L1i - Global City Regions

Cards (25)

  • Global city-regions
    New urban forms emerging under conditions of contemporary globalisation, spread out over a large area, containing a number of cities within commuting distance, and one or more international airports that link the region with other parts of the world
  • Global city-regions
    • They have multiple urban centres - this is termed a polycentric structure
    • They are a new form: a series of anything between 10 and 50 cities, physically separate but functionally networked, clustered around one or more larger central cities, and drawing enormous strength from a new functional division of labour
  • Global city-regions
    • Pearl River (inc. Hong Kong) & Yangtze River Delta (inc. Shanghai) Areas, China
    • The Tokaido (Tokyo-Osaka) corridor, Japan
    • Greater Jakarta, Indonesia
  • Global cities
    Defined in terms of their external information exchanges
  • Polycentric global mega-city regions

    Should be defined in terms of both their internal and external linkages
  • Technology and transportation networks
    • Crucial for global city-regions
    • Systems for electronic exchange allow business people to operate effectively up to about 2 hours' travel time from metropolitan cores (or major airports), conducting many exchanges electronically, but travelling to face-to-face meetings in these cores (and others)
  • Business activities
    • May no longer need to be located in traditional CBDs (central business districts)
    • Some meeting places are clustered around transport nodes like airports
  • City-regions
    • Characterised by concentrated deconcentration - business activities disperse over the scale of the wide city region, but simultaneously reconcentrate at particular nodes within it
    • Highly networked through its multiple nodes and links – but there is a recognisable urban hierarchy
  • City-regions in China
    • Chuanyu mega-region (105.5 million) encompasses Chongqing, Chengdu, and 13 cities from Sichuan province
    • The Capital Economic Zone (70.6 million) encompasses Beijing and Tianjin
    • The Pearl River Delta region (50.2 million) includes Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Hong Kong
    • Yangtze River Delta region (76.7 million) centred around Shanghai
  • City-regions in North-West Europe
    • South-East England; centred on London
    • The Randstad, Holland; Amsterdam, Rotterdam
    • Central Belgium; Brussels, Antwerp, Ghent
    • Rhine-Ruhr, Germany; inc. Dortmund, Cologne
    • Rhine-Main, Germany; centred on Frankfurt
    • Northern Switzerland; centred on Zurich
    • Paris region, France; centred on Paris
    • Greater Dublin, Ireland; centred on Dublin
  • South-East England city-region

    • The largest of the European city-regions, extending into the South West and into the East and West Midlands regions
    • There are important functionally polycentric relationships operating in the region, stemming from the strength of London's global linkages
    • Analysis of commuting flows shows that the region consists of no less than 51 functional urban regions
    • Of the total 2001 employment in the city-region of just over 9 million, London accounts for 48%
  • Polycentric geographical structure
    • Traditional downtown centre
    • Newer business centre
    • Internal edge city
    • External edge city
    • Outermost edge city complexes
    • Specialised sub-centres
  • Traditional downtown centre
    Based on walking distances and served by a radial public transportation centre, serving the oldest informational services (banking, insurance, government)
  • Newer business centre
    Often developing in an old prestige residential quarter, as the location of newer services (advertising, media, design)
  • Internal edge city
    Resulting from pressure of space in traditional centres and speculative development on old industrial land
  • External edge city

    Often located on the axis of the main airport
  • Outermost edge city complexes
    For back offices and R&D, at major stations
  • Specialised sub-centres
    May take a variety of forms, e.g. education & high technology
  • Polycentric geographical structure applied to London
    • Traditional downtown centre: City of London
    • Newer business centre: The West End
    • Internal edge city: London Docklands
    • External edge city: Airports
    • Outermost edge city complexes: Reading, Croydon
    • Specialised sub-centres: Oxbridge, Silicon Fen, M4 corridor
  • Randstad, Holland
    • Commonly portrayed as one of Europe's most pronounced polycentric mega-city regions
    • Combines a political capital, a financial capital, a cultural capital, first class international gateway functions, and a highly-skilled cosmopolitan workforce, distributed over a number of historically distinct cities
  • Randstad, Holland
    • Contains 12 cities > 100,000 inhabitants – the most populous being Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague and Utrecht
    • The region's economic powerhouse, home to some 3.2 million jobs, most in various services
    • Global connections facilitated through the port of Rotterdam, Schiphol airport, and the Amsterdam Internet Exchange
    • A dense network of roads and railways connect the cities of the Randstad together as part of planned polycentricism
  • Specialisation within the Randstad
    • Amsterdam has the largest concentration of financial services, law firms and advertising firms
    • Utrecht is characterised by a strong presence of management consultancy firms
    • The Hague attracts business services (accountants and law firms) but does not have many financial services
    • Rotterdam relies heavily on its port and a large concentration of advanced logistic services
  • While in terms of population and employment distribution the Randstad appears an un-differentiated polycentric conurbation, there is actually a complex pattern of specialisation
  • Planning in the Randstad
    • Much planning has gone in to ensuring efficient transport interconnections, yet such measures meet with varying levels of success
  • Forms and connections of global city-regions
    • Each region has a particular form and differing levels of internal & external connectivity
    • There are varying degrees of polycentricity and hierarchy between the urban centres
    • Some have a very dominant centre, e.g. London
    • Some have a less obvious hierarchy, e.g. The Randstad
    • Global City-Regions are very complex entities