Central Place Theory

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Transcript Central Place Theory

Central Place Theory

Central Place Theory

• Central Place: market center for the exchange of goods and services by people attracted from the surrounding area • Theory explains how services are distributed and why a regular pattern of settlements exists • German geographer Walter Christaller (1930)

Note the regularity of spacing between urban centers -- towns. Local lore has it that the distances between towns evolved because it was the distance someone could travel in a day.

The Cumberland Valley of Pennsylvania is a portion of the Great Valley of the Appalachians. Broad valley floor, agricultural, settled in the early-to-mid 1700s

General Trends • There will be a regular spatial order in the number of central places of different population sizes.

– Few large places – Many small places • There will be a regular spatial order in the spacing of central places of different population sizes.

– Large places relatively farther apart – Small places relatively closer together

Central Place Functions Categories of like services found in a central place • • • • • • Grocery Stores Gas Stations Jewelry Stores Book Stores Hair Stylists Auto Dealerships • • • • • • Houses of Worship Schools Doctors Dentists Museums Concert Halls

Would you travel farther to buy a new car or the week’s groceries?

To buy a new car Would you travel farther to see your family physician or a heart specialist?

To see a heart specialist Would you travel farther to go to elementary school or to go to high school?

To go to high school

A Hierarchy of Educational Services Town: Village: Elementary High School City: College School Hamlet: No Schools

Stock Exchange Sports Stadium Regional Shopping Mall Major Department Store Income Tax Service Convenience Store Gas Station

Each central place function has a: • • Threshold: the minimum number of people needed to support a central place function With fewer customers a store cannot afford to stay in business.

• • Range: the maximum distance beyond which a person will not travel to purchase a good or service Beyond a certain distance people cannot afford the travel costs.

Optimal Location

(for Pizza Shop)

Fig. 12-6: The optimal location for a pizza delivery shop with seven potential customers in a linear settlement (top) and with 99 families in apartment buildings (bottom).

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.

Rank-Size Rule: a country’s nth-largest settlement is 1/n the population of the largest settlement

City New York City Los Angeles Chicago Houston Phoenix Philadelphia San Antonio San Diego Population 8,391,881 3,831,868 2,851,268 2,257,926 1,593,659 1,547,297 1,373,668 1,306, 300

Primate City Rule

• • The largest settlement has more than twice as many people as the second-ranking settlement.

Primate City=largest city • Denmark – – Copenhagen 1 million Arhus 200,000 • United Kingdom – – London 8 million Birmingham 2 million • Thailand – Bangkok 1.5 million – Nonthaburi 250,000

McDonald’s locations in Lincoln, Nebraska.

McDonald’s locations in Lincoln, Nebraska.