1 / 19

Urban Geography

Urban Geography. What is a city?. How do we define a City?. Population, Economic Function, Political Organization, Urban Culture Does population alone make up a city? Does density have anything to do with it?. Population. United States definition= 2500 Japan’s definition= 30,000

gad
Download Presentation

Urban Geography

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. Urban Geography What is a city?

  2. How do we define a City? • Population, Economic Function, Political Organization, Urban Culture • Does population alone make up a city? • Does density have anything to do with it?

  3. Population • United States definition= 2500 • Japan’s definition= 30,000 • What is the problem with population alone as a definition ?

  4. Economic Function & Political Organization • An urban settlement that has been legally incorporated into an independent self governing unit • Fixed boundaries, elected officials, taxes, ability to provided essential services

  5. Urban Culture • Urban vs. Rural (city slickers vs. country rubes) • Are people in cities more cultured? • Mass media has blurred that line • Social differences: Large size High density Social Heterogeneity

  6. Origins of the city • Since the earliest origins, cities have been centers of education, religion, commerce, record keeping, communication, and political power. • People moved to cities for employment, protection, and to be apart of civilization

  7. City Landscape • Macro- symbolic nature of the city cathedrals, monuments, bridges, skyscrapers, parks, sport stadiums etc… • Micro- the nooks and crannies of the city. Street layout (grid and curved street patterns). Front porches, street signs, store fronts.

  8. Urbanization • The process by which a city grows • The two dimensions of urbanization • Increase in the number of people living in the city • Increase in the percentage of people living in the city

  9. Urbanization • 1800 only 3% OF The World’s population lived in cities • London the only city over 1 million citizens • 2000 almost half of the World’s population inhabit cities • 400 cities with at least 1 million

  10. MDCs vs. LDCs • More developed countries have a higher percentage of urban residents • Less developed countries have more of the larger Urban areas

  11. Cities with 10 million

  12. Central City • A city that is surrounded by suburbs • Central City and Suburbs is call urbanized area • 60% of the United States live in an urbanized area

  13. Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) • The functional area of a City • MSA includes • A central city of at least 50,000 • The county within which the city is located • Adjacent counties with high population density, and a large percentage of residents work in the central city

  14. Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area (CMSA) • Two adjacent MSAs with overlapping commuting patterns,1 million in population or more, and has separate component areas • CMSA Adams, Arapahoe, Broomfield, Boulder, Denver, Douglas, Jefferson, and Weld.

  15. Primary Metropolitan Statistical Areas (PMSA) • With in a CMSA an MSA that exceeds 1 million may be classified as a PMSA • Adams, Arapahoe, Denver, Douglas, and Jefferson

  16. Distribution of People within Urban Areas • Three models of urban Structure • Concentric Zone Model • Sector Model • Multiple Nuclei Model

  17. Concentric Zone Model • Created by E.W. Burgess (1923) • City grows outward like the growth rings of a tree

  18. Sector Model • Developed by Homer Hoyt (1939) • As a city grows in wedges out, certain areas are more attractive of different activities

  19. Multiple Nuclei Model • C.D. Harris & E.L. Ullman (1945) • A city includes multiple structures in which activity revolves

More Related