Cities Around the World
Size of Cities and City Models
Density/Infrastructure and Urban Data
Challenges to Urban Life
Misc
100

What are the two factors that determine how cities develop?

Site and Situation

100

Rank size rule states

The second largest city in a country will be half the size of the largest city

100

In which kinds of places can we observe low, medium, and high population density patterns? 

Low: Rural area, small town

Medium: Suburb

High: City

100

The favelas in Brazil initially started as __________, which develop as a result of lack of access to affordable housing. 

Squatter Settlements

100

How is quantitative data collected? How is qualitative data collected?

Quantitative: Census

Qualitative: Interviews and field studies

200
Identify and example of a site characteristic

Open-ended (Anything involving geographic features)

200

What are the four main components of Central Place Theory?

Central place, range, threshold, and breaking point

200

What are the two different kinds of urban data that geographers collect? What is the difference? 

Quantitative (Numbers) and Qualitative (descriptive)
200

In core area cities, the practice of buying up and rehabilitating deteriorating housing which resulted in the raising of housing values and a social change in neighborhoods is called

Gentrification

200

Describe the urban heat island

A mass of warm air generated by urban building materials and human activities

300

What is a boomburb? List an example

Large suburbs (100,00+), Own government, Connected to a city by highway, Rapid growth, More sustainable development

300
List at least two criticisms of Christaller's Central Place Theory.

Does not accurately explain all urban growth, mega urban regions, and does not take into account factors such as physical geography

300

Describe the impact of infrastructure on urban development

Open-ended

300

Describe the concept of inclusionary zoning. What is one pro and one con? 

A policy that requires new developments to have affordable housing options

Pro: desegregation, upward mobility, little $ from gov

Con: Limits free market, not always effective in practice

300

Describe the characteristics of edge cities

Started as suburbs, located near highways, self-sufficient, population increases in the AM and decreases in the PM

400

What are megacities? What are some of the challenges that arise as they continue to develop?

Overcrowding, lack of housing, jobs, development of squatter settlements, etc. 
400

According to Hoyt's sector model, each spoke represents _________

Transportation Routes such as highway systems

400

Define the concept of urban sprawl

The decline in density and the spread of urban space associated with the building of freeways in the second half of the twentieth century

400

List and describe two solutions to urban sustainability issues

Brownfield redevelopments, urban rooftop farms, climate change adaptation planning, farmland protection acts, regional planning efforts

400

What is the multiple nuclei model. Can you apply it to a large city like Chicago? 

CBD- Loop/Gold Coast, etc.

Areas like O'Hare for transportation

Woodfield, Oak Brook, Old Orchard

500

Describe the relationship between world cities and globalization

World cities are economic centers that drive globalization through transportation and communication

500

What are the similarities and differences between the Latin American, Sub-Saharan African, and Southeast Asian city models? 

Similarities: All influenced by colonization

Differences: Structure and function of CBD

500

Which of the following cities demonstrates how investments in infrastructure can drive economic growth through improved transportation and trade connections: 

London- focused on maintaining and upgrading existing systems, such as the London Underground and Heathrow Airport. 

Tokyo- extensive infrastructure like high-speed rail (Shinkansen) and Narita International Airport, but its primary focus has been domestic connectivity and technology development

Singapore- Singapore has heavily invested in its port infrastructure (Port of Singapore), making it one of the busiest ports globally. Additionally, Changi Airport is a major hub for trade

 Singapore

500

What is new urbanism? What are the goals of new urbanism?

A movement that prioritizes environmental sustainability by creating walkable neighborhoods, containing different housing and job types 

500

What are primate cities? Describe the relationship between primate cities and rank size rule

Primate cities are the largest city in a country that dominates the country in both size and in terms of economy, culture, etc. (usually in LDC), 2x the size of the second largest city (disproportionately large, proving rank size rule incorrect) 

 

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