urbanisation

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issues faced because of urban sprawl

  • Water and air pollution
  • Increased traffic
  • Loss of agriculture
  • Increased car dependency: bad for the environment
  • Degraded human health
  • Increased water consumption
  • Crowded schools
  •  Loss of open spaces
  • Lack of housing
  • Inflation
  • High crime rate
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reducing traffic congestion

  •    London congestion charge it is a charge you pay when entering central London it makes people not want to come into central London (7-22 pounds)
  •   Park and ride scheme - Park and ride facilities are parking lots with public transport connections that allow commuters and other people heading to city centers to leave their vehicles and transfer to a bus, rail system-people leave their cars outside central London so there is less traffic and so more people use public transport
  •  Barclays bikes - these can be found all over central London you can rent a bike 
  •   Extension of tube rail means that more people will come to form outer London into central London by tube instead of by car meaning there will be less traffic 
  • Free OAP and student transport - if you are a student or an older person you can get a pass that allows you to use free public transport this means more people will use busses and trains and roads won't be as bus
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advantages of brownfield sites

  • Redeveloping a Brownfield site not only boosts the economy by creating jobs and lifting property prices, but it improves the environment and creates a safer, healthier space.
  • Bringing a Brownfield site back into use prevents ‘urban sprawl’ thereby reducing traffic.
  • Brownfield redevelopment can be cheaper because vital infrastructure (drainage, electricity, roads, transport networks, etc.) already exists.
  • More likely to get planning permission
  • Cheaper as don't have to put road access and drainage in
  • Stop city expansion as already in the city
  • Closer to the CBD
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advantages of greenfield sites

  •  Often being on the edge of towns and cities, Greenfield sites may be a more pleasant environment and have less congestion.
  • There are no clean-up costs associated with Greenfield sites.
  • Encourage commuting and traffic congestion as people travel into urban areas from the countryside.
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impacts of urbanisation

  • Air pollution
  • Water pollution/ shortage
  • Increase in crime rates because of a shortage of employments
  • Shortage of housing
  • Squatter settlements/slums
  • Littering
  • Dying sea life
  • Noise pollution
  • Urban sprawl - conflict because more people are moving to smaller towns and spreading out
  • Increasing traffic
  • Brain drain - rural areas lose highly skilled workforce

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push factors LEDC rural area

  • Lack of water
  • Lack of food
  • Feeling unsafe
  • No community
  • Underdeveloped
  • Food shortages
  • Deserts expanding - less farming
  • Lack of employment
  • Many diseases
  • Low life expectancy
  • Lack of education after 14
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pull factors LEDC urban area

  • Jobs
  • Better quality of life
  • More developed
  • More informal jobs available
  • Higher pay
  • More promotions
  • More higher education
  • Access to technology
  • Better future
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pull factors LEDC urban area

  • Jobs
  • Better quality of life
  • More developed
  • More informal jobs available
  • Higher pay
  • More promotions
  • More higher education
  • Access to technology
  • Better future
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impacts of urbanisation on urban area LEDC (squatt

  • Pollution
  • Adds to emissions
  • often built on hillsides, rain causes flash floods which cause landslides so homes can get damaged
  • Sewage open in drains and dirty water causes a health risk
  • Poor sanitation 
  • Inadequate  housing
  • Overcrowding
  • Spreading of diseases
  • houses can be very small with several people living inside
  •  aren't safe as there are crime, drug trafficking, and violence
  • More higher education available
  • More people coming to work
  • Loss of skilled workers in rural areas
  • More people working in informal jobs
  • Poorly paid work
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solutions to LEDC urban area

  • Rehousing scheme
  • Self-help scheme - giving them materials - local authorities help the squatter settlement residents to improve their homes by offering loans or grants
  • Water and sanitation project
  • Site and service: the land is divided into plots and water sanitation, electricity is supplied before any building begins

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settlement patterns

  • a dispersed settlement pattern is where the buildings are spread out and is often found in upland areas

 

  • a nucleated settlement pattern is where a lot of buildings are grouped together and is often found in lowland areas

 

  • a linear settlement pattern is where the buildings are built in lines and is often found on steep hillsides.
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urbanisation defenitions

  • counter urbanization is when large numbers of people move from urban areas into surrounding countryside or rural areas. 
  • Regeneration- When an area has been completely transformed by the refurbishment of the buildings and landscape.
  • Gentrification -the process whereby the character of a poor urban area is changed by wealthier people moving in, improving housing, and attracting new businesses, often displacing current inhabitants in the process.
  • Deindustrialization -the reduction of industrial activity or capacity in a region or economy.
  • Reurbanisation Developing urban areas by building new buildings and revitalizing old ones.
  • Informal sector: jobs that are created by people but not recognized officially such as doing someone's washing
  • depopulation - the condition of having reduced numbers of inhabitants 
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Urbanisation

Urbanization -  an increase in the proportion of people living in urban areas compared to rural areas. 

Squatter settlements - areas of cities built by people of any materials they can find also known as shanty towns or favelas

Case study MEDC - London 

Case study LEDC - kibera, kenya 

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settlement definitions

  • Commuter settlement - a place where people live and travel elsewhere to work
  • Greenbelt - an area around a city where development is restricted so towns and cities don’t merge
  • Rural/ urban fringe - the area at the very edge of the city beside the countryside
  • urban sprawl - the growth of towns and cities spreading and taking over parts of the countryside
  • derelict -  in a very poor condition as a result of disuse and neglect. 
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