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Urban Geography

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Title: Urban Geography


1
  • Urban Geography

2
Defining Concepts
  • A city is a concentrated nonagricultural
    settlement.
  • Hinterland
  • Region which a city provides services/draws
    resources
  • Incorporation
  • Process of defining a city territory and
    establishing a gov.
  • Primate cities
  • Large city with majority of national population
    (i.e. Paris)
  • Urbanization
  • Process of concentrating population in cities
  • Conurbations when cities grow and merge
    together into vast urban areas
  • Megalopolis Boston to D.C. route 1

3
Urban Geography
  • Three important topics
  • Functions of cities and economic role in
    organizing territory
  • Study of urbanization
  • Throughout history
  • Different places
  • Internal patterns (distribution of housing,
    industry, culture, etc. in a city)

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Urban Functions
  • Early functions
  • Government centers
  • Protection
  • Agglomeration division of labor
  • Economy sectors
  • Primary extracts resources directly from earth
  • Secondary transforms raw materials from primary
    sec.
  • Tertiary (service sector)
  • Economic bases
  • Basic sector produces exports
  • Non-basic sector services needs of the city
  • Multiplier effect - basic jobs multiplies
    non-basic jobs

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Locations of Cities
  • Site factors
  • Characteristics of location (i.e. defensive
    hilltops, oases, rivers, and locations of
    minerals source)
  • Situation factors (cities may arise on an
    unfavorable site due to the situation)
  • Building upon exising cities (Mexico City)
  • Transportation/trade routes (Deltas or
    Swamplands i.e., New Orleans, Shanghai,
    Calcutta)

10
Central Place Theory
  • Walter Christaller founder of Theory
  • Three requirements
  • Hinterlands divide the space completely so that
    every point inside the hinterland is inside the
    hinterland of some market
  • Hinterlands are uniform shape and size
  • Within each market region distance between
    central place and furthest place must be minimal

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Early Urban Societies
  • Holland - 17th century
  • Global shipping, banking
  • Supported by highly productive agriculture
  • Pre-industrial revolution
  • Britain
  • Occurred during industrialization
  • Worlds first model of urbanization
  • Terrible hardships Oliver Goldsmiths Rural
    Mirth , Dickens (Slums)
  • Agr. Rev. Reduced 3 of workers needed
  • Migration to cities by displaced workers
  • Labor Intensive high ratio of workers to amount
    of capital invested in machinery
  • Domestic Servants (1/3 labor force in 1910)
  • Emigration Forced dislocation of criminals to
    Australia and Georgia

14
Urban Population Growth
  • IN 1800 the 21 European cities w/ populations of
    100,00 or more held about 4.5 million people
  • By 1900 there were 147 such places with a total
    pop. Of 40 million, or about 10 percent of the
    total population

15
Urbanization Today
  • Occurring rapidly w/o concomitant econ.
    development
  • Inadequate infrastructure Est. 90 of sewage in
    the developing world pours into streams and
    oceans
  • Living conditions mimic 19th century England
  • Caused by deteriorating rural conditions
  • Concentrates labor forces by 2025 2/3 pop in
    urban areas

16
Different from historic British experience
  • 1) Increased commercialization and mechanization
    accelerated displacement of workers (gap between
    rich and poor widens)
  • 2) Radio TV advertise urban opportunity
  • 3) Medicine lower death rates, inc. pop
  • 4) Machinery has replaced workers
  • 5) Migration opportunities are decreasing
  • 6) More interdependent
  • 7) Gov. favor urban projects

17
Government Policies
  • Used to reduce rural to urban migration (Vietnam
    and Cambodia)
  • Limit housing and jobs building codes limit
    slums no city services, restrict small businesses
  • Improve rural areas US during depression
  • Compulsory ruralization

18
Vitality of Cities
  • Positive aspects of urbanization
  • Informal, underground economy particularly in the
    cities of developing countries
  • Urban immigrants are assets to growth
  • De Sotos study of Peru

19
Models of Urban Form
  • Four models of internal patterns
  • The Nature of Cities Harris and Ullman
  • Concentric zone figure 10.13
  • CBD tall buildings, lawyers offices near
    courts, jewelry stores cluster
  • Less intensive business wholesaling, warehouse
    (nonpolluting)
  • Residential land use surrounds urban core
  • Transportation modifies it
  • Sector high rent expands along new trans
    routes, middle income around high rent, low
    income adjacent to industry and trans 10.5
  • Multiple- nuclei figure 10-16 several nodes of
    growth from CBD
  • Peripheral Harris 1995 highways disperse
    growth (case study 414 415)

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Social Factors in Residential Clustering
  • Congregation when people decide to live with
    people who have a similar ethnic background
  • Segregation when people live together because
    of segregation

26
Urban Planning
  • Planning the ideal city
  • Ebenezer Howards - Garden Cities (relocate
    people and cities in countryside and surround
    cities by greenbelts) greatly influenced city
    planning in US and Europe
  • Le Corbusiers - Radiant Cities (tall glass
    offices and aprtments faced far apart and
    surounded by green space)
  • Proposed to bulldoze historic core of Paris
    (1922)
  • 2 main concepts machine made env. standardized
    buildings and green space (city in a park)
  • Many people believed his ideas created a half
    century of monotony
  • Canberra, Australia radiant city that work b/c it
    allows for walking
  • Charter of the International Congress of Modern
    Architecture (CIAM)
  • Codified the functions of the modern city

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Culture in Urban Models
  • Contrasts to North American models
  • Latin America CBDs thrive, reliance on public
    transit, high income pop.live near CBD
  • Western Europe new structures are built net to
    indigenous and colonial structures
  • Traditional Islamic mosque is at the center
    surrounded by markets and then housing (including
    in the Koran)
  • Asian southeast asia reflects western design
    form

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Growth of Suburbs
  • U.S. phenomenon due to prosperity after WWII
  • 1950 (33 urban, 23 suburbs, 44 rural)
  • 2000 (30 urban, 51 suburbs, 19 rural)
  • Early suburbs
  • Cultural preference for rural living
  • Henry Ford
  • We shall solve the city problemby leaving the
    city
  • Automobile allowed for suburban growth
  • Government policies
  • FHA loan program guaranteed loans down payments
    shrank to less than 10 (favored construction of
    single new family housed in suburbs not urban
    rehabilitation)
  • Tax incentives - homeowners could deduct
    mortgage, interest payments and prop taxes from
    gross taxable income
  • Returning veterans fed dollars provided for
    Homes for Heroes

34
Society Hill
35
Society Hill
36
Suburban Infrastructure
  • Sprawl unplanned urban sprawl is expensive
  • High costs
  • Energy
  • Commute / transportation
  • Leapfrogging infrastructure can not be advanced
    in a regular manor
  • Environmental
  • Farmland reduction of farmland
  • Loss of or pollution of green space

37
Social Consequences of Suburbs
  • Residential segregation and marketing
  • Advertisers target potential customers
    geographically
  • 62 lifestyle types Gray Power affluent retirees
    in Sunbelt cities
  • Restrictive covenants
  • Legal agreements that the land would never be
    sold to people of a designated race or religious
    group
  • Made illegal in late 1970s
  • Job movement and creation
  • Home owners associations - regulate some aspect
    of property
  • 20 million homes in U.S. out of the total 106
    million (50 million people)
  • Commuting patterns
  • Rush hour

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New Patterns
  • New urbanism
  • Recreate small town America
  • Less dependence on cars
  • Telecommuting people working at home at
    computer terminals
  • 12 million employees in the U.S. work from home
    on computers
  • Virtual shopping
  • Internet
  • U.S. e-commerce in 2003 reached 95 billion
  • 13 percent of U.S. travel agencies closed in 2002
  • 5 of U.S. shopping on internet in 2002
  • Amazon 4 billion in 2002
  • Brick and mortar

41
Central Cities Decline
  • 1970-1995 central cities pop. Fell (22 in
    Philadelphia)
  • 2000 central cities housed only 30 U.S. pop.
  • 60 of jobs now in suburbs
  • Loss of entry level jobs
  • Economic decline
  • Spatial mismatch
  • 1968 John Kain man. Jobs to the suburbs ? poor
    concentrated in center city? less jobs in city
    and more in suburbs ? inner city unemployment
  • Income is 70-75 of the suburbs
  • Deteriorating housing and neighborhoods
    inner-city neighborhood euphemism for slum

42
Central Cities New Growth (21st Century)
  • Service sector economy
  • Increased white collar jobs
  • Finance, IT, bio-tech
  • Gentrification restoring select older
    neighborhoods
  • Rediscovering urban living
  • Yuppies young urban professionals
  • Empty nesters older people who move back to
    cities
  • Immigrants latinos outnumber Afr. Amer. in 10
    largest U.S. cities
  • Network Hypothesis employers seek reliability
    current employee recommendation
  • African Americans
  • Northern City migration 1.5 mill. 1910 -1945,
    6.5 million 1945-1970
  • Decreasing rates of poverty

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Redistribution of Jobs Housing
  • Ameliorating Spatial Mismatch
  • Urban enterprise zones efforts to
    reindustrialize cities
  • Manufacturers receive government subsidies
  • Increase blue collar jobs
  • Reclaiming Brownfields abandoned industrial
    facilities
  • 400,000 across the U.S.
  • Cleaned 19,000 acres generated 1.5 billion
    dollars and 570,00 jobs
  • Relocate subsidized housing provide poor
    families with suburban homes
  • Transportation to suburban jobs
  • Avg car cost 7,000 per yer
  • Interest Free car loans
  • Increasing bus services

45
Governing Urban Areas
  • Annexation adding suburbs to cities (slowing
    trend)
  • Incorporation (figrure 10-44)
  • Thwarts efforts to be annexed
  • Special district governments legal retaining
    wall aroung municipalitiesp
  • Ending subsidies encouraging sprawl
  • Tax incentives to stay in cities

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End of Chapter 10
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