1 / 40

AP Environmental Science Mr. Grant Lesson 67

AP Environmental Science Mr. Grant Lesson 67. Our Urbanizing World & Sprawl. Objectives:. Define the term sprawl . Describe the scale of urbanization Assess urban and suburban sprawl Outline city and regional planning and land use strategies. Evaluate transportation options.

Download Presentation

AP Environmental Science Mr. Grant Lesson 67

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. AP Environmental Science • Mr. Grant • Lesson 67 Our Urbanizing World & Sprawl

  2. Objectives: • Define the term sprawl. • Describe the scale of urbanization • Assess urban and suburban sprawl • Outline city and regional planning and land use strategies. • Evaluate transportation options.

  3. Define the term sprawl. • Sprawl: The unrestrained spread of urban or suburban development outward from a city center and across the landscape. Sometimes specified as growth in which the area of development outpaces population growth.

  4. Describe the scale of urbanization. • The world’s population is becoming predominantly urban. • The shift from rural to urban living is driven largely by industrialization and is proceeding fastest now in the developing world. • Nearly all-future population growth will be in cities of the developing world. • Environmental factors influence the location and growth of cities. • The geography of urban areas is changing as cities decentralize and suburbs grow and expand.

  5. Our urbanizing world • Urbanization = the movement of people from rural to urban (cities and suburbs) areas • Society’s greatest change since it became sedentary • People need a safe, clean, urban environment • Urban systems must be sustainable • Urban populations are growing rapidly • The growing human population • More people are moving to urban areas

  6. Industrialization causes urbanization • Urbanization began for two reasons: -Farms began producing access food. - Industrial revolution spawned technology -Creating jobs and opportunities in cities -Increasing production efficiencies You need to know this

  7. Urbanization • Developed nations have slowing urbanization. Developing nations are urbanizing rapidly • Searching for jobs, wars, ecological damage Write in your notes one megacity in a developing nation

  8. What Factors influence the location of cities?

  9. Things Like… • Climate, • Ttopography • Waterways -Determine whether a small settlement becomes a large city • Many well-located cities are linchpins in trading networks. How?

  10. How urbanization is changing Today, cities thrive in resource-poor areas • Cheap fossil fuels and powerful technologies (Dallas) • Water is brought in from distant areas (e.g., Las Vegas) • Phoenix grew 91% between 1990 and 2008 • What’s a major technology that makes life in Phoenix bearable in the summer?

  11. People moved to suburbs and cities suffered • Why would people move to suburbs? • Suburbs had more space • Economic opportunities • Cheaper real estate • Less crime • Better schools • Inner cities declined

  12. Because… Suburbs offer - Economic opportunities • Cheaper real estate • Less crime • Better schools When people moved to suburbs • Inner cities declined

  13. What enabled people to move to suburbs? • Automobiles and an expanding road network • Abundant, cheap oil - Jet travel, television, cell phones, the Internet allow easier communication from any area

  14. So what is sprawl? • Sprawl = the spread of low-density urban or suburban development outward from an urban center • Sprawl covers large areas of land with low-density development. • What are the impacts of Sprawl? • Sprawl has negative impacts involving transportation, pollution, health, land use, habitat loss, and economics.

  15. Effects of Sprawl Transportation- More people need to drive to get somewhere when they live in suburbs. Pollution- Cars and driving create emissions. Can contribute to urban smog, acid rain, ozone destruction. Health- Sprawl promotes people being sedentary because you have to drive so much.

  16. Effects of Sprawl Continued… • Land Use- Low-density development uses more land. • -Houses and roads replace 1 million ha (2.5 million acres) of U.S. land each year – 6,700 acres/day! • Economics- Sprawl drains money from urban downtown centers by demanding resources like: -Road systems, sewer systems, police and fire services, telephone line.

  17. Exit Ticket! Is there Sprawl in the area you live? Does it bother you or not? Have this answer in your notes. I will check at the end of class

  18. People in suburbs take up lots of space

  19. Several types of development lead to sprawl

  20. So how do people deal with the effects of sprawl? • Through city and regional planning • With zoning • With urban growth boundaries • With smart growth

  21. What is City Planning? City planning = designing cities to maximize their efficiency, functionality, and beauty City planners help control development Address transportation needs Create public parks Improve neighborhood living conditions Streamline traffic

  22. Washington, D.C. was a planned city Pierre Charles L’Enfant’s 1791 plan called for splendid diagonal avenues, monuments, a spacious, stately feeling

  23. What is regional planning? Regional planning = deals with same issues as city planning, but with -Has broader geographic scales - Must coordinate with multiple municipal governments Regional planning brings together: Urban and rural residents Homeowners, farmers, developers, and governments coordinate on what future land uses will be

  24. What is Zoning? Remember all these terms are way people deal with SPRAWL!! Zoning = organizes areas for different types of development and land use Zoning involves government restriction on the use of private land Do you think people have issues with this?

  25. Issues with Zoning Do you think people have issues with zoning? Proponents say government can set limits for the good of the community

  26. Proponents say government can set limits for the good of the community. Zoning maintains tranquility of neighborhoods. Gives property owners some security knowing certain developments can and cannot be located nearby.

  27. Opponents of zoning Say government is restricting what people can do on their private land. This represents a “top-down” constraint on personal property rights Some even consider it a “regulatory taking” that violates individual freedoms.

  28. Urban growth boundaries (UGBs) Limit sprawl: keeps growth in existing urbanized areas Revitalize downtowns Protect farms, forests, and industries Disadvantages: Increase housing prices within their boundaries - Increase the density of new housing inside the UGB

  29. Many cities have urban growth boundaries • Other states, regions, and cities have adopted UGBs • Boulder, Colorado; many California areas • Trying to concentrate development, prevent sprawl, and preserve farmland and habitat Oregon’s long-term goal was to prevent growth of a megalopolis stretching from Eugene to Seattle

  30. Oregon’s long-term goal was to prevent growth of a megalopolis stretching from Eugene to Seattle

  31. Smart growth tries to counter sprawl Smart growth = urban growth boundaries and other land use policies to control sprawl Proponents of smart growth promote: Healthy neighborhoods and communities Jobs and economic development Transportation options Environmental quality Building “up, not out” Focusing development in existing areas Favoring multistory shop-houses and high-rises

  32. New urbanism is now in vogue New urbanism = neighborhoods are designed on a walkable scale Homes, businesses, and schools are close together Functional neighborhoods in which most of a family’s needs can be met without using a car New urbanist developments have green spaces, mixed architecture, creative street layouts

  33. Vocab to know: -light pollution -Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design -new urbanism -transit-oriented development -urban ecology -urban growth boundary (UBG) -regional planning -urban heat island effect Please create cards for each one of these words.

  34. Evaluate transportation options. • Mass transit systems can enhance the efficiency and sustainability of urban areas. • The United States lags behind other nations in mass transit, but as population and demand increase, new efforts are being made.

  35. Transit-oriented development • Transit-oriented development = compact communities in the new urbanist style • Are arrayed around stops on a major rail transit line • People can travel by train and foot • Zoning rules must cooperate with new urbanism • Denser development must be allowed so sprawl is prevented

  36. Mass transportation Traffic jams cause air pollution, stress, and lost time Cost the U.S. economy $74 billion/year Key in improving quality of urban life: mass transportation Buses, trains, subways Light rail = smaller systems powered by electricity Cheaper, more energy efficient, and cleaner Traffic congestion is eased

  37. The most-used U.S. train systems are in large cities Carry 25% of each city’s daily commuters New York’s subways, the T in Boston Portland’s buses carry 66 million/year Each bus keeps 250 cars off the road each day Train and bus systems

  38. U.S. mass transit lags behind other nations • Most nations have extensive, accessible bus systems • The U.S. lags behind in mass transit systems • Other nations have high-speed bullet trains • The U.S. starves its only national passenger trains (Amtrak) of funding • Why is U.S. mass transit behind? • Low population density and cheap fuel support roads and cars • In 2009, Congress set aside $8 billion for high-speed rail

  39. Establishing mass transport is not easy • It is expensive to replace existing roads • Strong, visionary political leadership is needed • Growth is directed, instead of being overwhelming • Governments can encourage mass transit • Raise fuel taxes • Tax inefficient modes of transport • Reward carpoolers • Encourage bicycle use and bus ridership • Charge trucks for road damage • Stimulate investment in renewed urban centers

More Related