Urban Canada

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Urban Canada

description

Urban Canada. Why are Cities located where they are?. Natural harbour Lay on river- power, running water, industries Railway line Major highway Important road intersection Close to natural resources. Communities Across Canada. The Hamlet Smallest kind of settlement - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Urban Canada

Page 1: Urban Canada

Urban Canada

Page 2: Urban Canada

Why are Cities located where they are?•Natural harbour•Lay on river- power, running water,

industries•Railway line•Major highway•Important road intersection•Close to natural resources

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Communities Across CanadaThe Hamlet• Smallest kind of settlement• 8-10 buildings• Limited services• Buildings usually clustered around an

intersection, sometimes called a “four corner community”

• Not many habitants

• Local Examples▫Dunsford▫Cambray

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The Village•As hamlets grew, they became villages•Typically 200-800 people•Can have a population up to 1000

people

•Local Examples▫Bethany▫Little Britain

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The Town•Has a population of 1 000-10 000 people

•Most have a main shopping area and provide all the main goods and services their residents need

•Local Examples▫Fenelon Falls▫Omemee ▫Bobcaygeon

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The City•Becomes a city when reaches a population of

10 000 people or more

•More goods and services than towns

•Industries bring money to the city and provide part of the economic base with businesses

•Local Examples▫Lindsay▫Peterborough

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The City•Cities that reach a population of over 100

000 people are referred to as CMA- Census Metropolitan Area

•Examples in OntarioTorontoHamiltonMississaugaKitchener-WaterlooLondonSt. Catharines-NiagaraOshawaWindsor

BarrieSudburyKingstonBrantfordThunder Bay

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Land Use in the City•How is the land within a city used?

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Land Use in the City•City land uses include the following:

▫Residential (homes) - 40%

▫Commercial (stores/offices) -4%

▫Industrial (factories) - 6%

▫Institutional (schools, libraries, government buildings and religious centres) -10%

▫Recreational (parks/open space) -7%

▫Transportation (roads, tracks) -33%

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Residential•Largest use of land in the city

Includes areas called the suburbs- residential areas located around the fringes of the city

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Commercial Land Use•Stores, offices, strip malls, indoor malls•Tend to be located on busy streets and

areas easily accessible for cars and public transit

Central Business District (CBD)- heart of the city

•Downtown area

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Industrial Land Use• Provides money and jobs for the city• Located near transportation routes or railways in an

industrial park

• Industrial Park- area set aside specifically for industries

Types of Industries

Light industry-small industrial plants and warehouses

Heavy Industry- large-scale factories (ex. Steel plants)

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Recreational•Parks•Green space•Sports fields•Arenas•Walking paths

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Institutional•School- elementary, secondary, post

secondary•Government Buildings- court house, city

hall•Libraries•Religious centres- church, synagogue,

temple

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Transportation•Roads

▫Highways▫Arterials▫Local roads

•Rail lines

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The Changing CityMegalopolis- this occurs when cities grow

so big that their boundaries touch and form one huge urban area

•Canada has one Megalopolis- goes from Oshawa to St. Catharines

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Problems in the Modern CityAs cities continue to grow, problems can

arise:•Traffic•Crime•Overcrowding•Strain on city facilities•Not enough money to fix problems

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City RenewalCities with problems cannot restart from

scratch, but they can renew themselves- in one of 4 ways

1. Renovation-renovate or alter individual buildings

2. Redevelopment-one type of building is torn down and another is built in its place

3. Land Reclamation-renewing areas that become so polluted that they are not being used for anything

4. Diversifying-develop new industries