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“METROPOLISATION” IN EUROPE

I - URBANISATION AND “METROPOLISATION” ( on a World scale)

Key question : Do the urban regions in the world have the same development ?

What is urbanisation ?

What is “metropolisation” ?

“Metropolisation” is a very recent word which describes a phenomenon consisting (in the developed countries) in the growth of major cities. These have economic, political, and cultural advanced functions. They have a big influence zone.

Document : Urban population in the world (2002)

Introduce this document

This document is a planisphere which describes the urban situation .

Describe and analyse the document

Strong population rate for the developed countries (more than 50%) : America (Northern and southern America), western Europe and northern Africa, Australia.

Minor population rate for the underdeveloped countries (less than 50 %) : Sub-Saharan Africa Eastern Asia and India.

We must be careful because a population rate of 40% in China corresponds to ?

What are the European and English situations ?

Europe and England belong to the developed countries and the population rate is strong (more than 75 % of the whole population)

The growth of major cities in developed countries is slow, while third world cities are expanding rapidly, though chaotically. For example : at the beginning of the 21st century, more than half the world population is concentrated in major cities. London which used to be the first city in the world in 1900, now ranks only 25th although it remains the top of European city. (Paris 10 million inhabitants ; London 9 million inhabitants)

II - METROPOLISATION IN ENGLAND (on a national scale)

Key question : Why can we say that England experiences the “metropolisation” phenomenon ?

-  The growth of the English population and the extension of cities, towns, agglomerations …

Differences between rural areas and urban areas are more and more visible

BBC website

Introduce these documents

These are a map and a graph of the evolution of the English population in rural and urban areas.

Comment the graph :

People under 44 years old are used to live in urban areas whereas people over 45 years old prefer living in rural areas. (use urban and rural population rate)

According to you what reasons can explain this location ?

-  migration (rural exodus)

-  nowadays cities are attractive (jobs, activities, cares …)

-  the phenomenon of urban sprawl : suburbs win spaces on rural areas.

Sometimes urbanisation can be dangerous :

Creeping urbanisation could destroy rural England in 30 years

Creeping urbanisation and development may lead to the destruction of the traditional English countryside in a single generation, a report warns today.

The remorseless expansion of housing, industry, traffic, road-building and airport construction, combined with the steady decline in traditional farming, may mean the treasured, traditional countryside will have all but disappeared by 2035, says the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE).

By Michael McCarthy, Environment Editor (Independent News and Media Limited)

Published:09 September 2005

Remorseless : impitoyable

Steady : progressif

What is “creeping urbanisation” ?

An urbanisation with a spatial expansion

What danger is pointed out in this document ?

City planners and politics in England use an urban policy called urban planning.

What is urban planning ?

New urbanism, new orthodoxy

Richard Rogers used to be an ardent supporter of modernist town planning – the old 1947 orthodoxy. Now he champions New Urbanism: high-density urban villages where everything is within a ten-minute walk, to use Leon Krier’s pithy phrase; mixed uses; preservation of the countryside and respect for the fabric of the traditional city.

Planning is the problem Jules Lubbock 4 - 7 - 2001

Urban planning should organise and contain the urban sprawl, but according to numerous city planners this policy leads to many problems :

The new urbanism (represented by Richard Rogers) is shallow and authoritarian. Its impulse to confine people in high-density settlements has disastrous social and economic effects. The truly radical answer is to dismantle the planning system, allow people to live where they wish, and nurture a creative mix between town and country. Let Swindon breathe, the Yorkshire Dales thrive, and Glasgow flourish!

Planning is the problem Jules Lubbock 4 - 7 - 2001

Settlement : installation

Planning and prices

One of the major effects has been upon the general cost of living. The price of land has been massively inflated by an artificial shortage of supply, resulting from the draconian system of planning permission instituted in 1947.

For example, Grade 2 agricultural land in Essex costs about £4,000 an acre. But once planning permission for housing is granted this rises astronomically. Developers are said to have paid about £500,000 an acre for land with planning permission to build executive houses outside Chelmsford.

Housebuilders make much of their profit from sharing that planning gain with the landowners. The selling price for such houses is around £120,000. At 12 houses to the acre, the cost of our planning system amounts to an extra £40,000 on each of those houses before a single brick has been laid.

Planning is the problem Jules Lubbock 4 - 7 - 2001

Is there a solution to these real problems?

Mixing Town and Country

I believe that there is. Moreover, it is to be found in one of the fundamental principles of New Urbanism – reinstating mixed uses within urban areas. If mixed uses are so desirable, why restrict them to towns alone? As we have seen, the most fundamental land-use zoning is that between town and country. Almost no one questions it.

Planning is the problem Jules Lubbock 4 - 7 - 2001

Summary : what are the characteristics of “metropolisation” in England ?

-  growth of population

-  urban sprawl

-  a functional zone in the inner city and huge suburbs

-  activities are numerous and quite different (services leisure industry …)

-  Towns are linked by a network

III - THE METROPOLISATION PHENOMENON IN ENGLAND : THE EXAMPLE OF LONDON (on a local scale)

Key question : How is such a major city as London evolving?

History :

The city grew on a privilege geographical location with two poles emerging in the Middle Ages : Upstream, Westminster became the political centre, and downstream, the City became the economic centre.

In the 19th century, when the docks where built east of the city, London grew to become the first port in the world.

WWII’s damage and the crisis that mired port activities altered the appearance of the two banks. While the City bristled with high-rise buildings, the docks underwent heavy renovation with new creation of new CBD downstream, and new buildings, like Tate Modern were erected to revitalise the south bank.

History and geography Hatier

location / theme
The City of London (City + Isle of dogs) / Services; CBD
East end + Whitechapel / Quartiers populaires
Westminster + Whitehall / Buckingham; Trafalgar square tourism politic
West end (Soho Mayfair) / Piccadilly Oxford Street tourism + eco