c. What is the most distinctive above ground result of high land costs and intensive land use? i. Describe the vertical geography of a skyscraper?

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1 AP Human Geography Unit 7b Guided Reading: Urban Patterns and Social Issues Mr. Stepek Key Issue #1: Why Do Services Cluster Downtown? (Rubenstein p ) 1. What is the CBD? What does it contain and why? 2. Retail Services in the CBD: Type of retailer (include examples) Reason to originally locate the CBD? Changes in Recent Years Who do they serve now? Where have they moved (outdated)? Why do some of these survive downtown? What is the trend in this type of retail? 3. Why do business services such as advertising, banking, finance, journalism and law locate in the CBD? a. What do these services depend on? i. For example, why do lawyers locate in the CBD? b. Why is a central location important to fully staff an office? 4. What has the extreme competition for land in the CBD resulted in? a. High demand and expense has resulted in CBD land use being described as what? b. What are some examples of how the CBD uses land below ground level (summarize)? c. What is the most distinctive above ground result of high land costs and intensive land use? i. Describe the vertical geography of a skyscraper? 5. What two activities have traditionally been excluded from the CBD? a. (we covered why factories moved from the central city in unit 6) i. How have cities repurposed former industrial use buildings on waterfronts? ii. Can you think of a Chicago example of this repurposing (lecture)? b. i. What groups of people originally lived downtown?

2 ii. iii. Where did they go in the 20 th century? How has this changed in the 21 st century? What groups have been especially attracted to downtown living? Examples. What are they attracted to? What are they not concerned about? 6. How are CBDs in Europe different from those in North America? a. What are the most prominent structures? b. How do European cities try to preserve their historic CBDs? c. What type of retail establishments are you more likely to find in CBDs outside of North America, why? Key Issue #2: Where Are People Distributed Within Urban Areas (Rubenstein p )? Models of Urban Structure 7. What do the three models of urban structure help us to understand? 8. Where were the three models describing the internal structure of cities developed? 9. Reproduce the Concentric Zone Model by ( = year) below: Draw model 3. Zone of Working Class ( Independent workers ) Homes 4. Zone of Middle-Class ( Better Residences ) Housing Legend (include details from text, we will add more info during lecture, so leave some room) 1. CBD (see above GR #1 5 for details) 2. Zone of Transition 5. Commuter s Zone

3 10. Reproduce the Sector Model by ( = year) below: Overall idea: Legend (include details from text, we will add more info during lecture, so leave some room) 1. CBD (see above GR #1 5 for details) 2. Transportation and Industry 3. Low-class Residential 4. Middle-Class Residential 5. High Class Residential 11. Reproduce the Multiple Nuclei Model by ( = year) below: Legend w/notes from lecture 1. CBD 2. Wholesale/light manufacturing 3. Low-class residential 4. Medium-class residential 5. High-class residential 6. Heavy manufacturing 7. Outlying business district 8. Residential suburb 9. Industrial suburb

4 12. At what level of aggregation is the data for urban patterns spatially analyzed? a. What kind of study is this? Applying the Models Outside of North America (Rubenstein p ): 13. In contrast to most U.S. cities, where do wealthy Europeans live? a. Why? _ b. What is a similarity in how wealthy urban Europeans live compared to Americans? c. (de Blij p 325) Because of their age, how are European cities different from American cities? _ 14. Before electricity, how were social classes segregated in European cities? a. Describe. _ 15. Today, where do low-income urban Europeans tend to live? a. Describe the built landscape of these low-income suburbs? b. What problems do the residents face? _ c. Who are these residents more likely to be? i. (de Blij p 325) What connection do they have to Europe? Give some examples d. What are two reasons European officials encouraged the construction of these high-density suburbs? i. ii. (Review) By what term do we call this process of isolation? Urban Development and Models in Less Developed Countries (Rubenstein p , de Blij , ) 16. Is the structure of cities in LDCs, more similar to those in North America or Europe? How? 17. Describe the layout of a typical Islamic city

5 18. Describe the urban plan standardized for Latin American cities under the Law of the Indies (1573)? a. In post-independence Latin American cities, in what sector do the elite live? Describe. 19. Due to housing shortages and rapid urbanization where do many poor migrants to LDC cities live? What does de Blij (p 316) called these settlements? a. What are these called in Latin America? b. Describe the physical conditions of these settlements (Rubenstein p ) c. (de Blij p 327) Along what lines are cities in LDC regions segregated? d. (de Blij p 327) What type of economy that flourishes in these areas? e. To what does de Blij ascribe the chaotic and mixed land-use found in the global periphery (p 317)? f. What common trait does one see in all cities in the global periphery that is more intensive and has a greater scale of contrast than in MDCs (de Blij p 317)? g. In what way are major port cities and former colonial cities in LDCs segregated (de Blij p )? 20. African and Asian City structures (READ de Blij p ) Sub-Saharan African City Model (by de Blij) Southeast Asian City Model (by McGee)

6 21. Latin American Model (READ de Blij ) by and : 1. Commercial/CBD 2. Market 3. Industrial Zone 4. Elite Residential 5. Zone of Maturity 6. Zone of in situ accretion 7. Shantytowns (see #20 above). What is a disamenity sector? 8. Gentrification 9. Middle-class residential Key Issue #3: Why Do Inner Cities Face Distinctive Challenges? (Rubenstein p ) 22. What is filtering? a. What happened to inner city neighborhoods which experienced a great deal of filtering? 23. What is redlining (compare Rubenstein p 420 and de Blij p 317)? 24. (de Blij p ) Review definition of blockbusting a. What did this lead to? b. What effect did suburbanization have on cities?

7 c. How have some cities tried to counter this? i. Can you think of a Chicago examples (lecture)? ii. Gentrification will be discussed below. 25. Describe the process called urban renewal. a. What are two criticisms of urban renewal programs? i. ii. 26. Public Housing a. What did public housing replace? b. When was public housing mostly constructed? c. Why were high-rise public housing projects considered unsatisfactory living environments for families? i. What did some observers blame for this problem? As a result, what has happened to most high-rise public housing? What has happened to the supply and demand of public housing in general since 1980? 27. What is gentrification? a. What attracts middle-class people to inner-city living? b. How is this altering the ethnic patterns in places like Chicago? c. What effect has this had on low-income people in gentrifying neighborhoods?

8 28. Inner-city Social Issues (please be careful when reading this, the text paints inner city residents with a very broad brush that is not accurate. Not all low-income people outside of gentrifying areas are part of the underclass. It is important to understand that these issues exist, but we will discuss them more sensitively in class) a. Who are the underclass and what issues do they face? b. What is the culture of poverty (read p 422, we will discuss/take notes during lecture)? 29. What two ways do local governments try to close the gap between the cost of services and the funding available from taxes? Key Issue 4: Suburban Challenges (Rubenstein p ) 30. What % of Americans live in the central city? suburbs? rural areas? 31. Define the three levels of urban settlements a. City i. What population trend have central cities experienced since 1950? b. Urbanized area c. Metropolitan statistical area (what does it include?) i. ii. iii. d. What problem has made it hard for localities to deal with problems? 32. Metropolitan areas that overlap are called what? 33. What is the structure of the peripheral model? a. What develops around the beltway of the peripheral model? b. (add definition from lecture) c. Can you think of locations in the Chicagoland area that may qualify? 34. What is the density gradient? a. In what two ways has the density gradient changed in American cities in recent years (this is changing again)? i. ii. SEE CONCENTRIC ZONE MODEL RESIDENTIAL DENSITY NOTES FOR CURRENT TRENDS

9 35. Reproduce the Peripheral (Galactic) Model (p 427) by (1997) below: Legend w/notes from lecture 1. Central City 2. Suburban Residential Area 3. Shopping Mall 4. Industrial District 5. Office Park 6. Service Center 7. Airport Complex 8. Combined Employment and Shopping Center 36. (Lecture) Reproduce the Urban Realms by ( 1964) below: Legend w/notes from lecture 37. What is urban sprawl (de Blij p 320)? a. What are three negative effects of urban sprawl (Rubenstein p for a - c)? i. ii. iii. b. What surrounds some European cities and limits suburban sprawl? c. What is the attempt to limit suburban sprawl through legislation/regulation called?

10 d. (de Blij p 320) What process demolishes older buildings in suburbs for new construction? i. What (hideous) supersized homes often replace them? ii. How do some argue teardowns can limit urban sprawl? 38. (de Blij p 321) What is New Urbanism? a. What New Urbanists believe their programs will achieve? b. What is a building goal for housing under New Urbanism? Suburban Issues (Rubenstein p ) 39. In what two ways are suburban areas segregated (Rubenstein p 429)? a. i. What are gated communities (de Blij p )? b. i. What laws prevent mixed land use in suburbs? 40. What is happening in the inner suburbs of some metropolitan areas? a. What is this called (lecture)? 41. What dominates the suburban shopping landscape? a. (lecture) Why is this description outdated? 42. What 20 th century form of transportation is critical for life in the suburbs? a. What are the three main advantages of public transportation over the automobile? i. ii. iii. 43. While overall investments and ridership in public transit has declined (despite its advantages) what one type of public transit has been exception to that trend? 44. Why is the minimal level of public transit in most U.S. cities a problem? 45. What disadvantageous cycle is funding for public transportation caught in?

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