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Urban Sprawl

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Urban Sprawl Where Will It End? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Urban Sprawl


1
Urban Sprawl
  • Where Will It End?

2
What do these areas have in common?
  • Hickory Woods
  • Partridge Farms
  • Meadowlands
  • What they have in common
  • Houseslots of houses
  • All are housing developments.
  • Name after the types of land that were cleared in
    order to build new homes.
  • No more woods, farms, or meadows.

3
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6
Urban Developments
  • For many decades, urban development around the
    world and especially in the United States
    Canada has been moving out from cities to
    suburbs.
  • It is an area of housing built at the edge of a
    city.
  • Developers create suburbs by buying up farmlands
    or forested areas outside a city.
  • Used for housing tracts, shopping centers, and
    office parks.
  • Only way to get there is through traffic-clogged
    roads.

7
Problems
  • Rapid and often poorly planned spread of cities
    and suburbs is known as urban sprawl, where they
    move outward into rural areas.

8
The Geographic Setting
  • Smaller cities or towns with open land between
    them and the central city are called exurbs. The
    city, its suburbs, and exurbs link together
    economically to form a functional area called a
    metropolitan area.
  • A megalopolis is formed when several metropolitan
    areas grow together.
  • Examples Boston, New York, Philadelphia,
    Baltimore, and Washington, D.C.
  • Urbanization, the growth in the number of cities
    and the resulting changes has occurred because
    more people moved to cities to find work.

9
Land Use Patterns
  • The land in cities is used for residential,
    industrial, and commercial purposes. The core of
    a city is almost always based on commercial
    activity. The area of commercial activity is the
    citys central business district (CBD)
  • Cities have various functions, including to
    provide retailing, entertainment, transportation,
    business, education, and government services.
    Cities also often provide wholesaling,
    manufacturing, residential, recreation,
    religious, and social services.

10
Concentric Zone Model
  • Urban core The older part of a city. CBD
  • Urban fringe the ring of small towns and suburbs
    that surround a big city.
  • Rural fringe the small towns, farms, and open
    spaces that lie just beyond a citys suburbs.

11
The Concentric Zone Model The Concentric ring
model also known as the Burgess model is one of
the earliest theoretical models to explain urban
social structures. It was created by sociologist
Ernest Burgess in 1925.
12
Multiple Nuclei Model
  • The multiple nuclei model is an ecological model
    put forth by Chauncy Harris and Edward Ullman in
    the 1945 article "The Nature of Cities." The
    model describes the layout of a city. It notes
    that while a city may have started with a central
    business district, similar industries with
    common land-use and financial requirements are
    established near each other. These groupings
    influence their immediate neighborhood. Hotels
    and restaurants spring up around airports, for
    example. The number and kinds of nuclei mark a
    city's growth.
  • The theory was formed based on the idea that
    people have greater movement due to increased car
    ownership. This increase of movement allows for
    the specialization of regional centers (eg. heavy
    industry, business park). There is no clear CBD
    in this type of model.
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_nuclei_model

13
Sector Model
  • The sector model also known as the Hoyt model was
    proposed in 1939 by economist Homer Hoyt. It is a
    model of urban land use and modified the
    concentric zone model of city development. The
    benefits of the application of this model include
    the fact it allows for an outward progression of
    growth however, like all models of urban form its
    validity is limited.
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sector_model
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