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Unit Seven: Cities and Urban Land Use Advanced Placement Human Geography Session 4
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Functions of Cities
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Connections Cities are connected to other cities and to rural areas. Cities provide services to their own inhabitants as well as those outside of city limits.
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Connections Some cities are transportation centers where major routes converge: –roads –railroads –sea traffic –air transportation
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Connections Other cities have special functions in: –mining –manufacturing –recreation
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Connections A common property of all settlements is centrality, so that cities become central places that provide goods and services for the surrounding area.
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The Economic Base of a City
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Economic Base of a City Two levels of activities support the economic base of a city: –those that connect to the outside –those that support the internal structure
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Economic Base of a City Some city workers produce goods or services for outside the city. These “export activities” result in money flowing into the city. These activities are collectively known as the basic sector of the city’s economy.
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Economic Base of a City Nonbasic, or service sectors, of the economy are crucial to the city’s: businesses professional office city government schools intracity transit systems
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Economic Base of a City It is difficult to separate the basic and nonbasic sectors of a city’s economy. Usually workers produce goods and services in both sectors.
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Economic Base of a City The larger the city, the more likely it is to be multifunctional, with workers from both the basic and nonbasic sectors.
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Economic Base of a City A base ratio compares the number of workers employed in the basic sector and those employed in the nonbasic sector. The larger the city, the larger its ratio of nonbasic workers. More workers are needed to support the city’s growth.
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Economic Base of a City A multiplier effect takes hold when basic sector employment is accompanied by a larger share of nonbasic workers.
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Economic Base of a City Example of the multiplier effect: –A new car manufacturing plant locates to an area (basic sector). –Workers are needed for services such as grocery clerks, doctors, and gasoline station attendants (nonbasic sector).
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Economic Base of a City Chauncy Harris (1943) published an article in which he classified cities in the U.S. into three types according to their functions.
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Economic Base of a City Harris’s types of U.S. cities: –manufacturing-dominated cities in the Northeast –retail centers scattered across the country –diversified cities with multiple functions
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Economic Base of a City Today’s cities… –Harris’s categories are blurred because growing size has brought greater diversification.
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Economic Base of a City Examples of diversification: –Boston has a disproportionate number of universities. –Las Vegas is a center for gambling. Both cities have diversified considerably as they have grown.
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Urban Influence Zones
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Urban influence zones are the areas outside the city that are affected by it. As the distance away from the city increases, its influence on the surrounding countryside decreases.
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Urban Influence Zones The urban hierarchy is almost always at work, as individuals may also be in the influence zone of a town or village.
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The Changing City
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Stages of Change 1967: John Borchert developed four stages in the evolution of the American metropolis.
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The Sail-Wagon Epoch 1790-1830 Trade took place across the sea or along coastlines. Overland trade took place by wagons.
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The Iron Horse Epoch 1830-1870 New railroad technology changed the nature of trade and employment.
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The Steel-Rail Epoch 1870-1920 The steel industry transformed urban America and job opportunities for workers.
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The Auto-Air-Amenity Epoch 1920s-1960s The internal combustion engine came to dominate life styles, the economic base of cities, and employment opportunities.
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Today… Some might add another epoch initiated by computer technology, which has changed people’s lives and altered employment opportunities.
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Models of Urban Systems
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Models of Urban Systems Two theories of settlement geography, or the patterns of settlement on the earth’s surface, are: –rank-size rule –Christaller’s central place theory
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Models of Urban Systems Rank-size rule –Urban hierarchy identifies settlements of differing sizes and complexities from the hamlet to the megalopolis. –For many large countries, the city-size hierarchy is summarized by the rank-size rule.
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Models of Urban Systems Rank-size rule –tells us that the nth largest city will be 1/n the size of the largest city.
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Models of Urban Systems Rank-size rule –Example: The second largest city will be ½ the size of the first ranked city. The fifth largest city will be 1/5 as large as the first ranked city.
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Models of Urban Systems Rank-size rule –often reflects the distribution of wealth in a country. –often describes the pattern of urban area size in well-established countries where economies are more complex.
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Models of Urban Systems Rank-size rule –In some countries the primate city is so dominant that no other cities fit the rank-size rule (e.g. Seoul, South Korea).
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Models of Urban Systems Rank-size rule –Countries with primate cities often have a large gap between standards of living in the city and the countryside.
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Models of Urban Systems Central Place Theory –This theory views urban settlements as centers for the distribution of economic goods and services to surrounding nonurban populations.
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Models of Urban Systems Central Place Theory –This theory is based on the work of Walter Christaller in his book entitled The Central Places in Southern Germany (1933).
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s assumptions: –no topographic barriers –no difference in farm productivity –an evenly dispersed farm population
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s assumptions: –People have similar life styles and incomes. –There are differing thresholds. Thresholds are the minimum number of consumers necessary to support different products.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s assumptions: –People will purchase goods and services at the nearest center.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller made assumptions for the sake of developing a consistent model to explain settlement patterns. He knew that in reality these factors vary.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s results have formed the basis of central place theory.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s results included the following: –The landscape is divided into noncompeting market areas known as complementary regions. –Each individual urban center and its merchants have a sale monopoly.
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Central Place Theory According to Christaller, market areas form hexagons in order to cover all markets without overlap. COMPLEMENTARY REGIONS
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s results included the following: –Market areas form a series of hexagons that cover the area. –All areas are served. –There is no area with equal service from two centers.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s results included the following: –The central place is at the center of each hexagon. –The central place will supply all the goods and services to consumers in that area.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s results included the following: –The size of the market area of a central place is based on the number of goods and services offered. –The larger the number of goods and services, the larger the market area.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s results included the following: –Within each hexagon, or around its edges, lie smaller hexagons with central places that serve smaller areas.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s results included the following: –The nesting of small hexagons within larger ones creates a hierarchy of central places.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s results included the following: –Small centers may provide goods with low thresholds (e.g. foodstuffs). –Larger centers provide more expensive items, like cars or farm machinery.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller came to two important conclusions regarding settlement patterns.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s first conclusion: –Towns of the same size are evenly spaced because they are in the centers of like-sized market areas. –Larger towns are farther apart than smaller towns because their market areas are larger.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s second conclusion: –Towns are part of an interdependent system. –If a central place is eliminated, the entire system readjusts, altering the spatial pattern to meet the needs and demands of the inhabitants.
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Models of Urban Systems Christaller’s conclusions describe agricultural areas particularly well. In areas where cities are multi- functional, the model is less applicable.
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Key Terms to Review Connectivity Centrality Economic base Internal structure Basic sector Nonbasic sector Multifunctional cities Multiplier effect Chauncy Harris Urban influence zones Urban hierarchy Rank-size rule Central place theory Primate cities Complementary regions Market areas
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Key Terms to Review Hexagons Mass transportation
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