Urban Forms Flashcards

1
Q

Megacity

A

Urban agglomeration with a population of 10 million or more

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2
Q

Periphery

A

Outlying regions of a country

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3
Q

Periphery Characteristics

A
Least economic value
Provide resources for core
Less affluent
People leave due to push factors
Wales, Scotland, Cornwall
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4
Q

Core

A

Central area of a country, usually with the seat of government

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5
Q

Core Characteristics

A

Most economic growth = most jobs
Most affluent live there
Best infrastructure
London + South East

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6
Q

Megacity Characteristics

A

2-3 times more GDP than other cities
Less environmentally damaging- public transport
Fuel political pressure- protests
Centres of innovation- solutions to global problems trialed
Better education and healthcare
Empower women
More efficient to provide utilities and services in densely populated areas

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7
Q

World City

A

A city not necessarily the largest in terms of population, but is disproportionately important to the economy

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8
Q

How are World Cities ranked?

What are the 4 main aspects?

A

Globalisation and World Cities Research Network, part of the ‘knowledge economy’
Accountancy
Law
Advertising
Banking / Finance
More economically interconnected cities ranked as alpha ++, progressively moves down

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9
Q

Characteristics of World Cities

A
Production Hub
Political Hub
Migration Hub
Cultural Hub
Business, Transport, Trade
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10
Q

Production Hub

A

Manufacturing centres i.e. East End
Media and communications centres
TNC headquarters

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11
Q

Political Hub

A
Power at a global level
Dictate trading links between countries
Majors promote city globally
Influence and participate in global events
i.e. 2012 Olympics 
i.e. G8 Summits
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12
Q

Cultural Hub

A

Museums
National theatres
High quality educational institutions
Multi-functional infrastructure

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13
Q

Migration Hub

A

Jobs = migration
Attracts a large number of talented and globally mobile people
i.e. London’s population speaks over 300 languages

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14
Q

Business, Transport, Trade

A

Financial headquarters i.e. Canary Wharf
Dominate trade
TNC headquarters
Large levels of international passenger traffic i.e. Heathrow Airport

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15
Q

Urban Form

A

Relates to physical characteristics going towards the makeup of an area

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16
Q

Physical factors impacting the make up of an area

A

Topography- gap towns
Water
Natural Resources
Land Type

17
Q

Human factors impacting the make up of an area

A

Planning
Infrastructure
Land Value

18
Q

Town Centre Mixed Developments

A

Mixed land use
Planned by local councils
Funded partly by private investment
Aims to attract people back to city centre

19
Q

Town Centre Mixed Developments: Example

A

Cube, Birmingham
24 storey mixed use development
BBC, Highways England, Hotel Indigo
135 flats

20
Q

Cultural and Heritage Quarters

A

Focuses on history and character of an area
Local councils redevelop former industrial areas
Attracts visitors = economic development
Jewellery Quarter

21
Q

Fortress Developments

A

Security: CCTV, high walls, security guards
Often in suburban areas
Safe place for families- only rich can afford

22
Q

Gentrified Areas

A

Wealthy regenerate run down inner city areas by improving housing
Creates a range of high quality housing
Large access to services
Poorer residents maybe displaced due to increased living costs- social and ethnic segregation

23
Q

Edge Cities

A

New areas of offices, shops, leisure facilities
Built near major transport links- cheap land
Some housing too
Most travel to them for work or to use available services
Become more popular with increased car ownership
Common in USA

24
Q

How does topography affect an urban form?

A

Steep hillsides = slums

Flat areas encourage low density housing as lots of space

25
Q

How does water affect an urban form?

A

Cities grow along rivers i.e. London

Seas and lakes inhibit urban growth

26
Q

How do natural resources affect an urban form?

A

Areas rich in resources encourage population gorwth

27
Q

How does land type affect an urban form?

A

Some land types difficult and expensive to build on

Swamps and wetlands inhibit urban growth

28
Q

How does planning affect an urban form?

A

Unplanned leads to expanding slums and poor infrastructure

Planned often includes open spaces and leisure facilities

29
Q

How does infrastructure affect an urban form?

A

New developments often built along transport links- linear growth
Utilities can be extended to connect to new developments

30
Q

How does land value affect an urban form?

A

Highest in city centre- profitable chain stores and skyscrapers
Less profitable shops and large houses located further out where land is cheaper

31
Q

Structure of a city in a developed country

A

CBD
Inner City- relative poverty, high pop. density, high proportion of ethnic minorities
Suburbs- less dense housing as lower land value, houses are large and newer, less ethnic minorities, science parks and out of town shopping

32
Q

Structure of a city in a developing country

A

CBD
High cost housing- wealthy residents, luxury apartments, wealthy immigrants from HIC’s
Medium cost housing- Likely to have initially been informal that has slowly improved and had some services provided
Low cost housing- Informal, limited service access, high poverty, rural to urban migrants
Industrial areas located along transport links

33
Q

5 Characteristics of Post Modern Western Cities

A

Multiple centres with different purposes
Focus on tertiary and quaternary industries
Less uniform architecture
Planning priorities aesthetics over practicality
Higher social and economic inequality