APHUG Unit 6

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affordability

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126 Terms
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affordability

maximum price a buyer can afford to pay for an apartment/house

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agricultural surplus

food surplus necessary for creation of cities

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anti-displacement tenant activists

advocates for poor and working class who are at risk for losing affordable housing to new development

negative response to urban design initiatives (existing communities disrupted)

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anti-displacement tenant activists

example: project in New York City for 15-story residential building rejected by residents because of less affordable housing (despite rent subsidizing)

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automobile cities

cities whose size and shape are dictated by and pretty much require ownership of an automobile

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automobile cities

examples (think size and shape): Miami, Atlanta, Las Vegas, and especially Phoenix

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below market rate housing

costs much less than the going/market rate (affordable) and is usually determined who gets it by a lottery

a benefit of Inclusionary Zoning

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blockbusting

when realtors tell white homeowners that Black people are moving in to get them to sell their homes

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city

relatively large, densely populated settlement with a much larger population than rural towns and villages

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urban

relating to a city

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socioeconomic stratification

structuring of society into distinct socioeconomic classes, including leadership

grew as society grew

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first urban revolution

agricultural and socioeconomic innovations that led to the rise of the earliest cities

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urban hearth areas

Regions in which the world’s first cities evolved

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urban hearth areas

examples: Indus River Valley, Yellow River Valley, West Africa, Andean highlands, Mesoamerica

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site

an absolute location of a place on Earth, including all physical features

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situation

relative location of a place or the location of a place in reference to its surrounding features, places of human activities, or its regional position with reference to other places

changes over time

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situation

example: Pittsburgh built close to coal and iron ore mines to use in manufacturing

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site

example: Pittsburgh built at the confluence of 3 rivers

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capitalism

economic and political system in which a country’s trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit rather than owned and run by the state

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communism

all property is publicly owned and managed by the state

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communism

example: China political/economic system

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streetcar settlements

A settlement outside of a city with streetcar lines; the streetcars take residents into and out of the city easily

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second urban revolution

The industrial innovations in mining and manufacturing that led to increased urban growth

less focus on technological innovations, more on industrialization

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redevelopment

a set of activities and government policies intended to revitalize an area that has fallen on hard times

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metropolis

a very large and densely populated city, particularly the capital or major city of a country or region

NOT a metropolitan/metro area

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metropolis

example: New York City

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urban area

Any self-governing place in the United States that contains at least 2500 people

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urbanized area

urban areas with 50,000 people or more

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urban clusters

urban areas with 50,000 people or more

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metropolitan statistical areas

In the United States, a region with at least one urbanized area as its core

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micropolitan statistical areas

one or more urban clusters of at least 10,000 but less than 50,000 people as their cores

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metropolitan statistical areas

example: New York-Newark-Jersey City (most populated), Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim (2nd most populated)

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suburbs

populated areas on the outskirts of a city

older version = “bedroom communities”

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urbanization rate

The percentage of a nation’s population living in towns and cities

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suburbanization

the movement of people from urban core areas to the surrounding outskirts of a city

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sprawl

the tendency of cities to grow outward in an unchecked manner

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decentralization

In an urban context, to move business operations from core city areas into outlying areas such as suburbs

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decentralization

example: banks establishing suburban branches

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edge city

concentration of business, shopping, and entertainment that developed in the suburbs, outside of a city’s traditional downtown or central business district

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edge city characteristics

  • Over 5 million square feet of office space

  • Over 600,000 square feet of retail space

  • A population that increases every morning and decreases every afternoon, indicating more jobs than homes

  • Status as an end destination due to its businesses, entertainment, shopping, and recreation

  • A history of not resembling a city three years prior to its establishment

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edge city

example: Tysons Corner, VA (near Washington DC)

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boomburbs

places with more than 100,000 residents, but they are not core cities in the metropolitan areas

Mostly in Texas to Pacific Ocean

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infill development

the building of new retail, business, or residential spaces on vacant or underused parcels in already-developed areas (IMPORTANT!)

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exurb

a semirural district located beyond the suburbs that is often inhabited by well-to-do families

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world cities

cities that have become the command and control centers of the global economy

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world cities

example:

1991: New York, London, Tokyo

Today: Paris, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Singapore, Los Angeles, Sydney, Berlin, etc.

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gated communities

Privately governed and highly secure residential area within the bounds of a city; often has a fence or a gate surrounding it

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urban system

a set of interdependent cities or urban places connected by networks

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urban system

example: Seattle + Olympia + cities around Puget Sound in WA (see map in textbook)

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urban hierarchy

a ranking of cities, with the largest and most powerful cities at the top of the hierarchy

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rank-size rule

states that the population of a settlement is inversely proportional to its rank in the urban hierarchy (do some math)

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primate city

much larger than any other city in a country, and it dominates the country’s economic, political, and cultural life

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primate city

examples: Lagos (Nigeria), London, Moscow, Athens, and Paris

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central place theory

a model that attempts to understand why cities are located where they are

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central places

settlements that make certain types of products and services available to consumers

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central place theory assumptions

Christaller says:

(1) the surface of a region is flat with no physical barriers, such as mountains or rivers

(2) soil quality is the same everywhere

(3) population and purchasing power are evenly distributed

(4) the region has uniform transportation networks that permit direct travel from each settlement to the others

(5) from any given place, any good or service can be sold in all directions out to a certain distance.

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central place theory

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threshold

the number of people required to support a business

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range

the distance people will travel to acquire a good or service

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gravity model

mathematical model that attempts to predict how places will interact (controversial!)

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gravity model

(p1*p2)/d²

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gravity model

examples: New York and New Jersey interact a lot, but so do New York and Los Angeles

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concentric zone model

E.W. Burgess says:

Ring 1: CBD

Ring 2: Zone of transition

Ring 3: Zone of independent workers’ homes

Ring 4: Zone of middle class residences

Ring 5: Commuters’ zone

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concentric zone model

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Hoyt sector model

focused on transportation and communication as the drivers of the city’s layout

higher cost areas along transportation routes

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multiple-nuclei model

residential districts organized around several nodes (nuclei) rather than one CBD

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Hoyt sector model

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multiple-nuclei model

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galactic city (peripheral) model

the CBD remains central, but multiple shopping areas, office parks, and industrial districts are linked by a ring road or beltway

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galactic city (peripheral) model

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galactic city (peripheral) model

example: Phoenix follows this city model

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Griffin-Ford model

traditional elements of Latin American culture blended with the modern forces of globalization

CBD has two parts: a traditional market sector that sells everyday goods and the more modern CBD

combination of concentric zones and radial sectors

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Griffin-Ford model

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gentrification

The displacement of lower-income residents by higher-income residents as an area or neighborhood improves

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Southeast Asian city model

focal point of these cities was not a CBD but rather the old colonial port zone with surrounding commercial districts, the alien and Western commercial zones

squatters + middle class

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Southeast Asian city model

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Sub-Saharan African city model

carry the imprint of European colonial powers

3 CBDs

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Sub-Saharan African city model

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perceived density

the general impression of the estimated number of people present in a given area

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zoning regulations

dictate how land can be used

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population density

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fiscal squeeze

when city revenues cannot keep up with increasing demands for city services and expenditure on decaying urban infrastructure

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built environment

human-made space in which people live, work, and engage in leisure activities on a daily basis

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smart growth

policies combat regional sprawl by addressing issues of population density and transportation

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compact design

makes more efficient use of land that is already developed by encouraging development to grow up, not out

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diverse housing options

quality housing for people and families of all life stages and income levels

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new urbanism

focuses on fostering European-style cities of dense settlements, attractive architecture, and diverse housing of different types and prices within walking distance to shopping, restaurants, jobs, and public transportation

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principles of New Urbanism

  1. walkability

  2. connectivity

  3. mixed use and diversity

  4. diverse housing options

  5. quality architecture and urban design

  6. traditional neighborhood structure

  7. increased density

  8. smart transportation

  9. sustainability

  10. quality of life

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greenbelt

a zone of grassy, forested, or agricultural land separating urban areas

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greenbelt

example: English Garden City (London)

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zoning

the classification of land according to restrictions on its use and development

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slow-growth cities

cities that change their zoning laws to decrease the rate at which the city spreads horizontally, with the goal of avoiding or slowing the negative effects of sprawl

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slow-growth cities

example: the growth of Issaquah, WA is an example of ________

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cons of New Urbanism

  1. property values decrease

  2. amount of affordable housing will decrease

  3. property owners face restrictions on land use

  4. existing communities disrupted

  5. new development will cause segregation

  6. places of historical importance may be destroyed or severely impacted

  7. sprawl increases rather than decreases

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de facto segregation

racial segregation that is not supported by law but is still apparent

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mortgage

a loan that is taken out to purchase a home

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redlining

the practice of identifying high-risk neighborhoods on a city map and refusing to lend money to people who wanted to buy property in those neighborhoods

predominantly Black

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redlining

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white flight

the mass movement of whites to the outlying suburbs

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housing choice voucher program

assists very-low-income families, the elderly, and the disabled with affordable, decent, safe, and sanitary housing

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