Geography settlement 1

Cards (48)

  • Settlement hierarchy
    Placing things in order of importance
  • Sphere of influence
    The distance people would travel from to access a service
  • Service
    A facility offered to people
  • Range of services
    The number or type of different services
  • Threshold population
    The minimum amount of people that are needed for a service to be offered and to remain open
  • Types of goods
    • High order goods
    • Low order goods
  • High order goods
    Expensive goods that people buy less frequently, also called comparison goods
  • Low order goods
    Cheaper goods that people buy every day, also called convenience goods
  • Settlement hierarchy
    • Isolated dwelling
    • Hamlet
    • Village
    • Small town
    • Large town
    • City
    • Conurbation
  • Settlement hierarchy
    • Increases in population size
    • Increases in range and number of services
    • Increases in sphere of influence
  • CBD (Central Business District)

    The area in the middle of urban areas where there tends to be a concentration of retail and commercial land uses
  • Transition zone
    The area between the CBD and the largely residential suburbs
  • Suburbs
    The areas near the edge of an urban area that has a concentration of residential land use
  • Rural-urban fringe
    The boundary between an urban area and a rural area, demanded by multiple land uses
  • Greenfield site
    Land that has never been built on before
  • Brownfield site

    Land that has been built on previously but is not abandoned and derelict
  • Green belt
    Protected areas of land around large urban areas
  • Urban sprawl/growth
    The spread or growth of an urban area into the rural-urban fringe
  • Burgess model

    A land use model with a concentric circular pattern
  • Hoyt model
    A land use model where industry develops along major transport routes
  • Council housing
    Housing that belongs to the government and is given to people who are unemployed and cannot afford private housing
  • Detached housing

    A single house that is not attached to any other house, usually found in the suburbs
  • Semi-detached housing

    Two houses that are joined together, usually found in the suburbs
  • Terraced housing
    A long line of attached houses, typically found in old industrial cities
  • Bungalow
    A house with only one floor, popular with elderly and disabled people
  • Terraced houses

    Typical and old industrial houses in the UK, attached in a long line, basic housing for workers, often without electricity and with outdoor toilets
  • Bungalow
    A house with only one floor, popular with elderly and disabled people, can be detached or semi-detached, normally found in suburbs
  • Demand for houses has increased
    Even though population is fairly stable
  • Reasons for increased housing demand
    • Smaller family sizes
    • More divorces and single people
    • People leaving home younger
    • Increased migration
    • People getting married later
  • Many old terraced houses are considered uninhabitable, so new houses are needed
  • Old people choosing to live independently instead of care homes or with family increases housing demand
  • Green belts
    • Areas of land around an urban area that are protected from development
  • Urban wedges

    • Allowing urban growth to take place in wedges between different land uses to protect green areas
  • Brownfield sites

    • Previously developed land, often polluted, that the government wants used for new housing to protect greenfield sites
  • Housing density
    • Increasing the number of houses per hectare to reduce land use
  • Advantages of greenfield sites
    • Land never used before
    • Good transport links
    • Less traffic congestion
    • Ability to choose site size for expansion
  • Disadvantages of greenfield sites
    • Conflict with other land users
    • Many sites protected from development
    • Less accessible by public transport
    • Potential for public protests
  • Advantages of brownfield sites
    • Cheap land
    • Often located near central business district
    • Government incentives to build on them
    • Good public transport access
  • Disadvantages of brownfield sites
    • Land is usually polluted and needs cleaning up
    • Cannot always choose location
    • Limited room for expansion
    • Irregular site shapes
  • Retail in central business district
    • Good public transport links
    • Attractive buildings
    • Close to other services