Title: What is urban geography
1Urban Geography Urbanization and Location
- What is urban geography?
- Study of how cities function, their internal
systems and structure, and the external
influences on them.. - Variation among cities internal and external
relationships. - Key concepts trends
- Agglomeration clustering for mutual advantage
- Specialization mfg. Product associated with
cities (Sheffield, Milwaukee) - W. Europe1800, 20 2000, 75
- World 1800, 3 2000, 55
2Urban Geography Urbanization and Location
3Von Thunens Agricultural Land Use Model 1.
Isolated state 2. Single market at center 3.
Market price, p, same for all producers of a
given crop 4. Featureless plain 5. Yield per unit
acre same everywhere 6. Transportation costs are
proportional to distance and invariant to
direction 7. Farmers maximize profits
4Symbolic model LR Y (p-c) - Ytd
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6Urban Geography Urbanization and Location
- Urbanization in the 1990s
- Urban population as a percent of total
population (Fig. 18.6) - low-levels in Sub-Saharan Africa
- Variation in urbanization in Southwest
Asia/North Africa - Low urbanization in South Asia
- Singapore 100 percent urban
- Pacific Rim only Japan, S. Korea, and Taiwan
are highly urbanized.
7Urban Geography Urbanization and Location
8Urban Geography Urbanization and Location
- Urbanization in the 1990s
- Distribution of Great World Cities (Fig. 18.7)
- Western Europe, N. America, E. Asia
- Regional megalopolis in S. Florida
- Urban complex in Germanys Ruhr-Rhine zone
- Randstad in Netherlands
- megalopolitan development in Japan.
9Urban Geography Urbanization and Location
10Urban Geography Urbanization and Location
- Urbanization in the 1990s
- Megacities
- Many of largest cities in poorer countries
- By 2025, 15 cities with more than 20 million.
- Stand alone cities in developing countries
- Conurbations in developed countries
- By 2025 New York will no longer be among the
worlds 10 largest cities. - Fast growing cities in Asia, Africa, and South
America
11Urban Geography Urban Pattern and Structure
- Intraurban Spatial Organization
- Technology and urban form
- John Borcharts Evolutionary Epochs
- Sail-Wagon (1790-1830)
- Iron Horse (1830-1870)
- Steel-Rail (1870-1920)
- Auto-Air-Amenity (1920-1970)
- High-tech (1970-?)
12Urban Geography Urbanization and Location
Clarke Urban Growth Model
- output of model run on Santa Barbara
- Green Current Urban
- Light Blue Predicted Urban
- Royal Blue Excluded
- Yellow Roads
- Red Other
13Urban Geography Urban Pattern and Structure
- Central Place Theory
- Centrality
- Threshold min. population for normal profits
- Range distance consumer is willing to travel to
purchase product.
Demand
Demand
Distance
Price
14Urban Geography Urban Pattern and Structure
- Central Place Theory (cont.)
- Excess Profits Spatial Competition, Equilibrium
- Central place hierarchy, ordering, nesting
Threshold
Range
15Urban Geography Urban Pattern and Structure
- Central Place Theory (cont.)
- Assumptions
- Uniform spatial distribution of
population/income - Isotropic transport surface
- Consumers patronize nearest store
- No excess profits (rangethreshold)
- Hexagonal trade areas of central place theory
16Urban Geography Urban Pattern and Structure
Spatial Competition
17Urban Geography Urban Pattern and Structure
18Urban Geography Urban Pattern and Structure
19Urban Geography Urban Pattern and Structure
- Central Place Theory (cont.)
- Relax Assumptions
- Population/income variation
- Transport surface
- Consumer behavior
- Profits
20Urban Geography Urban Pattern and Structure
- Central Place Theory (cont.)
- Application to retail and settlement patterns.
- Do cities of similar size have approximately
equal spacing? - Encarta...
21Urban Geography Urban Pattern and Structure
- Functional structure
- CBD, central city, suburb
- Urban Ecology Classic Models
- Concentric Zone Burgess (1920s)
- Sector Model Hoyt (1930s)
- Multiple Nuclei Harris and Ulman (1940s)
22Urban Geography Urban Pattern and Structure
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26Urban Geography Urban Pattern and Structure
- Economic Base and the Base Multiplier
- Basic and non-basic sector
- Defining the base multiplier
- Example Raytheon