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Key Issue 4: Why Do Suburbs Face Distinctive Challenges?

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Key Issue 4: Why Do Suburbs Face Distinctive Challenges? * * Figure 13-33 HOUSING SEGREGATION: GATED COMMUNITY Dana Point, California, a Los Angeles suburb, has a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Key Issue 4: Why Do Suburbs Face Distinctive Challenges?


1
Key Issue 4 Why Do Suburbs Face Distinctive
Challenges?
2
Suburbanization
  • Suburbs Residential areas on the outskirts of a
    city or large town. Most modern suburbs are
    commuter towns with many single-family homes.
    Many suburbs have some degree of political
    autonomy and most have lower population density
    than inner city neighborhoods.
  • Auto oriented society
  • mass transit peaked in 1920s
  • shortage of consumer goods during WWII
  • declining friction of distance
  • GI Bill
  • Baby boom
  • Pull forces (low crime, quiet, less crowded, less
    pollution and noise)

3
What was the American dream in the 1950s?
4
Changes in Cities in the U.S.
  • U.S. population has been moving out of the city
    centers to the suburbs suburbanization and
    counter-urbanization

5
Overview of Suburbanization
Year Percent Urban Percent Suburban Percent Rural
1950 40 20 40
2000 30 50 20
6
Government Intervention
  • G.I. Bill
  • Provided numerous opportunities for veterans to
    transition to civilian life
  • Subsidized tuition, fees, books, educational
    materials for veterans desiring college
  • Provided low interest loans to veterans for the
    purchase of single family homes

7
Veterans return from WWII
Housing Americans previously suffered from
financial constraints such as ten year mortgages
and 80 down payments Federal Housing Authority
allowed thirty year mortgages and approve
mortgages with only 10 down
8
The Levitt Brothers
  • Took advantage of new market for houses
  • Purchased land once used to grow potatoes and
    constructed in Hempstead, Long Island the first
    of three Levittowns (later Pennsylvania and New
    Jersey)
  • Applied Fordist approach and mass produced houses
    to reduce costs
  • Later added baseball fields, shopping centers,
    schools, parks, and churches to neighborhoods

9
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10
The Peripheral Model
  • 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
  • Suburbs (peripheral areas) lack inner-city
    problems, but have to deal with sprawl and
    segregation

11
Cost of Suburban Sprawl
  • Sprawl progressive spread of development over
    the landscape not contiguous
  • Undesirable traits
  • Wastes land
  • Higher taxes and home prices
  • Greenbelts rings of open space (London,
    Birmingham)

12
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13
Why Are Urban Areas Expanding?
  • The Cost of Suburban Sprawl
  • A flattening of the density gradient for a
    metropolitan area means that its people and
    services are spread out over a larger area.
  • U.S. suburbs are characterized by sprawl, the
    progressive spread of development over the
    landscape.
  • Suburban Segregation
  • The modern residential suburb is segregated in
    two ways
  • Social Class
  • Similarly priced houses are typically built in
    close proximity to one another, thus attracting a
    specific range of income earners.

14
HOUSING SEGREGATION GATED COMMUNITY Dana Point,
California, a Los Angeles suburb, has a gated
community called Lantern Bay.
15
Why Are Urban Areas Expanding?
  • Suburban Segregation
  • The modern residential suburb is segregated in
    two ways contd.
  • Land Uses
  • Residents are separated from commercial and
    manufacturing activities that are confined to
    compact, distinct areas.
  • Zoning ordinances enacted in the early 20th
    century have contributed most notably to the
    segregation of land uses associated with suburban
    areas.

16
Why Are Urban Areas Expanding?
  • Urban Transportation
  • Public Transit
  • Benefits
  • In larger cities, public transit is better suited
    than motor vehicles to move large numbers of
    people, because each transit traveler takes up
    less space.
  • More cost effective than privately operated
    vehicles
  • Emits relatively less pollutants than privately
    operated vehicles
  • More energy efficient than privately operated
    vehicles
  • Limitations
  • Most people in the U.S. overlook the benefits of
    public transit, because they place higher value
    on the privacy and flexibility of schedule
    offered by a car.
  • Not offered in most U.S. cities

17
BOSTON PUBLIC TRANSIT Bostons subway system,
known as the T, includes heavy rail (top) and
light rail (bottom).
18
Europe versus U.S. Cities Sprawl
European cities, including this hypothetical U.K.
example, tend to restrict suburban development,
thereby concentrating new development in and
around existing concentrations. This leaves large
rings of open space, so-called greenbelts.
19
Northampton, United Kingdom
There is usually a sharp boundary between an
urban area in the U.K., such as Northampton, and
the surrounding rural area.
20
Density Gradient
  • Density gradient change in density in an urban
    area the number of houses per unit of land
    diminishes as distance from the center city
    increases
  • However in recent years
  • Less people living in center city
  • Less density difference within urban areas

21
Cleveland, Ohio Density Gradient1900-1990
  • The density gradient in Cleveland shows the
    expansion of dense population outward from the
    city center over time. In 1990, population
    dispersed over a wider area with less variation
    in density than before.

22
Suburban Segregation
  • Residents are separated from commercial and
    manufacturing activities that are confined to
    compact, distinct areas
  • Housing in a given suburban community is usually
    built for people of a single social class
  • Zoning ordinances a law that limits the
    permitted uses of land and maximum density of
    development in a community
  • Encouraged spatial separation

23
  • Transportation and suburbanization
  • Motor vehicles
  • More than 95 percent of all trips are made by car
  • Public transit
  • Advantages of public transit
  • Transit travelers take up less space
  • Cheaper, less pollutant, and more energy
    efficient than an automobile
  • Suited to rapidly transport large number of
    people to small area
  • Public transit in the United States
  • Used primarily for rush-hour community for
    workers into and out of CBD
  • Small cities-minimal use
  • Most Americans prefer to commute by automobile

24
Contribution of Transportation to Suburbanization
  • Urban sprawl makes people more dependent on
    transportation (work, shopping)
  • Motor vehicles had led to large scale development
    of suburbs more flexibility
  • U.S. government has paid 90 of the cost of
    limited access high-speed interstate highways
  • ¼ of land of city is roads and parking lots

25
Contribution of Transportation to Suburbanization
  • Rush-hour commuting heaviest traffic because
    large numbers of people are reaching small areas
    of land at the same time
  • Public transportation is cheaper, less polluting
    and more energy efficient

Average American loses 36 hours per year sitting
in traffic jams and wastes 55 gallons of gasoline
26
Contribution of Transportation to Suburbanization
  • The public transportation heavily used is rapid
    transit (subways, streetcars)
  • Subways have been modernized across the country
  • Not everyone without a car has access to public
    transportation (especially if live in city, but
    have suburban job)

27
Central London Traffic Sign
This sign near Marble Arch in London warns
motorists that they are about to enter the
Congestion Zone. A charge is levied for driving
a private vehicle into central London from 7 AM
to 630 PM.
28
Tram Line in Brussels
A Line 92 tram on the Rue Royale in Brussels.
29
Urban Realms Model
  • Developed by Vance based on San Francisco Bay
    area and metropolis
  • Describes spatial components of modern metropolis
  • Includes independent suburban downtowns within
    the sphere of influence of the central city and
    CBD
  • Depends on
  • Overall size of metropolitan region
  • Amount of economic activity in each urban realm
  • Topography and major land features
  • Accessibility of each realm

30
Edge City
Includes a central business district, central
city, new downtown, and suburban downtown
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