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GEOG 3515

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Title: GEOG 3515


1
GEOG 3515
  • The Geography of South America

Class 23 Economic GeographyUrban Environments
Cityscapes and Shantytowns
2
South American Cities
  • In the USA and Canada, land use in cities is
    usually closely controlled by zoning, determining
    the relative locations and mixes of different
    developments.
  • Such planning is relatively, speaking, absent
    from the South American city which had and has a
    much more laissez-faire approach to building.
  • This does not mean that South American cities are
    just random and have no spatial pattern.
  • The lack of planning has organically tended to
    produce a relatively recognizable juxtaposition
    of land use zones the provide stark contrasts
    between rich and poor.

3
South American City Model
From Ford, 1996. New and Improved Model of Latin
American City Structure. Geographical Review
86(3), 43740.
  • The generic urban model above highlights the
    growth of Latin American cities and the clear
    class divisions within them.
  • While the central business district (CDB), elite
    spine, and residential sector may have excellent
    access to services and utilities, life in the
    zone of peripheral squatter settlements is much
    more difficult.
  • In many Latin American cities, one-third of the
    population resides in squatter settlements.

4
(No Transcript)
5
Inner City
  • Before the development of the modern economy and
    rise of the service sector, the inner city was
    always an enclave of the elite, with large lots
    and big houses usually hidden away behind
    imposing walls with interior gardens or
    courtyards.
  • With the development of the high rises and the
    growth in the size and scale of commerce, the
    inner-city has given way to a Central Business
    District, in many cases the elite taking
    advantage of their ownership of large core lots
    to cash in on the real estate market as land
    values appreciated.
  • Elites have chosen to move to choice locations
    along a transit route, normally a multi-lane
    boulevard, connecting the CBD to one or more
    satellite mall-type developments on the edge of
    the old town center with entertainment, upscale
    shopping and franchise restaurants, frequently
    American like TGI Fridays or Tony Romas.

6
Inner City Landmarks
  • The Republic period may have coincided with a
    wave of nationalistic fervor and the construction
    of several large avenidas or boulevardes with
    large, grandiose buildings and monuments.
  • Somewhere in the center of most South American
    cities will be one or more grand plaza mayores or
    main squares onto which will front ornate
    cathedrals, el teatro nacional and/or imposing
    government buildings, many dating back to the
    colonial era.
  • The squares will be occupied by constantly
    milling peoples lottery ticket sellers,
    chess-players, etc. and will increasingly have
    become fringed by fast-food restaurants, either
    local franchises (e.g. Pollo Campero) or global
    (McDonalds, Pizza Hut, etc.) side streets will
    have small, family owned stores.
  • Since the Spanish preferred river sites for their
    cities, many will have a sizeable water body
    passing through it with bridges criscrossing,
    gravel and sand miners digging, trucks and cars
    being washed in the river bed, and sewers
    draining freely in.

7
Characteristic Inner Zones
  • Also near to the center will be the Zona Viva
    an upscale area, perhaps of historical value with
    preserved buildings in good condition, and the
    focus of non-mall night life boutiques,
    restaurants, nightclubs and so forth.
  • Most South American cities will also have a red
    light district with a less upscale character full
    of bars, pool halls and cheap hotels used for
    prostitution - these are frequently close to the
    market or to the industrial area and very seedy.
  • Near the center is also usually a mercado a
    sprawling market complex of covered stalls
    vending a staggering array of items, usually very
    cheaply, and dotted with food vendors, frequently
    selling traditional dishes

8
Linking the Edges
  • Although the CBD portion of the core has been
    extensively redeveloped and is high-rise, much of
    the older center of South American cities,
    particularly those built in mountainous areas, is
    a tangle of narrow streets with walled compounds
    and store fronts hemming in foot and vehicle
    traffic between narrow, frequently non-existent
    side-walks.
  • Growing car ownership and heavy use of diesel
    buses for public transport makes the roads
    frequently jammed, the air polluted and the noise
    levels intense.
  • With the industrial areas outside the main core
    of the town, the elite tending toward the outer
    edges, and the malls sprouting up everywhere,
    many South American cities have bypassed the town
    center with a peripheral ring road (the anillo
    periférico) which enables elites to get to the
    various malls or around to the factory areas
    without navigating across the center of town.
  • Frequently, the periférico marks the beginning of
    the shanty towns, the elite living inside the
    ring, the poor outside.

9
Suburban Trends
  • Unlike North American cities, the inner core of
    South American cities has, until recently,
    remained vital and of greater social standing,
    the periphery relegated to poverty, decay and
    crime.
  • However, a more recent trend, not reflected yet
    in the Ford model, is for the center to be
    further forsaken by the elite in favor of
    satellite, gated-community type developments
    outside the periférico in areas not yet covered
    by shanty towns (what would be termed greenbelt
    areas here) in Brazil this is frequently
    beachfront areas further out along the coast.
  • Frequently, they are built in line with existing
    elite spines with good roads extended out across
    the periférico through the shanty towns to permit
    the elite to transit through in their SUVs,
    Mercedes or BMWs to their jobs in the CBD.
  • However, ironically, these roads tend to permit
    the development of spurs of shanty settlements on
    the greenfield hillside areas bisected by the
    improved roads.
  • Sprawl, facilitated by buses, has extended the
    limits of cities.

10
Inner City Trends
  • Adjacent to the CBD, in areas that were formerly
    elite residential zones but which have not yet
    attracted the developers bulldozers, a flight of
    the rich to the spines and to the gated
    greenfield suburbs has left mansion homes vacant
    of their former owners.
  • Frequently, these have been converted into rented
    tenements multi-family apartment buildings in
    which several whole dwellings will be carved out
    of a single room, resulting in twenty or even
    forty families living in a building once housing
    a single family and their servants.
  • These then become the shanty-towns of the
    inner-urban poor, those working as street vendors
    or in low-paying service jobs in and around the
    towering commercial buildings of the next door
    CBD.
  • These types of changes create zones of disamenity
    which are neglected by the city authorities and
    exploited by the landlords.

11
Shanty Towns
  • Every South American city has them usually on
    the edge of town outside the ring road, often on
    steep slopes or along river corridors subject to
    periodic flooding.
  • So common are the shanty towns that almost every
    country in South America has its own term for
    them favelas, villas miserias, pueblos jóvenes,
    cerros and quebradas, and so forth.
  • Depending on the country and city, shanties may
    contain more than half of the urban population,
    although 20-30 is a more common figure.
  • In some situations, rapid growth of cities has
    led to shanties filling in underutilized space
    (for example steep unstable slopes) inside the
    sprawling metropolises, creating stark
    juxtapositions.

12
Highly VariableZones
  • They are characterized more by the fact that the
    land they occupy has no title the communities
    are squatting on (usually) public or ejidal lands
    than the nature of the dwellings.
  • Depending on age, they can range from sprawling
    collections of hastily constructed shacks of
    scavenged materials to more orderly, multi-room
    brick or cement panel buildings, often with rebar
    or wood scaffolding sticking out of a flat roof -
    evidence of permanency, or at least ambitions of
    such.

13
Changing Attitudes
  • Population growth has overwhelmed most South
    American cities and shanty towns are obvious
    demonstrations of this.
  • In the 1960s and 70s, when officials had not yet
    accepted the ultimate, even necessary reality of
    the shanty town, they were seen as failures and
    blights and were frequently eradicated with or
    without efforts to replace them with public
    housing complexes financed, all to frequently, by
    foreign loans.
  • The elite viewed them with distain and fear,
    imagining them to be soul-less hovels devoid of
    virtues and without community.
  • Frequently, we confuse economic poverty with
    poverty of spirit, absence of dignity and other
    redeeming social virtues and values.
  • Frequently, the opposite is true and gradually
    the shanty town has been looked at in a more
    positive light in terms of its societal role and
    the lives of its inhabitants, although it is
    still of great concern from the perspective of
    securing material quality of life and access to
    the key services enjoyed by formal settlements.

14
Characteristics of Shantytowns
  • Population densities are high, families living in
    close proximity to each other on small parcels of
    land.
  • Privacy is very limited, with minimal separation
    between households in both a geographical and
    physical sense.
  • Basic services are usually absent especially
    garbage collection, sanitary sewer service,
    telephone and piped potable water supply,
    although basic electricity service might be
    provided (often with many illegal connections).
  • Roads are usually unpaved, with no formal surface
    drainage to conduct surface runoff safely off the
    roads and down hillsides, leading to extensive
    erosion.
  • Garbage is usually burned in oil drums or pits
    and open-air defecation is common, thus
    development projects frequently promote
    pit-latrine projects in shanty towns.

15
Change Over Time
  • In the beginning, amenities are limited with
    perhaps a local front-room store (pulperia)
    selling basic items in a particular vecino
    (neighborhood) and many street-vendors and
    hawkers will be present selling food items and/or
    anything that can be carried or pushed up the
    potholed and muddy streets.
  • Depending on the age of the settlement, schools
    may be absent although as time goes by and the
    shanty upgrades to greater permanency and
    substance, such things as churches, schools,
    police stations, health clinics and public
    transport nodes will become established.
  • Prior to this maturity, shanty dwellers will need
    to walk down to the bottom of the community and
    to the periférico to hop on a bus to work, the
    doctor, church or school.
  • Development more permanent structures and better
    roads, depending on the terrain, might bring bus
    service and water tankersto the streets.
  • In the cases where formal incorporation of the
    shanty town occurs and titles are provided, roads
    might by paved and water and sewer pipes laid
    along with telephone lines.

16
Some Pros and Cons of Shantytowns
  • Illegal squats that, over time, become
    established and provided with services by
    authorities gives the urban poor a stake in
    society that they could not otherwise get.
  • They are a solution to a public housing issue
    that the formal economic system and government
    programs are ill-equipped to satisfy.
  • As the poor luchar for a better life, they tend
    to upgrade their own environment through
    self-help, eventually raising the quality of the
    barrios to something approaching middle-class
    status.
  • The reserve of urban poor close to the city
    provides a wealth of potential employees usually
    willing to work for low wages.
  • Because they are unplanned, they do not conform
    to appropriate building or public-works standards
    and thus are likely to experience public safety
    problems.
  • Because they lack basic services, they are foci
    for disease, both vector-born and infectious, and
    lead to water pollution from erosion and sewage
    runoff.
  • Made of ramshackle materials in risky locations,
    they are especially subject to the impact of
    earthquakes, floods, landslides, etc.
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