Transcript Services

Services
Chapter 12
Types and Origins of Services

Types of services




Consumer services (retail and personal services)
Business services (producer and transportation)
Public services (government employees)
Changes in number of employees

Growth in services and declines in primary/secondary

Origin of services- no one know precise origination

Services in rural settlements


Clustered rural settlements (Houses, schools, churches)
Dispersed rural settlements (Spread out cities)
Rural Settlement Patterns
Fig. 12-4: Circular settlement patterns are common in Germany. Linear “long lot”
patterns are often found along rivers in France, and were transferred to
Québec.
Distribution of Consumer Services

Central place theory- market place



Market area of a service
 Nodal regions
 Hexagon best fits an area
Size of market area
 Range is the distance people are willing to travel for a
service
 Modified to minutes instead of miles
Threshold
 Number of customers needed to make a profit
 Census helps determine this data
Distribution of Consumer Services

Market area analysis

Profitability of a location


Optimal location within a market


Range + Threshold= profitability
Best location is one that minimizes distance to the largest
number of consumers
Hierarchy of services and settlements

Nesting of services and settlements


Market, hamlet, township center, county seat, district city, small
state capital, and regional capital city
Rank-size distribution of settlements

Rank of cities based on a city’s population
Supermarket and Convenience Store
Market Areas
Fig. 12-8: Market area, range, and threshold for Kroger supermarkets (left) and
UDF convenience stores in Dayton, Ohio. Supermarkets have much
larger areas and ranges than convenience stores.
Business Services and Settlements

World cities




Ancient world cities- Ur, Athens, Rome
Medieval world cities- Feudalism, large walled cities
Modern world cities- Center of services world wide
Hierarchy of business services

World cities-London, New York and Tokyo


Command and control centers- Atlanta, Boston, Seattle


Headquarters, medical centers
Specialized producer-service centers- Detroit, Albany


Centers of financial, law and advertising
Highly skilled services
Dependent centers- Resort, Manufacturing, Industrial, Mining

Unskilled jobs; depends on world cities for economic decisions
Paris
Fig. 12-13: Paris was originally surrounded by walls which were expanded to include
new neighborhoods as the city grew.
Clustering of Services

Central business district (CBD)

Retail services in the CBD


High land costs in the CBD


Tokyo 1,000,000,000 per acre of land
Activities excluded from the CBD


Recent years has transitioned to offices instead of retail
Manufacturing, residential neighborhoods
Suburbanization of businesses

Suburbanization of retailing


Planned suburban shopping malls
Suburbanization of factories and offices

Cheap land and labor, close to residential neighborhoods