Why do services cluster downtown?
Where are people distributed within urban areas?
Why are urban areas expanding?
Why do cities face challenges?
Types of Services:
Public Services:
Examples: City hall, courts, libraries.
Centrally located for accessibility.
Business Services:
Examples: Advertising agencies, banks.
Proximity enhances collaboration.
Consumer Services:
High-threshold, high-range retailers.
Shopping habits changing; affluent moving to suburbs.
High Demand: Causes vertical development. (building upwards instead of outwards)
Underground CBD: Utilities like cables buried for space efficiency (build underground because there is no space aboveground).
Skyscrapers: Economically viable due to demand for space.
Concentric Zone Model (Burgess, 1923):
1st model to explain the distribution of different social groups within urban areas
City grows outward in concentric rings.
Rings: CBD → Zone in Transition → Working-Class Homes → Better Residences → Commuter's Zone.
Sector Model (Hoyt, 1939):
Develops in sectors or wedges from the center.
Multiple Nuclei Model (Harris and Ullman, 1945):
Cities have multiple centers or nuclei (e.g., ports, universities).
Understanding Patterns: Different social characteristics influence where people live.
Critiques: Too simple for contemporary urban patterns; blending models often clarifies urban demographics.
European Examples: Wealthy often live in inner portions; newer housing is often multi-family projects for low-income.
Developing Countries: Wealthy near city centers, poorer residents in outskirts or suburbs.
The combination of the 3 models supports the idea that people prefer to live near others who have similar characteristics to them.
Urban Settlements/Central City: Legally incorporated units.
Urban Area: Dense core, suburbs, and linkages.
Urban Cluster - urban area with a population between 2,500 and 50,000.
Urbanized Area: Minimum of 50,000 inhabitants.
Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA): method of measuring the functional area of a city, includes urbanized area, the country within which the city is located, and adjacent counties.
Sprawl: Spread of development over a larger area.
Segregation: Residential areas separated by social class, restrictive zoning laws.
Motor Vehicles: permit large-scale suburb development further from the CBD.
Future Vehicles: Alternative-fuel vehicles, hybrids, and hydrogen fuel cells.
Public Transit: More energy and cost-efficient, often overlooked in favor of private vehicle benefits.
Filtering: Larger houses divided for lower-income families leads to decline.
Redlining: Illegal designation by banks to limit loans in certain areas.
Public Housing: Often inadequate for families; managed by local housing authorities.
Gentrification: middle-class people move into deteriorated inner-city neighborhoods and renovate the housing. Often displaces low-income families as property values increase, causing a shift in the community demographic.
Underclass Issues: Permanent underclass suffers from various social problems including unemployment, illiteracy, and crime.
Culture of Poverty: Impacts community stability and children's upbringing.
Tax Base Erosion: Low-income inner-city residents require public services, but can't pay the taxes that fund them, leading to budget deficits and service cuts during recessions.
Impact of the Recession: lower assessed values of houses led to lower tax revenues acquired from proper taxes, leading the the housing market collapsing
Summary
services cluster in the CBD, and sometimes some consumer services (leisure)
the three models help explain where different groups of people live within urban areas
urban growth has been focused on mainly in suburbs that surround older cities
cities face physical, social, and economic difficulties, but also improvements