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Bristol case study

Bristol’s importance

Regional

  • Bristol Airport is the biggest in the south west

National

  • UK’s most centrally located seaport - 700,000 cars are imported to Portbury each year

International

  • Bristol University attracts students and researchers from all over the world

Patterns of migration

National

  • National migrants arrive for job opportunities (e.g Airbus, Rolls Royce) and to study and university

  • A higher proportion of internal migrants tend to stay in Bristol compared to other cities

International

  • Accounted for half of Bristol’s population growth

  • Large numbers are from EU countries, such as Poland and Spain

Migration’s impacts

Growth Of The City

  • Population has grown to just under 500,000 people

Character Of The City

  • Bristol’s large African and Afro-Caribbean population has had a significant cultural impact (e.g St Paul’s Carnival attracts 40,000 people every year)

Other Impacts

  • Increase in housing prices - Southville house prices £500,000 on average

  • Increase in social tension

  • 9% of children cannot speak English - extra lessons costs money

Ways of life

Culture

  • Old Vic, Hippodrome

Ethnicity

  • 50 nationalities represented

Housing

  • As the city has grown new housing areas have been developed (e.g Bradley Stoke)

Leisure

  • Planet Ice, Ashton Gate

Consumption

  • High petrol consumption as a result of high car usage

Contemporary challenges

Housing Availability

  • Social housing found on outskirts of the city in areas such as Lockleaze and Filwood

  • House prices amongst the highest in the county in postcodes such as BS9 and BS8, in the suburbs of Bristol

Transport Provision

  • Issues with the lack of public transport in certain areas (e.g Hartcliffe)

  • Electric scooters introduced to reduce congestion

Access To Services And Inequality

  • In lower income areas there are poorer quality services such as medical centres and schools

  • In 2013 in Filwood only 36% of GCSE students got top grades

  • Life expectancy in Filwood is 78 years - the average in Bristol in 80 years

Initiative to make more sustainable

Clean Air Zone

  • Introduced in central Bristol in November 2022

  • £9 charge for cars to travel through the zone if they are older + more polluting

  • This should reduce the use of polluting vehicles and encourage walking and cycling

E

Bristol case study

Bristol’s importance

Regional

  • Bristol Airport is the biggest in the south west

National

  • UK’s most centrally located seaport - 700,000 cars are imported to Portbury each year

International

  • Bristol University attracts students and researchers from all over the world

Patterns of migration

National

  • National migrants arrive for job opportunities (e.g Airbus, Rolls Royce) and to study and university

  • A higher proportion of internal migrants tend to stay in Bristol compared to other cities

International

  • Accounted for half of Bristol’s population growth

  • Large numbers are from EU countries, such as Poland and Spain

Migration’s impacts

Growth Of The City

  • Population has grown to just under 500,000 people

Character Of The City

  • Bristol’s large African and Afro-Caribbean population has had a significant cultural impact (e.g St Paul’s Carnival attracts 40,000 people every year)

Other Impacts

  • Increase in housing prices - Southville house prices £500,000 on average

  • Increase in social tension

  • 9% of children cannot speak English - extra lessons costs money

Ways of life

Culture

  • Old Vic, Hippodrome

Ethnicity

  • 50 nationalities represented

Housing

  • As the city has grown new housing areas have been developed (e.g Bradley Stoke)

Leisure

  • Planet Ice, Ashton Gate

Consumption

  • High petrol consumption as a result of high car usage

Contemporary challenges

Housing Availability

  • Social housing found on outskirts of the city in areas such as Lockleaze and Filwood

  • House prices amongst the highest in the county in postcodes such as BS9 and BS8, in the suburbs of Bristol

Transport Provision

  • Issues with the lack of public transport in certain areas (e.g Hartcliffe)

  • Electric scooters introduced to reduce congestion

Access To Services And Inequality

  • In lower income areas there are poorer quality services such as medical centres and schools

  • In 2013 in Filwood only 36% of GCSE students got top grades

  • Life expectancy in Filwood is 78 years - the average in Bristol in 80 years

Initiative to make more sustainable

Clean Air Zone

  • Introduced in central Bristol in November 2022

  • £9 charge for cars to travel through the zone if they are older + more polluting

  • This should reduce the use of polluting vehicles and encourage walking and cycling