follow Hoyt's sectors.
  • It provides us with an alternative set of
    explanations to Burgess.
  • Communication routes (Rivers, roads, railways) do
    often provide a very definite boundary to a
    sector/land-use.

26
Evaluation Against
  • Like Burgess, there is no reference to out of
    town developments.
  • ie commuter towns which developed after the car
    became popular
  • Like Burgess, there is no reference to the
    physical environment.

27
Multiple Nuclei Model
3
28
Harris and Ullmans Multiple Nuclei Theory
  • 1945
  • As an urban area grows, it develops around a
    number of different business centres or nuclei.

29
Multiple Nuclei Theory
  • Assumptions
  • Modern cities more complex than suggested by
    other theorists
  • Each nucleus acts as a growth point
  • Growth occurs outwards from each nucleus, until
    they all merge into one large urban area

30
Evaluations For
  • Mixture of Burgess and Hoyt
  • Shows some land-uses attract more of the same,
    for example industrial areas
  • Some land-uses may deter others from locating
    nearby, eg housing is usually located away from
    industrial areas

31
Evaluations Against
  • Not an exact fit for all cities and towns
  • Too complex

32
Manns Compromise Model
33
Evaluations For
  • Elements of both Burgess and Hoyt models.
  • SW wind blows smoke and pollution towards East.
  • Wealthy choose to live in pleasant unpolluted
    areas.

34
Evaluations Against
  • Does not include inner city renewal.
  • Based on limited study of only a few studies not
    entirely accurate.
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