1 / 12

Urban Geography

Urban Geography. Land uses in developed world cities. Learning Intentions. By the end of this unit, you should be able to: Understand why cities grow, List the main land uses in a developed city, Understand one land use model of a developed city. Introduction.

selma
Download Presentation

Urban Geography

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. Urban Geography Land uses in developed world cities

  2. Learning Intentions • By the end of this unit, you should be able to: • Understand why cities grow, • List the main land uses in a developed city, • Understand one land use model of a developed city.

  3. Introduction • The 7 Billion people who live on this planet are not evenly spread out. We prefer to live in some areas more than others. • Increasingly we prefer to live in towns and cities. • One hundred years ago, fewer than 200 million people lived in towns and cities; now the urban population is 3.5 billion.

  4. Why do people live in cities? • Jobs. • People move to cities because there are more job opportunities. There may be jobs in factories, offices, shops and services. • Each town or city used to have a specific function and would offer jobs in this area of work, for example, • Industrial centres – factory jobs making things. • Ports – jobs loading/ unloading goods on and off ships and jobs in the warehouse and distribution trade. • Tourist resort, such as Blackpool – jobs in hotels and restaurants catering for tourists.

  5. From Village to city • Nearly all the buildings in a village are houses. • As it starts to grow, it develops other land use zones. • It will have an industrial area as well as new housing zones and the old village will be taken over by shops and businesses. • This will become known as the town centre or the Central Business District. (CBD)

  6. Village to city • A typical town grows out from its original village in all directions and its different land use zones can be shown as concentric zones. CBD Inner City Suburbs

  7. Characteristics of the CBD • Oldest part of town. • Where most roads meet. • Bus and train stations. • High order shops. • Lots of Churches. • Offices. • Tallest buildings. • Most densely packed buildings. • Hotels, pubs and restaurants. • Entertainment facilities.

  8. Characteristics of the inner city • Built in the 19th century. • High density of buildings. • Old factories. • Low order shops and services. • Stone tenement houses. • Brick terraced houses. • Few gardens or small gardens.

  9. Characteristics of the city edge • Dates from 20th century onwards. • Planned shopping centres. • Business and office parks. • Some detached housing. • Low density of buildings. • Beside main roads.

  10. Characteristics of the Suburbs • Built in the 20th and 21st century. • Low density of buildings. • Mainly detached and semi detached houses. • Many houses with large gardens and garages. • Lots of open space and parks.

  11. Changes to Zones • These zones are consistently changing. • Old buildings are knocked down, new ones are constructed and others change their use. • For example. • Housing to offices. • Old factory buildings to stylish flats close to the city centre.

  12. Changes in the CBD • More indoor shopping centres, for example Buchanan Galleries. • Changes to road systems to ease congestions and increase pedestrian safety. For example, bus and taxi lanes, pedestrianized streets such as Buchanan Street .

More Related