1 / 22

North America - I (CHAPTER 3: 134-155)

North America - I (CHAPTER 3: 134-155). DEFINING CHARACTERISTICS. ANGLO-AMERICAN LABEL ENGLISH LANGUAGE CHRISTIAN FAITHS EUROPEAN NORMS GOVERNMENT, ARCHITECTURE, DIET, ARTS HIGHLY URBANIZED MOBILE POPULATIONS HIGH INCOMES MANUFACTURING OUTPUT FEDERAL STATES WITH PLURAL SOCIETIES.

shawn
Télécharger la présentation

North America - I (CHAPTER 3: 134-155)

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. North America - I(CHAPTER 3: 134-155)

  2. DEFINING CHARACTERISTICS • ANGLO-AMERICAN LABEL • ENGLISH LANGUAGE • CHRISTIAN FAITHS • EUROPEAN NORMS • GOVERNMENT, ARCHITECTURE, DIET, ARTS • HIGHLY URBANIZED • MOBILE POPULATIONS • HIGH INCOMES • MANUFACTURING OUTPUT • FEDERAL STATES WITH PLURAL SOCIETIES

  3. PHYSIOGRAPHIC REGIONS

  4. CLIMATE PATTERNS

  5. INDIGENOUS DOMAINS

  6. THE IMMIGRANT EXPERIENCE: 1820-1980 South/East Europe 10000 Germany Scandinavia 8000 Latin America Asia British Isles 6000 Immigration in 1000s 4000 2000 1820 1840 1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 Push FactorsPull Factors +1840s: Irish Potato Famine +Economic Opportunity +1850-1920: Overpopulation, War +Political/Religious Freedom +Recent: Overpopulation, War, Oppression +Land Availability

  7. POPULATION DISTRIBUTION

  8. URBAN GEOGRAPHY • CONCERNED WITH THE SPATIAL ASPECTS OF CITIES AND URBAN NETWORKS • 4 MAJOR THEMES • HISTORICAL EVOLUTION OF CITIES • INTERURBAN GEOGRAPHY • INTRAURBAN GEOGRAPHY • URBAN SOCIAL GEOGRAPHY • PLANNING AND POLICY-MAKING • 3 KEY MODELS • BORCHERT; ADAMS; VANCE

  9. BORCHERT’S MODEL(METROPOLITAN EVOLUTION) • GENERALIZATION OF THE HISTORICAL GROWTH OF THE US URBAN SYSTEM • BASED ON KEY CHANGES IN ENERGY AND TRANSPORTATION TECHNOLOGY • OCCURRED IN 5 STAGES • Sail-Wagon Epoch (1790-1830) • Iron Horse Epoch (1830-1870) • Steel-Rail Epoch (1870-1920) • Auto-Air-Amenity Epoch (1920-1970) • Satellite-Electronic-Jet Propulsion Epoch (1970-?)

  10. ADAM’S MODEL • FOCUSED ON INTRAURBAN GROWTH • BASED ON BREAKTHROUGHS IN TRANSPORTATION TECHNOLOGY • A PATTERN OF OUTWARD-AREAL EXPANSION • OCCURRED IN 4 STAGES • <1888- WALKING-HORSECAR ERA • 1888-1920- ELECTRIC STREETCAR ERA • 1920-1945- RECREATIONAL AUTO ERA • 1945-PRESENT- FREEWAY ERA

  11. ADAM’S MODEL(STAGES OF INTRAURBAN GROWTH) Electric Streetcars, commuter railroads Arterial Highways Expressways 1

  12. ADAM’S MODEL(STAGES OF INTRAURBAN GROWTH) Electric Streetcars, commuter railroads Arterial Highways Expressways 1

  13. ADAM’S MODEL(STAGES OF INTRAURBAN GROWTH) Electric Streetcars, commuter railroads Arterial Highways 2 Expressways 1 1880

  14. ADAM’S MODEL(STAGES OF INTRAURBAN GROWTH) Electric Streetcars, commuter railroads Arterial Highways 2 Expressways 1 1880

  15. ADAM’S MODEL(STAGES OF INTRAURBAN GROWTH) Electric Streetcars, commuter railroads Arterial Highways 3 3 2 Expressways 1 1880 1920

  16. ADAM’S MODEL(STAGES OF INTRAURBAN GROWTH) Electric Streetcars, commuter railroads Arterial Highways 3 3 2 Expressways 1 1880 1920

  17. ADAM’S MODEL(STAGES OF INTRAURBAN GROWTH) Electric Streetcars, commuter railroads 4 Arterial Highways 3 2 Expressways 1 1880 1920 1940 1990s

  18. URBAN SPATIAL CHANGESMICROSCALE (Intraurban) • James Vance defines a new tributary area;URBAN REALMS • Single urban structure of the past is transformed into a multicentered model in which several outlying activity concentrations rival the Central Business District (CBD)

  19. IDEAL FORM OF MULTICENTERED URBAN REALMS MODEL

  20. North America - I(CHAPTER 3: 134-155)

More Related