City 2 Flashcards
a street market very common in Islamic cities.
Bazaar
the amount of money different land users are prepared to pay for locations at various distances from the city center. The result is a tendency for a concentric pattern of land uses.
Bid-Rent Theory
rapid change in the racial composition of residential blocks in American cities that occurs when real estate agents and others stir up fears of neighborhood decline after encouraging ethnic minorities (African-American) to move to previously white neighborhoods. In the resulting out migration, real agents profit through the turnover of properties.
Blockbusting
former industrial sites that cities are now attempting to redevelop.
Brownfields
the downtown or nucleus of a city where retail stores, offices, and cultural activities are concentrated; building densities are usually quite high; and transportation systems converge.
Central Business District (CBD)
small districts used by the U.S. Census Bureau to survey the population.
Census Tract
artwork that shows a city.
Cityscape
a city founded by colonialism or an indigenous city whose structure was deeply influenced by Western colonialism.
Colonial city
the transformation of an area of a city into an area attractive to residents and tourists alike in terms of economic activity.
Commercialization
the outermost zone of the Concentric Zone Model that represents people who choose to live in residential suburbia and take a daily commute into the CBD to work.
Commuter zone
a model describing urban land uses as a series of circular belts or rings around a core central business district.
Concentric Zone Model
the net loss of population from cities to smaller towns and rural areas.
Counterurbanization
the tendency of people or businesses and industry to locate outside the central city.
Decentralization
distinct sizable nodal concentration of retail and office space of lower than central city densities and situated on the outer fringes of older metropolitan areas; usually localized by or near major highway intersections.
Edge city (Boomburgs)
neighborhoods dominated by a specific ethnic group, such as Chinatown or Little Saigon in Los Angeles.
Ethnoburbs
small communities lying beyond the suburbs of a city.
Exurb
a space within an urban environment that can accomodate a large number of people.
Festival landscape
a multi-use redevelopment project that is built around a particular setting, often one with a historical association.
Festival setting
a model of North American urban areas consisting of an inner city surrounded by large suburban residential and business areas tied together by a beltway or ring road
Galactic City Model (Peripheral Model)
the invasion of older, centrally located working-class neighborhoods by higher-income households seeking the character and convenience of less expensive and well-located residences; a process of converting an urban neighborhood from a predominately low-income renter-occupied area to a predominantly middle-class owner-occupied area.
Gentrification