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Chapter 13

Urban Patterns. Chapter 13. Key Issues. Where have urban areas grown? Where are people distributed within urban areas? Why do inner cities have distinctive problems? Why do suburbs have distinctive problems?. Percent Urban Population.

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Chapter 13

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  1. Urban Patterns Chapter 13

  2. Key Issues • Where have urban areas grown? • Where are people distributed within urban areas? • Why do inner cities have distinctive problems? • Why do suburbs have distinctive problems?

  3. Percent Urban Population Fig. 13-1: Percent of the population living in urban areas is usually higher in MDCs than in LDCs.

  4. Percent Urban by Region Fig. 13-2b: Although under half of the people in most less developed regions are urban, Latin America and the Middle East have urban percentages comparable to MDCs.

  5. Increasing Percentage of People in Cities • The percentage of urban dwellers is high in MDCs because over the past 200 years rural residents have migrated from the countryside to work in the factories and services that are concentrated in cities. • In MDCs the process of urbanization that began around 1800 has largely ended, because the percentage living in urban areas simply cannot increase much more. • As in MDCs earlier, people in LDCs are now being pushed off the farms by declining opportunities.

  6. Large Cities Fig. 13-2: Cities with 2 million or more people. Most of the largest cities are now in LDCs.

  7. Social Differences between Urban and Rural Settlements • Louis Wirth argued during the 1930s that an urban dweller follows a different way of life from a rural dweller, and defined a city as a permanent settlement that has three characteristics: • large size • high population density • socially heterogeneous people

  8. Large Size • If you live in a rural settlement, you know most of the other inhabitants and may even be related to many of them. • In contrast, if you live in an urban settlement, you can know only a small percentage of the other residents. • You meet most of them in specific roles.

  9. High Density • Each person in an urban settlement plays a special role or performs a specific task to allow the complex urban system to function smoothly. • At the same time, high density also encourages people to compete for survival in limited space. • Social groups compete to occupy the same territory, and the stronger group dominates.

  10. Social Heterogeneity • A person has greater freedom in an urban settlement than in a rural settlement to pursue an unusual profession, sexual orientation, or cultural interest. • Regardless of values and preferences, in a large urban settlement individuals can find people with similar interests. • Wirth’s three-part distinction between urban and rural settlements may still apply in LDCs, but in more developed societies, social distinctions between urban and rural residents have blurred.

  11. Legal Definition of a City • The term city defines an urban settlement that has been legally incorporated into an independent, self-governing unit. • In the United States, a city that is surrounded by suburbs is sometimes called a central city or a metropolitan area.

  12. Urbanized Area • An urbanized area consists of a central city plus its contiguous built-up suburbs where population density exceeds 1,000 persons per square mile. • Approximately 60 percent of the U.S. population lives in urban areas, divided about equally between central cities and surrounding jurisdictions. • Urbanized areas do not correspond to government boundaries.

  13. St. Louis Metropolitan Area Fig. 13-3: The metropolitan area of St. Louis is spread over several counties and two states. It is also a diversified trade center, given its position on the Mississippi River.

  14. Megalopolis Fig. 13-4: The Boston–Washington corridor contains about one-quarter of U.S. population.

  15. Urban Structure • Three models of urban structure • Concentric zone model • Sector model • Multiple nuclei model • Geographic applications • Use of the models outside North America • European cities • Less developed countries

  16. Concentric Zone Model Fig. 13-5: In the concentric zone model, a city grows in a series of rings surrounding the CBD.

  17. Sector Model Fig. 13-6: In the sector model, a city grows in a series of wedges or corridors extending out from the CBD.

  18. Multiple Nuclei Model Fig. 13-7: The multiple nuclei model views a city as a collection of individual centers, around which different people and activities cluster.

  19. Peripheral Model of Urban Areas Fig. 13-19: The central city is surrounded by a ring road, around which are suburban areas and edge cities, shopping malls, office parks, industrial areas, and service complexes.

  20. Social Area Analysis- Indianapolis: Percent Renters Fig. 13-8: The distribution of renters in Indianapolis illustrates the concentric zone model.

  21. Indianapolis: Household Income Fig. 13-9: The distribution of high income households in Indianapolis is an example of a sector model.

  22. European Cities • In contrast to most U.S. cities, wealthy Europeans still live in the inner rings of the high-class sector, not just in the suburbs. • A central location provides proximity to the region’s best shops, restaurants, cafes, and cultural facilities. • In the past, social segregation was vertical: Richer people lived on the first or second floors, while poorer people occupied the dark, dank basements, or they climbed many flights of stairs to reach the attics. • During the Industrial Revolution, housing for poorer people was constructed in sectors near the factories.

  23. Suburban Segregation • The modern residential suburb is segregated in two ways: • First, residents are separated from commercial and manufacturing activities. • Second, a given suburban community is usually built for people of a single social class, with others excluded by virtue of the cost, size, or location of the housing. • The homogeneous suburb is a twentieth-century phenomenon.

  24. Less Developed Countries • In LDCs, as in Europe, the poor are accommodated in the suburbs, whereas the rich live near the center of cities, as well as in a sector extending from the center. • The similarity between European and LDC cities is not a coincidence.

  25. Latin America • Colonial cities followed standardized plans. • All Spanish cities in Latin America, for example, were built according to the Laws of the Indies, drafted in 1573. • Cities were to be constructed on a gridiron street plan centered on a church and central plaza, and neighborhoods centered around smaller plazas with parish churches or monasteries.

  26. Latin American City Model Fig. 13-15: In many Latin American cities, the wealthy live in the inner city and in a sector extending along a commercial spine.

  27. Squatter Settlements • A large percentage of poor immigrants in urban LDC areas live in squatter settlements. • Squatter settlements have few services, because neither the city nor the residents can afford them. • At first, squatters do little more than camp on the land or sleep in the street. • Families then erect primitive shelters with scavenged materials. • The percentage of people living in squatter settlements, slums, and other illegal housing ranges from 33 percent in São Paulo, Brazil, to 85 percent in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, according to a U.N. study.

  28. Squatter Cities

  29. Inner Cities vs. Suburbs • Inner-city physical problems • Deterioration process • Urban renewal • Inner-city social problems • Underclass • Culture of poverty • The peripheral model • Density gradient • Cost of suburban sprawl • Suburban segregation

  30. Filtering • Landlords stop maintaining houses when the rent they collect becomes less than the maintenance cost. • The building soon deteriorates and grows unfit for occupancy. • At this point in the filtering process the owner may abandon the property, because the rents that can be collected are less than the cost of taxes and upkeep. • Schools and shops close because they are no longer needed with rapidly declining populations. • Through the filtering process, many poor families have moved to less deteriorated houses farther from the center.

  31. Redlining • Some banks engage in redlining—drawing lines on a map to identify areas in which they will refuse to loan money. • Although redlining is illegal, enforcement of laws against it is frequently difficult. • The Community Reinvestment Act requires banks to demonstrate that inner city neighborhoods within its service area receive a fair share of its loans.

  32. Public Housing • Most early high-rise public housing projects are now considered unsatisfactory environments for families with children. • Some claim that the high-rise buildings caused the problem, because too many low-income families are concentrated into a high-density environment. • Many have been demolished in recent years. • Cities have also experimented with “scattered-site” public housing, in which dwellings are dispersed throughout the city.

  33. Public Housing Supply • The supply of public housing and other government- subsidized housing diminished by approximately 1 million units between 1980 and 2000. • But during the same period, the number of households needing low-rent dwellings increased by more than 2 million. • Urban renewal has been criticized for destroying the social cohesion of older neighborhoods and reducing the supply of low-cost housing.

  34. Inner-city Social Problems: The Underclass • Beyond the pockets of gentrified neighborhoods, inner cities contain primarily low income people who face a variety of social problems. • Inner city residents frequently are referred to as a permanent underclass because they are trapped in an unending cycle of economic and social problems.

  35. Lack of Job Skills • The future is especially bleak for the underclass because they are increasingly unable to compete for jobs. • The gap between skills demanded by employers and the training possessed by inner city residents is widening. • Inner city residents don’t even have access to the remaining “low-skilled” jobs, such as custodians and fast-food servers, because they are increasingly in the distant suburbs.

  36. Homeless • An estimated one to two million Americans are homeless. • Most people are homeless because they cannot afford housing and have no regular income. • Roughly one-third of U.S. homeless are individuals who suffer from mental illness.

  37. Density Gradient • As you travel outward from the center of a city, you will see the decline in population density. • According to the density gradient, the number of houses per unit of land diminishes as distance from the center city increases. 1980 Density Gradient 1990 Density Gradient

  38. Cleveland, Ohio, 1900–1990 Fig. 13-20: The density gradient in Cleveland shows the expansion of dense population outward from the city center over time.

  39. Public Transportation • Because few people in the United States live within walking distance of their place of employment, urban areas are characterized by extensive commuting. • As much as 40 percent of all trips made into or out of a CBD occur during four hours of the day—two in the morning and two in the afternoon. • Public transportation is cheaper, less polluting, and more energy-efficient than automobiles. • Despite the obvious advantages of public transportation for commuting, ridership in the United States declined from 23 billion per year in the 1940s to 8 billion in 2002.

  40. New Rapid Transit Lines Tokyo Moscow London • The one exception to the downward trend in public transportation is rapid transit. • Subway rider-ship in the United States has increased 2 percent each year since 1980. • Most European and Asian urban centers have enjoyed extensive mass transit systems for decades, allowing citizens to commute without the need for automobiles

  41. Chapter 13 Urban Patterns The End

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