Settlement Pattern
Settlement Pattern
Settlement Pattern
ORIGINS OF SETTLEMENTS
Religious - graves, churches, temples
Cultural - schools, libraries
Political/Military - leaders house,
walls
Economic - stores, food
Element)
The population is not
Population
Distribution
Pop. Distribution the pattern of
Two types
Dispersed people are spread out,
patterns.
Rural Settlement
The patterns are effected by three factors
The resources found in the area
The transportation methods that were
Urban Settlement
Patterns
After the Agricultural Revolution there was a
DEVELOPMENT OF URBAN
SETTLEMENTS
Athens - first city over 100,000
by the 5th century BC over 300,000
Rome - center of an empire 200 BC-400 AD
all roads lead to Rome
Paris, London, Vienna - all old Roman
sites
Mid-Evil Europe - after the fall of Rome
urbanization decreased
patterns of castles, walls & narrow streets
compact space surrounded by walls
Renaissance-Baroque Cities
Renaissance 15-16th centuries
Baroque 16-18th centuries
development of wide avenues &
monuments
Paris & London rebuilt, Washington D.C.
Industrial City
19th century to present
city designed around industry and
transportation
most modern cities
offices at higher
levels
Outward Expansion
advent of the automobile &
transportation routes
decline of public transport
URBAN PATTERNS
City Center
best known area, most visually
distinctive
San Francisco, London
original site of settlement
Central Business District
retail & office space
assessable
often a focal point with
skyscrapers
Zones in Transition
mixed use with light industry
transition from business to residential
older neighborhoods (slums)
home to ethnic groups not culturally
integrated
ghettos vs. ethnic neighborhood
Suburbs
residential
nodes of retail services
continued
5 zones
1. CBD central business district
Innermost ring- concentration
of non-residential activities
2. Zone in Transition
Industry and poorer-quality
housing
Often subdivided apartment
houses
Often filled by immigrants
continued
3. Zone of Working Class Homes
Modest older houses occupied
by stable families
4. Zone of Middle Class Homes
Newer and more spacious
homes
5. Commuters Zone
Area of people who dont live in
city where they work
Sector Model
Created in 1939 by economist Homer
Hoyt
Def. a model of internal structure of
factors originally
continued
As city grows, activities spread outward in
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