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Impacts of Urbanization

  • Urbanization

    • Creation and growth of urban areas or cities and their surrounding developed land

    • Urban growth

      • The rate of increase of urban populations

      • Urban areas grow in two ways

        • Natural increase

        • Immigration

    • Rural people are pulled to urban areas in search of jobs, housing, educational opportunities, health care, entertainment, and freedom from religious, racial, and political conflicts

    • Main advantages

      • Access to education

      • Sanitation

      • Access to health care

      • More jobs

      • Better transportation

    • Main disadvantages

      • Worse air quality

      • High population density

        • Increase spread of communicable disease

      • Noise pollution

        • High levels of stress

      • High crime rate

  • Advantages of Urbanization

    • Cities

      • Centers of economic development, innovation, education, industry, commerce, transportation, and jobs

        • Better access to medical care, family planning, education, and social services

    • Recycling is more economically feasible because concentrations of recyclable materials

    • Concentrating people in cities helps preserve biodiversity by reducing the stress of wildlife habitats

    • Central cities can save energy if residents rely more on energy-efficient mass transportation

  • Disadvantages of Urbanization

    • Huge ecological footprints

    • Lack of vegetation

    • Water problems

    • Concentrate air pollution

    • Health issues

    • Excessive noise

    • Create different climates

    • Light pollution

  • Phases of Urbanization

    • People migrated from rural ares to large central cities

    • Many people migrated from large central cities to suburbs and smaller cities

    • Some people fled both cities and suburbs and migrated to developed rural areas

  • Urban Sprawl

    • The growth of low-density development on the edges of cities and towns

    • Major factors that promoted urban sprawl in the U.S.

      • Ample land was available for most cities to spread outward

      • Federal government loan guarantees for new single family homes for WWII veterans stimulated the development of suburbs starting around 1950

      • Low cost gasoline and federal and state funding of highways encourages automobile use and the development of outlying tracts of land

      • Technology has made possible to work from home

      • Goof suburban school districts

      • More space to raise children

      • Higher quality of life

  • Environmental Problems

    • Building homes in preserved areas causes habitat destruction/fragmentation

    • Problems related to the high usage of fossil fuels, since more people drive to work and other places

  • Ecological Footprints

    • Urban populations only occupy around 2% of the earth’s land are, but they consume 75% of its resources and produce 75% of all carbon dioxide emissions from human activities

    • Most of the world’s cities are not self-sustaining systems

    • Large areas of land must be destroyed and degrade to provide for the urban people, which results in the lowering of biodiversity

    • Most urban dwellers live in an artificial environment that isolates themselves from natural areas that contain biodiversity

  • Lack of Vegetation

    • Most trees, shrubs, and other plants are destroyed in urban areas in order to make way for development

    • Vegetation is important because it absorbs air pollutants, gives off oxygen, cools the air through transpiration, provides shade, muffles noise, and provides habitats

  • Water Pollution

    • As water demands increase, expensive reservoirs must be built, and deeper wells must be drilled

      • Can deprive rural and wild ares of surface water and deplete groundwater

    • Covering land with asphalt and concrete causes precipitation to runoff quickly and overload storm drains, causing flooding

    • Global warming is causing urban dwellers in arid areas to have a shortage of water

  • Pollution

    • High population densities and high resource consumption causes cities to produce most of the world’s air pollution, water pollution, and waste

    • Pollution is produces in a small area and cannot be dispersed and diluted as easily as pollution in rural areas

    • Most of the CO2 from human related sources are due to urban areas

    • Nitrogen nutrients in runoff can disrupt the nitrogen cycle

  • Excessive Noise

    • Urban dwellers are subject to noise pollution

      • Any unwanted, disturbing, or harmful sound that impairs or interferes with hearing, causes stress, hampers concentration and work efficiency, or causes accidents

    • Too much noise can kill someone and cause permanent hearing damage

  • Light Pollution

    • The artificial light created

    • Affects some plant and animal species

      • Migrating birds

        • Lured off course by the lights of a high rise building

        • Fatally collide with the buildings

  • Heat Island Effect

    • Cities are generally warmer than the suburbs and rural areas

    • Causes

      • The enormous amount of heat created by cars, factories, air conditioners, and heat-absorbing dark roofs and streets in cities creates an urban heat island, surrounded by cooler rural and suburban areas

    • Consequences of the heat island effect

      • Increases the formation of photochemical smog

      • Increases dependence on air conditioning for cooling

      • Increases energy consumption

  • Transportation

    • Motor vehicles have many harmful effects on people and the environment

      • Automobile accidents kill approximately 1.2 million people a year and injure another 15 million

      • Kill about 50 million wild animals and family pets a year

    • World’s largest source of outdoor pollution, and cause 30,000 to 60,000 premature deaths per year in the U.S.

    • Fastest growing source of climate changing CO2 emissions

    • Account for ⅔ of oil used in the form of gasoline in the U.S. and ⅓ of the world

    • At least a third of urban land worldwide, and half in the U.S. is devoted to roads, parking lots, gasoline stations, and other automobile related uses

  • Reducing Automobile Use

    • Charge a tax on gasoline to cover the estimated harmful cost of driving

      • Such a tax would amount to about $3.18 per liter of gasoline in the U.S.

  • Alternatives to Car Ownership

    • Mass transit rail

      • Advantages

        • Uses less energy

        • Produces less air pollution

        • Requires less land

        • Causes fewer injuries and deaths

        • Reduces car congestion in cities

      • Disadvantages

        • Expensive

        • Commits riders to a schedule

        • Causes noise and vibration

    • Bicycles

      • Advantages

        • Affordable

        • No pollution

        • Quiet

        • Require little parking space

        • Easy to maneuver in traffic

        • Require few resources

      • Disadvantages

        • Little protection in an accident

        • No protection from bad weather

        • Impractical for long trips

        • Tiring

        • Lack of secure parking

    • Buses

      • Advantages

        • Can be rerouted

        • Cost less to develop and maintain

        • Can reduce car use and air pollution

      • Disadvantages

        • Can lose money due to low fares

        • Can get caught in traffic and add to pollution

        • Commits riders to a schedule

        • Noisy

    • Rapid Rail

      • Advantages

        • Reduce travel by car and plane

        • Ideal for long trips

        • Energy efficient

      • Disadvantages

        • Expensive

        • Must operate along heavily used routes

        • Cause noise and vibration

  • Conventional Land-Use Planning

    • Urban and rural areas use some form of land-use planning to determine the best present and future use of each parcel of land

      • Encourage future population growth and economic development, regardless of the environmental and social consequences

    • Leads poorly controlled urban growth and sprawl

      • 90% of the revenue of local governments used to provide public services comes from property taxes levied on building/property based on economic value

    • Zoning

      • Most widely used approach in which various parcels of land are designated for certain uses

        • Can be used to control growth and protect areas from some types of development

        • Disadvantages

          • Threatens/destroys environment

          • Favors high-priced housing over protecting environmentally sensitive areas and low-priced housing because of property tax revenue from high-priced developments

  • Smart Growth

    • Limits and regulations

      • Limit building permits

      • Urban growth boundaries

      • Greenbelts around cities

      • Public review of new development

    • Zoning

      • Encourage mixed use of housing and small businesses

      • Concentrate development along mass transportation routes

      • Promote high-density clutter housing developments

    • Planning

      • Ecological land use planning

      • Environmental impact analysis

      • Integrated regional planning

      • State and national planning

    • Protection

      • Preserve existing open space

      • Buy new open space

      • Buy development rights that prohibit certain types of development on land parcels

    • Taxes

      • Tax land, not buildings

      • Tax land on value of use

    • Tax breaks

      • For owners not agreeing to allow certain types of developments

      • For cleaning up and developing abandoned urban sites

    • Revitalization and New Growth

      • Revitalize existing cities/towns

      • Build well-planned new towns and villages within cities

NE

Impacts of Urbanization

  • Urbanization

    • Creation and growth of urban areas or cities and their surrounding developed land

    • Urban growth

      • The rate of increase of urban populations

      • Urban areas grow in two ways

        • Natural increase

        • Immigration

    • Rural people are pulled to urban areas in search of jobs, housing, educational opportunities, health care, entertainment, and freedom from religious, racial, and political conflicts

    • Main advantages

      • Access to education

      • Sanitation

      • Access to health care

      • More jobs

      • Better transportation

    • Main disadvantages

      • Worse air quality

      • High population density

        • Increase spread of communicable disease

      • Noise pollution

        • High levels of stress

      • High crime rate

  • Advantages of Urbanization

    • Cities

      • Centers of economic development, innovation, education, industry, commerce, transportation, and jobs

        • Better access to medical care, family planning, education, and social services

    • Recycling is more economically feasible because concentrations of recyclable materials

    • Concentrating people in cities helps preserve biodiversity by reducing the stress of wildlife habitats

    • Central cities can save energy if residents rely more on energy-efficient mass transportation

  • Disadvantages of Urbanization

    • Huge ecological footprints

    • Lack of vegetation

    • Water problems

    • Concentrate air pollution

    • Health issues

    • Excessive noise

    • Create different climates

    • Light pollution

  • Phases of Urbanization

    • People migrated from rural ares to large central cities

    • Many people migrated from large central cities to suburbs and smaller cities

    • Some people fled both cities and suburbs and migrated to developed rural areas

  • Urban Sprawl

    • The growth of low-density development on the edges of cities and towns

    • Major factors that promoted urban sprawl in the U.S.

      • Ample land was available for most cities to spread outward

      • Federal government loan guarantees for new single family homes for WWII veterans stimulated the development of suburbs starting around 1950

      • Low cost gasoline and federal and state funding of highways encourages automobile use and the development of outlying tracts of land

      • Technology has made possible to work from home

      • Goof suburban school districts

      • More space to raise children

      • Higher quality of life

  • Environmental Problems

    • Building homes in preserved areas causes habitat destruction/fragmentation

    • Problems related to the high usage of fossil fuels, since more people drive to work and other places

  • Ecological Footprints

    • Urban populations only occupy around 2% of the earth’s land are, but they consume 75% of its resources and produce 75% of all carbon dioxide emissions from human activities

    • Most of the world’s cities are not self-sustaining systems

    • Large areas of land must be destroyed and degrade to provide for the urban people, which results in the lowering of biodiversity

    • Most urban dwellers live in an artificial environment that isolates themselves from natural areas that contain biodiversity

  • Lack of Vegetation

    • Most trees, shrubs, and other plants are destroyed in urban areas in order to make way for development

    • Vegetation is important because it absorbs air pollutants, gives off oxygen, cools the air through transpiration, provides shade, muffles noise, and provides habitats

  • Water Pollution

    • As water demands increase, expensive reservoirs must be built, and deeper wells must be drilled

      • Can deprive rural and wild ares of surface water and deplete groundwater

    • Covering land with asphalt and concrete causes precipitation to runoff quickly and overload storm drains, causing flooding

    • Global warming is causing urban dwellers in arid areas to have a shortage of water

  • Pollution

    • High population densities and high resource consumption causes cities to produce most of the world’s air pollution, water pollution, and waste

    • Pollution is produces in a small area and cannot be dispersed and diluted as easily as pollution in rural areas

    • Most of the CO2 from human related sources are due to urban areas

    • Nitrogen nutrients in runoff can disrupt the nitrogen cycle

  • Excessive Noise

    • Urban dwellers are subject to noise pollution

      • Any unwanted, disturbing, or harmful sound that impairs or interferes with hearing, causes stress, hampers concentration and work efficiency, or causes accidents

    • Too much noise can kill someone and cause permanent hearing damage

  • Light Pollution

    • The artificial light created

    • Affects some plant and animal species

      • Migrating birds

        • Lured off course by the lights of a high rise building

        • Fatally collide with the buildings

  • Heat Island Effect

    • Cities are generally warmer than the suburbs and rural areas

    • Causes

      • The enormous amount of heat created by cars, factories, air conditioners, and heat-absorbing dark roofs and streets in cities creates an urban heat island, surrounded by cooler rural and suburban areas

    • Consequences of the heat island effect

      • Increases the formation of photochemical smog

      • Increases dependence on air conditioning for cooling

      • Increases energy consumption

  • Transportation

    • Motor vehicles have many harmful effects on people and the environment

      • Automobile accidents kill approximately 1.2 million people a year and injure another 15 million

      • Kill about 50 million wild animals and family pets a year

    • World’s largest source of outdoor pollution, and cause 30,000 to 60,000 premature deaths per year in the U.S.

    • Fastest growing source of climate changing CO2 emissions

    • Account for ⅔ of oil used in the form of gasoline in the U.S. and ⅓ of the world

    • At least a third of urban land worldwide, and half in the U.S. is devoted to roads, parking lots, gasoline stations, and other automobile related uses

  • Reducing Automobile Use

    • Charge a tax on gasoline to cover the estimated harmful cost of driving

      • Such a tax would amount to about $3.18 per liter of gasoline in the U.S.

  • Alternatives to Car Ownership

    • Mass transit rail

      • Advantages

        • Uses less energy

        • Produces less air pollution

        • Requires less land

        • Causes fewer injuries and deaths

        • Reduces car congestion in cities

      • Disadvantages

        • Expensive

        • Commits riders to a schedule

        • Causes noise and vibration

    • Bicycles

      • Advantages

        • Affordable

        • No pollution

        • Quiet

        • Require little parking space

        • Easy to maneuver in traffic

        • Require few resources

      • Disadvantages

        • Little protection in an accident

        • No protection from bad weather

        • Impractical for long trips

        • Tiring

        • Lack of secure parking

    • Buses

      • Advantages

        • Can be rerouted

        • Cost less to develop and maintain

        • Can reduce car use and air pollution

      • Disadvantages

        • Can lose money due to low fares

        • Can get caught in traffic and add to pollution

        • Commits riders to a schedule

        • Noisy

    • Rapid Rail

      • Advantages

        • Reduce travel by car and plane

        • Ideal for long trips

        • Energy efficient

      • Disadvantages

        • Expensive

        • Must operate along heavily used routes

        • Cause noise and vibration

  • Conventional Land-Use Planning

    • Urban and rural areas use some form of land-use planning to determine the best present and future use of each parcel of land

      • Encourage future population growth and economic development, regardless of the environmental and social consequences

    • Leads poorly controlled urban growth and sprawl

      • 90% of the revenue of local governments used to provide public services comes from property taxes levied on building/property based on economic value

    • Zoning

      • Most widely used approach in which various parcels of land are designated for certain uses

        • Can be used to control growth and protect areas from some types of development

        • Disadvantages

          • Threatens/destroys environment

          • Favors high-priced housing over protecting environmentally sensitive areas and low-priced housing because of property tax revenue from high-priced developments

  • Smart Growth

    • Limits and regulations

      • Limit building permits

      • Urban growth boundaries

      • Greenbelts around cities

      • Public review of new development

    • Zoning

      • Encourage mixed use of housing and small businesses

      • Concentrate development along mass transportation routes

      • Promote high-density clutter housing developments

    • Planning

      • Ecological land use planning

      • Environmental impact analysis

      • Integrated regional planning

      • State and national planning

    • Protection

      • Preserve existing open space

      • Buy new open space

      • Buy development rights that prohibit certain types of development on land parcels

    • Taxes

      • Tax land, not buildings

      • Tax land on value of use

    • Tax breaks

      • For owners not agreeing to allow certain types of developments

      • For cleaning up and developing abandoned urban sites

    • Revitalization and New Growth

      • Revitalize existing cities/towns

      • Build well-planned new towns and villages within cities