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LAND USE ZONES. URBAN LAND USE MODEL. CBD (city centre). C19th housing and industry (Inner City). Early C20th housing (Inner Suburbs). Late C20th housing (Outer Suburbs). THE CBD (Central Business District). The CBD of the town was the first place to be built.
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URBAN LAND USE MODEL CBD (city centre) C19th housing and industry (Inner City) Early C20th housing (Inner Suburbs) Late C20th housing (Outer Suburbs)
THE CBD (Central Business District) • The CBD of the town was the first place to be built. • It is full of shops, offices, restaurants and banks. • There are very few houses here. • Buildings in the CBD tend to be tall because the land is expensive,
GLASGOW’S CBD Buchanan Galleries
GLASGOW’S CBD Central Station
GLASGOW’S CBD The Italian Centre
THE INNER CITY • This zone used to be full of large factories and rows of tenements or terraced houses built in the nineteenth century. • Today many of the big factories have closed and the tenements have been modernised or replaced.
GLASGOW’S INNER CITY Finnieston Crane – evidence of former ship building industries
GLASGOW’S INNER CITY Modernised Tenements in Govan
GLASGOW’S INNER CITY High rise flats were built to replace some of the old tenements that had been demolished
GLASGOW’S INNER CITY New housing in the Gorbals
THE INNER SUBURBS • This zone is made up of houses built in the 1920’s and 1930’s. • Houses here tend to be detached or semi-detached and most have gardens.
GLASGOW’S INNER SUBURBS Giffnock
GLASGOW’S INNER SUBURBS Clarkston
THE OUTER SUBURBS • This is the most recent zone to appear. • This zone has many large, modern houses built after WW2. It also contains some council estates. • Recently small, modern industries and large shopping centres have been built here because the land is cheaper and there is more open space.
GLASGOW’S OUTER SUBURBS Newton Mearns
GREENBELT • The Greenbelt is an area of countryside around towns and cities. • It helps prevent towns and cities from growing too large and merging into one another. • You often find small villages here.
GLASGOW’S GREENBELT The Campsie Fells
LAND USE ZONES ON A MAP GLASGOW
THE CBD • Grid Iron street pattern • Train & Bus stations • Lots of churches • Tourist Information • Routes converge
19th Century Industry & Housing • Large, irregular shaped industrial buildings • Close to river and railway • Tenements nearby with grid iron pattern • Little open space
The Inner Suburbs • Curved, geometric street pattern with ovals and crescents • More open space • Detached and semi detached houses with gardens
The Outer Suburbs • Edge of town location • Irregular street pattern • Lots of open space
Modern Industrial Estate • Edge of town location • Smaller buildings • Open space • Landscaping • Good road links
EXTRA WORK • On page 19 there are a selection of past paper to practice. • Collect lined paper and complete the general question first. • Then move on to do the Foundation or Credit questions
Aberdeen Mapwork • Give 4-figure GR of CBD and give reasons for your choice. • A group of students were asked to gather information about urban & industrial change in the field study area between GR 9406 to GR 8906. • Describe in detail the gathering techniques they might use to complete such as assignment. Give reasons for using each technique. • Describe and explain the differences between the 2 areas of Middleton Park (9211) and Kittybrewster (9207). • Using map evidence explain the advantages & disadvantages of the site and situation of Aberdeen Airport (8712) 3 4 5 6
General 2009 Q1c
Foundation 2007 Q1f
Credit 2009 Q5 • Look at Reference Diagram Q5. • Give reasons for the patterns of the land use shown in both the suburbs and the Central Business District. One mark for a simple point, two marks for a developed point.No marks for description. Mark 4:2, 3:3, 2:4 Possible answers include:- • There are more shops and offices in the CBD due to its greater accessibility • (1) as a result of there being stations located there (1) and • A class roads converging (1). • Land values are high in the CBD so only large shops and offices can afford the rents (1). • There are hotels in the centre because they areclose to the stations (1). • There is much less open space in the CBD due to the high demand for land (1). • The residential land is mainly in the suburbs because land is cheaper there (1) and the environment is more suitable with cleaner air and less noise (1). • There is industry in the suburbs because new industries are located at the edge of cities for ease of access by road, avoiding the traffic congestion of the centre (2).
Credit 2008 Q5 • Look at Reference Diagram Q5A. • Explain in detail why there are different types of houses in Zones 1 and 3. • Reference Diagram Q5B: Statement • (b) Look at Reference Diagram Q5B. • What techniques could a group of Geography students use to gather information • on changes in the Central Business District (CBD)? • Give reasons for your chosen techniques. 5
Answer One mark for a valid point. Two marks for a developed point. 1 mark for description. For full marks both zones must be referred to. Possible answers might include: Zone 1 19th C In the inner city tenements/terraced housing was built to save space (1), because this zone is close to the CBD where land is expensive (1) this allowed high population densities (1), houses were close to industry because people had to walk to work (1), little open space or gardens as land was scarce (1). Zone 3 late 20th C Because it is on edge of town where land is cheaper there will be low housing density (1), houses are larger, detached or semi detached with back and front gardens and garages (1), newer housing so better planned layout with cul-de-sacs and crescents (1).
At least two techniques must be described. Maximum of three marks if no reasons are given or if reference is made to only one technique. Do not credit the same reason twice. Mark 2:3 or 3:2. Possible answers might include: Comparison of old and new photographs (1) these could be displayed side by side to highlight changes in land use (1) and differences in the amount of open space, building heights and street layouts (1). Photographs could be annotated to show changes (1). Looking at old and present day maps (1), saves the need for time consuming fieldwork and would show changes in land use (1) and differences in the amount of open space (1), services available then and now (1). Fieldwork in CBD could record building age, height and function (1), able to record present day land use (1), would be able to compare this with old records, photographs of area (1). In any of the above give credit for old materials obtained from library/planning offices. 5 ES