1 / 29

What is Urban Geography?

What is Urban Geography?. A sub-discipline of geography It examines the places we live, the structure of our cities, and the pattern of cities on the landscape Topics we ’ ll cover in this unit: The history of urban areas (cities) City placement Primate cities Urban sprawl Smart growth

michon
Télécharger la présentation

What is Urban Geography?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What is Urban Geography? • A sub-discipline of geography • It examines the places we live, the structure of our cities, and the pattern of cities on the landscape • Topics we’ll cover in this unit: • The history of urban areas (cities) • City placement • Primate cities • Urban sprawl • Smart growth • Gentrification • Sanitation issues

  2. When and Why Did People Start Living in Cities?

  3. Agricultural Villages • Agriculture began 10,000 to 12,000 years ago • People became more sedentary • Before urbanization, people often clustered in agricultural villages • Relatively small in size and population • Subsistence farming • Egalitarian in nature

  4. How cities came to be: • Two components enable the formation of cities: 1. An agricultural surplus 2. Social stratification (a leadership class)

  5. Modern Definition of City • City - conglomeration of people and buildings clustered together to serve as a center of politics, culture, and economics. • Globally, more people live in cities/towns than in rural areas

  6. Definition of Urban • Urban:The buildup of the central city and the suburban realm - the city and the surrounding environs connected to the city. • Non-rural and non-agricultural

  7. The First Urban Revolution • The innovation of the city • Cities developed independently in 5 separate hearths.

  8. 5 Hearths of Urbanization • Mesopotamia, 3500 BCE • Nile River Valley, 3200 BCE • Indus River Valley, 2200 BCE • Huang He and Wei River Valleys, 1500 BCE • Mesoamerica, 200 BCE

  9. 5 Hearths of Urbanization

  10. The Second Urban Revolution • A large scale movement of people to cities to work in manufacturing. Made possible by: • Second agricultural revolution that improved food production and created a larger food surplus • Industrialization, which encouraged growth of cities near industrial resources

  11. Where are Cities Located and Why?Site & Situation

  12. Site • Actual location of a settlement on the earth • Physical characteristics of landscape specific to area • Landforms, climate, vegetation types, availability of water, soil quality, minerals and even wildlife

  13. Situation • Relative location of a city • A city’s place in the region and the world around it. • Accessibility of location • Extent of connections with another place • Distance from raw materials

  14. Central Place Theory • Developed by German geographer Walter Christaller in 1933 • Attempts to explain the reasons behind distribution patterns, size and number of cities/towns around world • Conclusion: people gather in cities to share goods & ideas - cities exist for purely economic reasons.

  15. Trade Area • Has dominant influence over adjacent areas • Largest city has largest trade area

  16. Rank-Size Rule • The population of a city or town will be inversely proportionate to its rank in the hierarchy. For example: • 1st largest city = 12 million people; • 2nd largest = 6 million (1/2); • 3rd largest = 4 million (1/3) • Does not apply in all countries, especially countries with a primate city

  17. Primate Cities…What are they? -A city that is disproportionately larger than the rest of the cities in the country. -They dominate country in influence & are national focal-point -Size and activity are a strong pull factor -Not every country has a primate city -Examples: Paris, London, Mexico City

  18. Gentrification • Occurs when individuals buy up and rehabilitate dilapidated housing, • Raises housing values & changes neighborhood. • Frequently in cities with a tight housing market • Displaces lower income residents. • Plays a key role in increased homelessness. • Examples: San Francisco, Portland, and Chicago

  19. Urban Sprawl…what is it? • Unrestricted growth of housing, commercial developments, and roads over large expanses of land, with little concern for urban planning. • Low-density developments beyond the urban center • Increasing separation between homes, schools, and places of employment = more driving • Outward rather than internal growth • Conversion of open spaces, productive agricultural land and parks to developments

  20. Think… -Strip malls -Big box stores -Chain restaurants -Huge intersections -Numerous housing developments

  21. Implications of Urban Sprawl • Traffic congestion & longer commutes • Increase pollution • Conversion of natural open spaces to urban areas • Degradation of “quality” green space • Increased cost of providing utilities, services and infrastructure to a sprawling population

  22. Proponents of Urban Sprawl • Cheaper land • Lower building costs • Suburbs better place to raise family

  23. Opponents of Urban Sprawl • Environmentalists - habitats for plants and animals are lost & air pollution from increased traffic • Small towns - Increased taxes after development • The Lorax

  24. The Solution: Smart Growth • Smart Growth is defined as growth that is economically sound, environmentally friendly, and supportive of community livability - growth that enhances our quality of life • Smart growth is development that serves the economy, the community and the environment • Control sprawl by making better use of land that has already been developed • Examples: St. Louis Park and Portland, OR

  25. New Urbanism • Development, urban revitalization, and suburban reforms that create walkable neighborhoods - some are concerned over privatization of public spaces • some are concerned that they do nothing to break down the social conditions that create social ills of the cities • some believe they work against urban sprawl Example: Celebration, FL

  26. Portland, Oregon Well-planned public transit system Mixed-use buildings

  27. Sanitation & Crime • Sanitation is a big issue for all urban areas because having lots of people living in close proximity can lead to the spread of disease. • Additionally, crime levels can rise along with population density

  28. The End

More Related