Les 5 - 2.3 intro Changing cities

Planning
  • Quick recap of the answers of the assignment from §2.2
  • Start §2.3
  • Time for homework

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Slide 1: Slide
AardrijkskundeMiddelbare schoolvwoLeerjaar 3

This lesson contains 19 slides, with interactive quiz and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 45 min

Items in this lesson

Planning
  • Quick recap of the answers of the assignment from §2.2
  • Start §2.3
  • Time for homework

Slide 1 - Slide

Key words §2.3
Suburbanisation - Movement of people from cities to the suburbs
Edge city - An area with a concentration of offices, shopping centres and facilities for recreation. Residential areas that sprouts near motorway intersections at the edges of large cities
Suburbs - Living area at the edge of a city
CBD (Central Business District) - Centre of a city housing all types of offices
Gentrification - Process of the renewal of deteriorated neighborhoods in high class residential areas. Also leading to the rise of the level of facilities in the neighborhood

Slide 2 - Slide

Leerdoelen
  • You know how a western city is built up.
  • You can describe the structure of an American city using a map or model.
  • You understand the difference between an American and a European city


Slide 3 - Slide

Slide 4 - Link

Look at Egypt and the United states at night. One has a good example of a primate city. The other has a good example of an urban network. Explain which keyword fits with which country, and explain how the storymap shows this.
  • Cairo in Egypt is a Primate City
  • The United states has an Urban Network

Slide 5 - Slide

Look at South-America and Europe. How can the airline routes in both continents be used to explain the relation between Urbanization and income?
  • The link between urbanization and income is that countries with high income have high degrees of urbanization, and often an urban network. 
  • Countries with lower income have a more varying degree of urbanization, and often primate cities
  • While the degree of urbanisation is similar the amount of internal air traffic in Europe suggests the existence of an urban network, while the air traffic in South-America is indicative of primate cities.

Slide 6 - Slide

Extra Challenge: Why are there barely any airlines connecting South America and Africa? And which places are these continents connected to? Explain why this is the case.
  • They do not have strong historical ties, and they both produce goods from the primary sector. This means they don't have much to trade.
  • They are connected to Europe and North America. This is due to historical (colonial) ties and high demand for the products produced in Africa and South-America.

Slide 7 - Slide

Western cities
  • American cities
  • European cities

Slide 8 - Slide

The American city
From the edge to the centre
  • Suburb - Living area at the edge of a city
  • Suburbanisation - Movement of people from cities to the suburbs
  • Mostly by rich people

Slide 9 - Slide

The American city
From the edge to the centre
  • Suburb
  • Megamall

Slide 10 - Slide

The American city
From the edge to the centre
  • Suburb
  • Megamall
  • Middle income area

Slide 11 - Slide

The American city
From the edge to the centre
  • Suburb
  • Megamall
  • Middle income area
  • Lower income area
  • Aka ghetto

Slide 12 - Slide

The American city
From the edge to the centre
  • Suburb
  • Megamall
  • Middle income area
  • Lower income area
  • CBD (Central Business District)
  • Centre of a city housing all types of offices

Slide 13 - Slide

CBD
The CBD, or central business district, is where you find high rising buildings at the centre of the American city. This is where big businesses have their offices and where the stock markets like Wall Street are located.
Old residential areas
Old residential areas in American cities were largely abandonend by people with a higher income. This left the poorer people behind and led to a degradation in the quality of these neighbourhoods. This is where you find the ghetto's.
Edge city
Due to many people moving outside of the city as a result of suburbanisation the facilities followed. This in turn created cities at the edge of the city. which were largely independent from the main city.
suburb
The rich people moved out of the city centre and into more spacious suburbs. They would often still work in the CBD. These people working in the city but living outside a city are called commuters (forensen).
Malls
Outside the city massive megamalls sprung up. These enormous stores ran smaller stores inside the city out of business. This led to a further degradation of the city centre.
Middle-income areas
These are residential areas around the city which are inhabited by the people who cannot afford living in a suburb, but are rich enough not to live in the ghetto's.
Old industrial area
Cities used to be formed around large industrial areas. These places can still be found in many cities. Most of these industrial areas are no longer in use and are places where gentrification takes place. This is a process where places are made more popular and disirable by inhabitants.
timer
3:00
Model of the American city

Slide 14 - Slide

Which two factors contributed to the degradation of the poor neighbourhoods at the centre of town?

Slide 15 - Open question

The European city
Differences with the American City
  • CBD is outside the city
  • Historic inner city
  • Inner city is inhabited by richer people -> gentrification

Slide 16 - Slide

Gentrification
Gentrification - Process of the renewal of deteriorated neighborhoods in high class residential areas. Also leading to the rise of the level of facilities in the neighborhood

Voorbeeld: NDSM werf Amsterdam
  • Oud industriegebied
  • Goedkope plek voor creatievelingen
  • Groeit in prijs en populariteit
  • Creatievelingen moeten weg wegens prijs, maar 
  • betere buur blijft over

Slide 17 - Slide

Next lesson
We are going to talk about non-western cities

Slide 18 - Slide

Homework
Assignment 1, 3, 4 and 7 of §2.3

Slide 19 - Slide