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Why do Suburbs Face Distinctive Challenges?

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Presentation on theme: "Why do Suburbs Face Distinctive Challenges?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Why do Suburbs Face Distinctive Challenges?
Ch. 13 Key Issue 4 Why do Suburbs Face Distinctive Challenges?

2 FIGURE 13-20

3 Metropolitan Statistical Area
Another definition of a city that accounts for the wide zone of influence of major cities What does it include?*** Urbanized area of 50,000+ County that city is located in Adjacent counties w/ high pop density and large % of workers in the central cities county

4 Urban Expansion Overlapping Metropolitan Areas
Counties may send large number of commuters to large cities BosNYWash megalopolis

5 FIGURE 13-21

6 Peripheral Model Chauncey Harris (mult. Nuclei guy)
Newest “transformation” on the city model Inner city surrounded by suburbs and businesses tied together by beltway (ring road) Shows problems of sprawl (edge cities) and segregation in suburbs

7 FIGURE 13-22

8 Density Gradient “Density Decrease”
Lower pop density as you move away from the center of the city Recent changes give a more uniform density Fewer people living in the center “gap” in the center where few are living Fewer differences in density w/in urban areas Density decrease in center (abandonment); Density increase periphery

9 FIGURE 13-23

10

11 Cost of Suburban Sprawl
Not built contiguously with rest of built-up area “Swiss cheese” development Fixed with “Infill development” Roads/utilities built to connect areas Wasted land and energy Greenbelts in UK Smart growth in US

12 Would-be Infill Development
FIGURE 13-24

13 Suburban Segregation Segregated in 2 ways: Segregated social classes
Segregated land use

14 Residential Segregation
Vertical segregation turns to territorial segregation Houses built to suit similar lifestyles cost, location, size  excludes certain people Zoning Regulations Prevents mixing of land uses Apartments separate from housing separate from industry/commercial

15 Effects of Residential Segregation
Older suburbs next to city = same issues seen in inner-city: Gentrifying inner-city attracts middle class Better tax base provides better services here Low income pushed to inner suburbs Deterioraitng tax base deteriorates services here Middle class could move further out on the periphery in newer homes “Sandwiching” the poor

16 New Urban Model? Poor older suburbs CBD Gentrified inner-city ring: middle/upper class Middle/upper class: Newer homes

17 Suburbanization of Businesses
Retail services moving to suburbs- where customers are Automobiles are necessity to get to services Larger malls situated near beltway Contain specialty store normally found in CBDs Anchor stores (Macy’s) Corner stores in CBDs eliminated Become centers for activity

18 FIGURE 13-26

19 Suburbanization of Business
Factories Cheaper land- need to be long one-story buildings (factories) Better highway access, no city traffic Offices Execs can drive from home to work w/o traffic Low status workers may not have car to drive to suburbs from inner-city Not a scenic or convenient (lunch) as CBD

20 Transportation and Suburbanization
Problems with congestion (delays, pollution) Evolution of transportation (train-trolley-car) has accelerated suburbanization Trains- only allowed for growth around station Motor Vehicles Policies to keep ownership and usage high ¼ of land dedicated to roads/parking lots Rush hour from cars England’s “congestion charging zone”

21 Transportation and Suburbanization
Public Transit Takes less space/ more people than cars European cities have extensive networks, connecting outer suburbs (RER and TGV) In US Primarily for rush hour commuters Higher value placed on owning vehicle Rapid transit has increased in some larger cities Won’t subsidize as much as Europe


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