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Latin America City Model

Theory that the farther away from the


center of a city, the worse conditions get
economically, politically, and socially.

Multiple Nuclei Model


A model of the international structure of
cities in which social groups arranged
around a collection of nodes of activities.

Gentrification
A process of converting an urban
neighborhood from a predominately low
income, renter occupied area to a
predominantly middle class, owner
occupied area.

Central Place Theory


Where the cetner of your market will be
where you should place your service this
theory also involves market area(service
area), range(distance people will travel),
and threshhold(how many you need to
support the service) --

Market Area
A geographic place in which one can
expect primary demand for a specific
product or service in one fixed location

CBD Central Business District


The area of a city where retail and office
activities are distributed

Concentric Zone Model


Model of the internal structure of cities in
which social group are spatially arranged
in a series of rings

New Urbanism
Is the revival of our lost art of a place
making and promotes the creation and
restoration of compact, walkable, mixeduse cities, towns, and neighborhoods
This is a throw back to the 50s and 60s

Annexation
To incorporate a country or other territory
within the domain of a state --

Sector Model
A model of the internal structure of cities in
which social groups are arranged around
a series fo sectors, or wedges, radiating
out from the central business district

Conurbation
A group of continuous networks of urban
communities.

Edge City
A large node of office and retail activities
on the edge of an urban area.

Density Gradient
The change in density in an urban area
from the center of the area to the outside.

Hinterland
An area that surrounds an urban center
that is dependent on the urban center for
goods and services.

Megalopolis
A very large city, sometimes a region
made up of several large cities and their
surrounding areas in sufficient proximity to
be considered a single urban complex.

Entrept
A port where merchandise can be
imported and re-exported with paying
import duties; a mart or place where
merchandise is deposited

Filtering
A process of change in the use of a house,
from single-family owner-occupancy to
abandonment.

Greenbelt
A ring of land maintained as parks,
agriculture, or open space that surrounds
a town or city and limits urban sprawl.

Urban Realms Model


Includes a central business district, central
city, new downtown, and suburban
downtown.
Each realm is a separate economic,
social, and political entity that is linked
together to form a larger metro framework.

Zoning
Pertaining to the division of an area into
zones, as to restrict the number and types
of buildings and their uses.

Central Business District (CBD)


The area of a city where retail and office
activities are clustered.

Zone in Transition
Zone of mixed land uses that surrounds
the central business district. These zones
are often referred to as such because of
the mixture of growth, change, and
decline.

World City
Dominant city in terms of its role in the
global political economy. Not the worlds
biggest city in terms of population or
industrial output, but rather centers of
strategic control of the world economy.

Peripheral Model
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.

Sprawl
The spreading outwards of a city, and its
suburbs to its outskirts to low density and
auto dependent development on rural
land, high segregation of uses, and
various design features that encourage
car dependency.

Public Housing Project


Housing that is built, operated, and owned
by a government and that is typically
provided at nominal rent to the needy.

Concentric Zone Model


Model of the internal structure of cities in
which social groups are spatially arranged
in a series of rings.

Underclass
A segment of the population that occupies
the lowest possible position in a class
hierarchy, below the core body of the
working class.

Redlining
A practice by banks and mortgage
companies of demarcating areas
considered to be high risk for housing
loans.

Primate City
The largest settlement in a country, if it
has more than twice as many people as
the second-ranking settlement.

Central Place Theory


A theory that explains the distribution of
services, based on the fact that
settlements serve as centers of market
areas for services; larger settlements are
fewer and further apart than smaller
settlements, and provide services for a
larger number of people who are willing to
travel farther.

Urban Renewal
A program in which cities identify inner-city
neighborhoods acquire the properties from
private owners, relocate the residents and
businesses, clear the site, build new roads
and utilities, and turn the land over to
private developers.

MSA
Metropolitan Statistical Area
In the U.S., a central city of at least 50,000
population, the county within which the city
is located, and adjacent counties meeting
one of several tests indicating a functional
connection to the central city

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