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The Largest Urban Areas. . Percent of Population Living in Urban Areas. . . Percent Urban by Region. . . Percentage of GDP From Services. . . Consumer Services. . . U.S. Employment Sectors. . . . . Hierarchy of World Cities. London, New York, and Tokyo are the dominant world cities in the global ec
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1. Settlements and Services
2. The Largest Urban Areas
3. Percent of Population Living in Urban Areas
4. Percent Urban by Region
5. Percentage of GDP From Services
6. Consumer Services
7. U.S. Employment Sectors
8. Hierarchy of World Cities
10. Business-Service Cities in the U.S.
11. Economic Base of U.S. Cities
12. Relationship Between Diversity and Economic Innovation
13. Coolness and Innovation Geography of Talent Geography of Diversity
14. Distribution of Consumer Services Central place theory
Market area of a service
Size of market area
Market area analysis
Profitability of a location
Optimal location within a market
Hierarchy of services and settlements
Nesting of services and settlements
Rank-size distribution of settlements
15. Key Points Concerning Central Place Theory A central place is a market center for the exchange of goods and services.
Central places compete against each other; this competition creates the regular pattern of settlements.
Each settlement has a market area, the region from which customers are drawn; the market area can be indicated by a circle.
For geometric reasons, hexagons rather than circles are used to indicate market areas.
Smaller settlements occur more frequently and closer together, while larger settlements occur less frequently and farther apart; this creates a hierarchy of settlements of different size by frequency and distance between them.
Small settlements provide goods and services that have small thresholds and ranges; large settlements provide goods and services that have large thresholds and ranges.
When the hierarchy is plotted on logarithmic paper, the line is straight in the United States but not in less developed countries.
16. Market Areas as Hexagons
18. Central Place Theory
19. Optimal Location (for Pizza Shop)
20. Rank-Size vs. Prime City Rule Distribution of Cities
21. Zipf’s Law or Rank Size Rule The second largest city is half the size of the largest city.
The third largest city is a third the size of the largest city.
It says that for most countries, the size distribution of cities must fit the power law: the number of cities with populations greater than S is inversely proportional to S.
23. Supermarket and Convenience Store Market Areas
24. Market Areas for SupermarketsDefined by 1 Mile Radii
25. Market Areas for SupermarketsDefined by 5 Minute Drive Times
29. Key Terms Basic industries
Business services
Central place
Central place theory
Consumer services
Economic base
Gravity model
Market area ( or hinterland) Nonbasic industries
Primate city
Primate city rule
Public services
Range (of a service)
Rank-size rule
Threshold
Urbanization