URBAN GEOGRAPHY. LEARNING OUTCOME Understanding of why people live in cities and where cities...

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URBAN GEOGRAPHY

Transcript of URBAN GEOGRAPHY. LEARNING OUTCOME Understanding of why people live in cities and where cities...

URBAN GEOGRAPHY

LEARNING OUTCOME

Understanding of why people live in cities and where cities originated.

REMEMBER…AGRICULTURE?

Agricultural Surplus: Producing more. Growing more than a single person can consume. Resulted from technology, like irrigation.

Social Stratification: Leadership class who controlled the surplus and the technology.

-Leadership class did not work in fields & were able to do other things like write, be religious, and philosophy.

-Created laws, which are a basis for cities. -Group of decision makers and organizers who controlled

the resources, and often the lives, of others.Hinterland: the area surrounding a city from which it obtains food

-Range and fertility of the hinterland determines the size of the city

URBAN HEARTHS

SITE

Site:  Absolute location. The physical elements; defensibility, fertility of soil.

Things you have to take into consideration:-Mountains? -Water? -Plains? -Plateau's? 

SITUATION

Situation:  "The relative location, it's place in its region and the world around it.“This is going to influence the cities Timbuktu was a trade route location, large city, now relatively deserted

Takes into consideration the world around the city and how it interacts.

URBAN GEOGRAPHY

Urban Geography: Focuses on how cities function, their internal systems and structures, and the external influences on them.

Study of Systems of Cities: focuses on where and why a city is located. Looks externally at a city and how they are connected.

Study of Internal Cities: focuses on internal working and structures of cities. Includes patterns of land use, racial and ethnic segregation, transportation and cycles of construction.

SITUATION CAN CHANGE

DEFINING URBANISM:

Urban: (Foulberg 277): the buildup of the central city and the suburban realm-the city and the surrounding envision connected to the city . Non-rural and non-agricultural.

Urbanization: refers to the increase in the percentage of people who live within the cities (Malinowski, p. 284)

City & Town: (Getis, p. 385) “denote nucleated settlements, multifunctional in character, including an established central business district and both residential and nonresidential land uses.”

EXTERNAL SITUATION INFLUENCE CITY: BORCHERT’S EPOCHS OF URBAN TRANSPORTATION Sail-Wagon Period: 1790-1830. Ships were transportation, once goods on land, they were hauled by wagon to destination.

Iron-Horse Period: 1830-1870 the railroad transported goods and people in this period.

The steel-rail period: 1870-1920 steel primary building material, mining and transport provided many jobs

The auto-air-amendity period 1920-1960 automobile angine. Farther commute and live outside central urban area

URBAN HIERARCHY

Hamlet: few dozen people and offer limited services. (Gas station and general store)

URBAN HIERARCHY

Villages: larger than hamlets and offer more services. There maybe stores specializing in the sale of food, clothing, furniture, and so on.

URBAN HIERARCHY CONT.

Towns: 50 to a few thousand people. Considered urban area with a defined boundary, but are smaller than a city in terms of population and area. Surrounding farms are “hinterland”

URBAN HIERARCHY CONT.

Cities: tens of thousands of people.

10,000+

URBAN HIERARCHY CONT.Metropolises: incorporate large areas and are focused around one large city.

50,000+

POPULATIONS CIRCA. 1700 AND TODAYMETRO AREAS: FUNCTION AS AN ECONOMIC UNIT

London 1700: 500,000 2013: 7,800,000

New York 1700: 4,937 2013: 8,336,000Paris 1700: 515,000 2013: 2,200,000Mexico City 1900: 500,000 2013: 8,000,000Tokyo 1700: 1,200,000 2013: 13,000,000

CITY (SMALLER UNITS OF URBAN AREAS)

URBANIZED AREA: CONTINUOUSLY BUILT-UP LANDSCAPE SO CLOSE TOGETHER. (THIS IS HOUSTON)

URBANIZED AREA: CONTINUOUSLY BUILT-UP LANDSCAPE SO CLOSE TOGETHER. (THIS IS HOUSTON)