make a note
Cities of the World
Cities of the World Regional Patterns and Urban Environments
Sixth Edition
EditEd by
Stanley D. Brunn, JeSSiCa K. GrayBill, Maureen HayS-MitCHell, and DonalD J. ZeiGler
ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD Lanham • Boulder • New York • London
Executive Editor: Susan McEachern Assistant Editor: Audra Figgins Senior Marketing Manager: Karin Cholak Marketing Manager: Kim Lyons Production Editor: Alden Perkins
Credits and acknowledgments of sources for material or information used with permission appear on the appropriate page within the text.
Published by Rowman & Littlefield A wholly owned subsidiary of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc. 4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200, Lanham, Maryland 20706 www.rowman.com
Unit A, Whitacre Mews, 26-34 Stannary Street, London SE11 4AB, United Kingdom
Copyright © 2016 by Rowman & Littlefield
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote passages in a review.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Information Available
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Cities of the world : regional patterns and urban environments / edited by Stanley D. Brunn, Jessica K. Graybill, Maureen Hays-Mitchell, and Donald J. Zeigler.—Sixth Edition. pages cm Revised edition of Cities of the world, 2012. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-4422-4916-5 (cloth : alk. paper)—ISBN 978-1-4422-4917-2 (electronic) 1. Cities and towns. 2. City planning. 3. Urbanization. 4. Urban policy. I. Brunn, Stanley D., editor. II. Graybill, Jessica K., 1973– editor. III. Hays-Mitchell, Maureen, editor. HT151.C569 2016 307.76—dc23 2015036537
∞ ™ The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992.
Printed in the United States of America
To a greener and more just future for planet Earth, its cities and residents.
Contents
List of Illustrations xv
Preface xxxi
1 World Urban Development Jessica K. Graybill, Maureen Hays-Mitchell, Donald J. Zeigler, and Stanley D. Brunn 3
The World Urban System: Prospects until 2050 7 World Urbanization: Past Trends 11
Early Urbanization: Antiquity to Fifth Century ce 11 / The Middle Period: Fifth to Seventeenth Century ce 14 / Industrial and Postindustrial Urbanization: Eighteenth Century to the Present 16
City Functions and Urban Economies 17 City Functions 17 / Sectors of the Urban Economy 18 / Basic and Nonbasic Economic Activities 18
Theories on the Spatial Structure of Cities 20 The Concentric Zone Model 22 / The Sector Model 23 / The Multiple Nuclei Model 23 / The Inverse Concentric Zone Model 24
Urban Challenges 26 Managing the Environment 26 / Managing Population Size and Growth 28 / Managing Urban Services 30 / Managing Slums and Squatter Settlements 31 / Managing Society 32 / Managing Unemployment 32 / Managing Racial and Ethnic Issues 34 / Managing Privacy 34 / Managing Modernization and Globalization 35 / Managing Traffic 37 / Managing Urban Governance 37
Concepts, Terms, and Definitions 38 Capital City 38 / City 39 / Colonial City 39 / Conurbation 39 / Galactic Metropolis 39 / Industrial City 40 / Megacity 40 / Megalopolis 40 / Metacity 40 / Metropolis and Metropolitan Area 40 / New Town 41 / Preindustrial City 41 / Postindustrial City 41 / Primate City 42 / Rank- Size Rule 42 / Site and Situation 42 / Socialist and Post-socialist City 43 / Suburbia 43 / Sustainable City 44 / Urbanism 44 / Urbanization 44 / Urban Agglomeration 45 / Urban Area 45 / Urban Place 45 / Urban Landscapes 45 / World City 46
Suggested Readings 46
2 Cities of the United States and Canada Lisa Benton-Short and Nathaniel M. Lewis 49
viii Contents
Historical Overview 52 Colonial Mercantilism: 1700–1840 52 / Industrial Capitalism: 1840–1970 54 / Postindustrial Capitalism: 1975–present 56
Models of Urban Structure 59 Distinctive Cities 62
New York City: A Global Metropolis 62 / Los Angeles: Outward Glitz, Inner Turmoil 66 / Detroit and Cleveland: Shrinking Cities 68 / Montreal: Moving Uphill from Upheaval 69 / Ottawa: A Capital of Compromise 70 / Washington, DC: A New Immigrant Gateway 72 / New Orleans: Vulnerable City 73
Urban Problems and Prospects 75 Globalization and the Urban Hierarchy 75 / Globalization and Localization 76 / Immigration and Increasing Diversity 79 / Women in the City 80 / Urban LGBTQ Communities 83 / Security and Urban Fortification 84 / Rebuilding and Memorialization 87
Urban Environmental Issues 88 Water 88 / Air Pollution 90 / Climate Change 92
Conclusions 93 Suggested Readings 95
3 Cities of Middle America and the Caribbean Roberto Albandoz, Tim Brothers, Seth Dixon, Irma Escamilla, Joseph L. Scarpaci, and Thomas Sigler 97
Historical Geography of Middle American and Caribbean Urbanization 99 Mexico 99 / Central America 105 / Caribbean 111
Models of Urban Structure 115 Distinctive Cities 116
Mexico City: Ancient Aztec Capital, Contemporary Megacity 116 / San José: Cultural Capital and Ecotourism Gateway 119 / Havana: The Once and Future Hub of the Caribbean? 120 / Panama City: Child of Globalization 124 / San Juan: American City Under Stress 125
Urban Challenges 128 Shifting Patterns of City Growth 128 / Social and Spatial Segregation 129 / Natural Disasters and Vulnerable Cities 129 / Managing Flows: Tourism and Drug Trafficking 132 / Gated Communities 132
Prospects for the Future 133 Economic Strengths and Vulnerability 133
Suggested Readings 134
4 Cities of South America Brian J. Godfrey and Maureen Hays-Mitchell 137
Urban Patterns in South America 139 Contemporary Urban Trends 142 / Critical Issues 143
Contents ix
Urban Primacy and Uneven Regional Development 143 / Economic Polarization and Spatial Segregation 144 / Economic Restructuring, Structural Adjustment, and Social Movements 145 / Declining Infrastructures and Environmental Degradation 145
Historical Perspectives on South American Cities 147 Pre-Columbian Urbanism 147 / Colonial Cities: Spanish versus Portuguese America 148 / Neocolonial Urbanization: Political Independence, Economic Dependence 150 / Twentieth Century: The Urbanizing Century 151
Distinctive Cities 154 Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo: Anchors of South America’s Megalopolis 155
Rio de Janeiro: The “Marvelous City” 156 / São Paulo: The Making of a Megacity 160 Brasília: Continental Geopolitics and Planned Cities 164 / Lima: Tempering Hyperurbanization on South America’s Pacific Rim 167 / Buenos Aires: Global City of the Southern Cone 174 / Curitiba and Bogotá: Planning For Sustainable Urban Development 177
Urban Challenges and Prospects 181 The Urban Economy and Social Justice 181 / Defensive Urbanism and Self- Help Housing 181 / Spatial Segregation, Land Use, and Environmental Injustices 183
An Eye toward the Future 184 Suggested Readings 185
5 Cities of Europe Linda McCarthy and Corey Johnson 187
Historical Perspectives on Urban Development 189 Classical Period: 800 bce to 450 ce 189 / Medieval Period: 450–1300 ce 190 / Renaissance and Baroque Periods: 1300–1760 ce 191 / Industrial Period: 1760–1945 ce 192
Urban Patterns across Europe 193 Postwar Divergence and Convergence 194
Western Europe 194 / Socialist Urbanization 197 / Post-Socialist Changes 197 Core-Periphery Model 198
Immigration, Globalization, and Planning 200 The Challenge of Integrating Immigrants 200 / European and Global Linkages 202 / Urban Policy and Planning 204
Characteristic Features within Cities 206 Town Squares 206 / Major Landmarks 206 / Complex Street Pattern 208 / High Density and Compact Form 208 / Bustling City Centers 208 / Low-Rise Skylines 209 / Neighborhood Stability and Change 209 / Housing 210
Models of the European City 212 Northwestern European City Structure 213 / Mediterranean City Structure 214 / Central and Eastern European City Structure 216
Distinctive Cities 216 London: Europe’s Global City 216 / Paris: France’s Primate City Par Excellence 221 / Barcelona: Capital of Catalonia 223 / Oslo: Low-Key Capital
x Contents
of Norway 226 / Berlin: The Past Always Present in Germany’s Capital 226 / Bucharest: A New Paris of the East? 228
Urban Challenges 229 Suggested Readings 233
6 Cities of Russia Jessica K. Graybill and Megan Dixon 235
Historical Evolution of the Russian Urban System 241 The Pre-Soviet Period: Birth of the Urban System 241 / The Soviet Period: New Urban Patterns 245 / Urban and Regional Planning in the Soviet Period 247 / The Urban Environment in the Soviet Period 248 / Late Soviet Period: The Beginning of Change 250
Contemporary Russia: Reconfiguring the Urban System 251 Political Urban Transformation 255 / Changing Urban Structure and Function 256 / Sociocultural Urban Transformation 258 / Twenty-first- Century Environmental Concerns 261
Distinctive Cities 263 Moscow: Russia’s Past Meets Russia’s Future 263 / St. Petersburg: Window on the West—Again? 265 / Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk: The International Power of Oil 267 / Norilsk: The Legacy of Heavy Industry 268 / Kazan: Volga Port in Tatarstan 270 / Vladivostok: Russia’s Pacific Capital? 271
Prospects for the Future 272 Suggested Readings 274
7 Cities of the Greater Middle East Zia Salim, Donald J. Zeigler, and Amal K. Ali 277
Foundations of the Urban System 282 Contemporary Urban Patterns 284 Models of Urban Structure 289
Urban Transects 292 / Arab Cities on the Gulf 293
Form and Function on the Urban Landscape 295 From Arab Spring to Arab Winter 298 Distinctive Cities 300
Cairo: The Victorious 300 / Jerusalem: City of Three Faiths 303 / Dubai: Gulf Showplace 306 / Mecca: City of the Hajj 308 / Istanbul: Transcontinental Hinge 310
Urban Problems and Prospects 313 Water 313 / Environmental Degradation 315 / Housing 316
Conclusion 317 Suggested Readings 319
8 Cities of Sub-Saharan Africa Garth Myers, Francis Owusu, and Angela Gray Subulwa 323
African Urbanization 325
Contents xi
Historical Geography of Urban Development 328 Ancient and Medieval Precolonial Urban Centers 330 / Urban Development after 1500 332 / African Urbanization in the Era of Formal Colonial Rule 333 / Postcolonial Urbanization 334 / Current Urbanization Trends 336
Distinctive Cities 340 Kinshasa: The Invisible City 340 / Accra: African Neoliberal City? 342 / Lagos: Largest Megacity of SSA 345 / Nairobi: Urban Legacies of Colonialism 347 / Dakar: Senegal’s City of Contradictions 351 / Johannesburg: A Multicentered City of Gold 354
Urban Challenges 357 Urban Environmental Issues 357 / Primate Cities 359 / Rural-to-Urban Migration 361
A Hopeful Vignette 363 Suggested Readings 365
9 Cities of South Asia Ashok Dutt, George Pomeroy, Ishrat Islam, and Ipsita Chatterjee 369
Urban Patterns at the Regional Scale 373 Historical Perspectives on Urban Developments 377
Indus Valley Era 377 / Aryan Hindu Impact 378 / Dravidian Temple Cities 380 / Muslim Impact 380 / Colonial Period 382 / The Presidency Towns 383
Models of Urban Structure 385 The Colonial-Based City Model 385 / The Bazaar-Based City Model 387 / Planned Cities 389 / Mixtures of Colonial and Bazaar Models 390
Distinctive Cities 390 Mumbai: India’s Cultural and Economic Capital 390 / Bengalūru and Hyderabad: India’s Economic Frontier 393 / Delhi: Who Controls Delhi Controls India 393 / Kolkata: Premier Presidency Town 395 / Karachi: Port and Former Capital 398 / Dhaka: Capital, Port, and Primate City 399 / Kathmandu, Colombo, and Kabul: Cities on the Edge 400
Globalization, City Marketing, and Urban Violence 402 Urban Challenges 407 Suggested Readings 409
10 Cities of Southeast Asia James Tyner and Arnisson Andre Ortega 413
Urban Patterns at the Regional Scale 415 Historical Geography of Urban Development 419
Precolonial Patterns of Urbanization 419 / Urbanization in Colonial Southeast Asia 421
Recent Urbanization Trends 427 Globalization, Urbanization, and the Middle Class 430
Models of Urban Structure 432
xii Contents
Distinctive Cities 435 Singapore: World City of Southeast Asia 435 / Kuala Lumpur: Twin Towers and Cyberspace 439 / Jakarta: Megacity of Indonesia 440 / Manila: Primate City of the Philippines 442 / Bangkok: The Los Angeles of the Tropics 444 / Phnom Penh, Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi: Socialist Cities in Transition 445
Urban Challenges 449 An Eye to the Future 452 Suggested Readings 453
11 Cities of East Asia Kam Wing Chan and Alana Boland 457
The Evolution of Cities 458 The Traditional or Preindustrial City 458 / The Chinese City as Model: Japan and Korea 459 / Colonial Cities 460
First Footholds: The Portuguese and the Dutch 460 / The Treaty Ports of China 460 / The Japanese Impact 461 / Hong Kong 463 / Japan: The Asian Exception 464
Internal Structure of East Asian Cities 465 Distinctive Cities 466
Tokyo and the Tokaido Megalopolis: Unipolar Concentration 467 / Beijing: The New “Forbidden City”? 470 / Shanghai: “New York” of China? 476 / Hong Kong: Business Not as Usual 480 / Taipei: In Search of an Identity? 484 / Seoul: The “Phoenix” of Primate Cities 486
Urban Problems and their Solutions 488 The Chinese Way 488 / Other Paths in East Asia 491
Closing the Gap: Decentralization in Japan 493 / Seoul: The Problems of Primacy 493 / Taipei: Toward Balanced Regional Development 494 / The Greening of East Asian Cities 495
Prospects for the Future 499 Suggested Readings 499
12 Cities of Australia and the Pacific Islands Robyn Dowling and Pauline McGuirk 503
Historical Foundations of Urbanism 506 Contemporary Urban Patterns and Processes 510
The Pacific Islands 510 / Australia 512 / Aotearoa/New Zealand 516
Distinctive Cities 520 Sydney: Australia’s World City 520 / Perth: Isolated Millionaire 525 / Gold Coast: Tourism Urbanization 527 / Auckland: Economic Hub of Aotearoa/ New Zealand 528 / Port Moresby and Suva: Island Capitals 531
Trends and Challenges 532 Suggested Readings 533
13 Cities of the Future Brian Edward Johnson and Benjamin Shultz 537
Contents xiii
Urban Growth in the Global South 538 Causes of Urban Growth in the Global South 541 / Challenges Posed by Urban Growth in the Global South 543
Urban Change in the Global North 544 Urban Sustainability at Center Stage 546
Pollution Problems and Urban Futures 546 / Climate Change and Urban Futures 548
Infrastructure to Mitigate Climate Change 550 Deindustrialization and Urban Futures 551 / Urban Gardening and Urban Futures 553
The Geography of Connectivity and Talent 553 Cities as Virtual Crossroads 556 / Cities as Nodes of Globalization 559 / Cities Beyond the Networked Core 560
Governance, GIS Use, and Security Provision 561 Governmental Cooperation 561 / Geographic Information Systems 561 / Surveillance of Public Space 563
Conclusions 564 Urban Living at Its Best 566
Suggested Readings 569
Appendix 571
Cover Photo Credits 573
Geographical Index 575
Index to Subjects 579
About the Editors and Contributors 583
List of Illustrations
Figures 1.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of the World. 2 1.2 Urban Environmental Risks. This conceptual diagram indicates the generalized,
possible risks and concerns for the environment of urban and urbanizing places at (i) local, regional and global scales and (ii) across short- and long-term time horizons. Because individual places will experience different suites of environmental concerns, this diagram is intended to pique discussion of possible urban environmental changes. 6
1.3 Growth of World and Urban Population, 1950–2030. 7 1.4 Urban Population of World Regions, 1950, 2014, 2050. 10 1.5 Urban Population in MDCs versus LDCs by Size Class of Urban Settlement,
1975–2015. 11 1.6 Spread of Urbanization, Antiquity to Modern Times. 12 1.7 The original adobe wall around Bukhara, Uzbekistan is several meters thick, a
reminder of the ancient culture and history associated with this city along the Silk Route. 14
1.8 Labor Force Composition at Various Stages in Human History. 19 1.9 Street peddlers in Shakhrisabz, Uzbekistan, the birthplace of Tamerlane (Timur) sell
goods from China and Turkey to local Uzbek customers in this ancient Silk Route city. 20
1.10 Generalized Patterns of Internal Urban Structure. 23 1.11 These cartograms indicate the amount of territory classified as urban in countries
worldwide (not all countries are included). 27 1.12 The Frontenac Hotel was built by the Canadian Pacific Railway. As the most well-
known signature architecture of Quebec City, it still functions as tourist magnet even though most no longer come by train. 28
1.13 Even in rich cities such as Macao, one of China’s Special Administrative Regions, scavengers find a niche in the urban ecosystem by collecting cardboard and other items that have value as recyclables. 31
1.14 Neuroscientists now tell us that the presence of water sharpens the intellect and enhances feelings of well-being. Selecting a place along the Charles River in Boston might be the best thing a student could do to maximize study time. 33
1.15 The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom took place under the leadership of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and others in 1963. The 50th anniversary of the march and the “I Have a Dream” speech took place in 2013 to keep the dream alive. 35
1.16 Banksy is a well-known graffiti artist whose works materialize on the urban landscape while no one is watching. In London, his unauthorized critique of CCTV appeared overnight on Royal Mail Service property. 36
xvi List of Illustrations
1.17 Urban Geography: Where It All Comes Together. 38 1.18 These heroic statues in front of the opera house in Novosibirsk, Russia, are typical
of former socialist cities. Statues, paintings, posters were all designed to inspire the populace to sacrifices lives of personal comfort for the sake of national welfare. 43
1.19 Matsu’s followers in Taipei love parades. With their big ears, these maidens remind everyone to listen to the voices of enlightened beings. Matsu is the goddess honored over and above all others on the island of Taiwan. 45
2.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of the United States and Canada. 48 2.2 Toronto’s unique City Hall was built in the 1960s to brand the city. Canada’s largest
city is also a hub for international travelers, such as these young men from India. 51 2.3 Skyscrapers, such as the Wrigley Building in Chicago, became the cathedrals of urban
commerce as steel-frame construction and the elevator enabled the design of ever taller buildings. 53
2.4 Slater’s Mill is today an historical landmark in Pawtucket, Rhode Island; it marked the beginning of the factory system in the United States. 55
2.5 The Erie Canal, running through downtown Syracuse, New York, was critical in pushing New York City to the top of the U.S. urban hierarchy. 55
2.6 Signs of deindustrialization, such as this abandoned steel mill, marked the landscapes of industrial-era cities such as Pittsburgh during the 1980s. 57
2.7 Pawn shops are examples of the parasitic economies that mark the poorer sections of many American cities and suburbs. 58
2.8 Roads and highways take up an enormous one-fifth of urban land in the United States, exemplified by this iconic photo of the Los Angeles freeway system. 60
2.9 “View of Savannah, as it stood the 29th March, A.D. 1734.” 61 2.10 As architecture critic Michael Sorkin has observed, “Like the suburban house that
rejects the sociability of front porches and sidewalks for private back yards, malls look inward, turning their backs on the public street.” 63
2.11 Peter Woytuk sculptures, playing off of New York’s nickname, the Big Apple, became a public art exhibit that extended all along Broadway, this one of the Upper West Side. 65
2.12 Migrants make their presence felt in numerous ways. In this case, there are sufficient Brazilian immigrants for a Brazilian service at this Baptist Church outside Washington, DC. 72
2.13 In areas that were flooded during Katrina, houses have been raised above flood level in anticipation of future threats. 74
2.14 New York’s Foreign-Born Population. 81 2.15 In 2014, DC hosted its first international pop-up picnic, called Diner en Blanc, for
1500 people. The concept, which originated in Paris, requires that guests wear all- white clothing and bring their own food and chairs. 82
2.16 The Stonewall riots took place on June 28, 1969, outside the Stonewall Inn in New York’s Greenwich Village. They are now regarded as the beginning of the gay and lesbian rights movement in the United States. 84
2.17 Here, circled in blue, a security camera has been positioned atop the Jefferson Memorial in the Washington, DC. What messages do surveillance cameras convey in a public space which memorializes freedom, liberty and independence? 86
2.18 Chicago and many other cities remain racially segregated, and minorities are concerned about police profiling and violence. 87
List of Illustrations xvii
2.19 This view of the 9/11 Memorial shows one of the two reflecting pools that sit within the footprints where the Twin Towers once stood. 89
2.20 On the Cincinnati waterfront, residents are reminded that the Ohio River is subject to combined sewer overflows that create a danger to public health. 92
3.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of Middle America and the Caribbean. 96 3.2 Over 100 hotels in Cancún’s zona hotelera offer thousands of jobs to Mexico’s youth,
preparing them to make a living in the service economy. Here they confront a native inhabitant of the island. 100
3.3 A panoramic view of Monterrey illustrates how a distinctive topographic feature, the Cerro de la Silla, can influence the shape of a metropolitan area. 102
3.4 Satellite image of the “sister” cities Quanaminthe (left) and Dajabón (right). The border between Haiti and the Dominican Republic follows the Massacre River in the bottom half of the image but leaves it in the top half to run more directly north. The industrial free zone, visible as the row of large white buildings near the river at the top of the image, lies in a political no man’s land between the border and the river. 105
3.5 Caribbean Urbanization by City Size, 1960 and 2010. 113 3.6 The Revised Griffin-Ford Model of Latin American City Structure. 114 3.7 The Zócalo (main square) in Mexico City is surrounded by colonial buildings, most
notably the Metropolitan Cathedral and the headquarters of the Federal and Capital Governments. 117
3.8 The elite western corridor connecting Chapultepec Park and the Zócalo is the preeminent place to memorialize Mexican heritage and identity. Here in the Alameda is a monument honoring Benito Juárez, a Zapotec Indian, in neoclassical style. 118
3.9 Mexico City’s federally subsidized subway system is incredibly congested at key transfer stations like the Hidalgo interchange downtown. 119
3.10 A lighthouse at Moro Castle stands at the entrance to Havana harbor, while young Cubans use the deteriorating sea wall as a recreational resource. 121
3.11 Here are two images of a Cuba frozen in time: Che Guevara, one of the leaders of the Cuban Revolution of 1959, and a classic American sedan (one of many still on the road) that arrived prior to the Revolution. 122
3.12 The polycentric city of Havana. 123 3.13 The fishing docks and the skyscrapers of Panama City reveal traditional and emerging
economic geographies. 125 3.14 The Casco Antiguo quarter in Panama City is currently undergoing the process of
gentrification. 126 3.15 The Plaza de Armas in San Juan, Puerto Rico, is now used not for drilling troops but
for enhancing urban life. Fountains are common components of plazas in Spanish cities. 127
3.16 Two aerial views of shantytowns (bidonvilles) in low-lying areas just north of the Port-au-Prince, Haiti city center. Flooding occurred in these areas after Hurricane Noel struck the island of Hispaniola on October 29–31, 2007. The storm claimed at least 30 lives in the Dominican Republic and 20 in Haiti. 130
3.17 Former military airport north of Port-au-Prince city center, July 2009, six months before January 2010 earthquake. 131
3.18 Tent camp at former military airport north of Port-au-Prince city center, November 2010, ten months after January 2010 earthquake. 131
4.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of South America. 136
xviii List of Illustrations
4.2 The Pelourinho historic district, named for the “pillory” formerly used to punish slaves, indicates the strong Afro-Brazilian influence in Salvador da Bahia. 139
4.3 Stabroek Market is the main market in Georgetown, Guyana and always bustling with activity. 140
4.4 Irrigators march through Cochabamba in celebration of the National Irrigators’ Congress, an important milestone in the process of establishing new forms of water governance in the wake of the water war. 146
4.5 Spanish conquistadores built Mediterranean-style structures atop Inca stone walls in pre-Columbian cities such as Cuzco in present-day Peru. 149
4.6 At 4,000 meters above sea level, Bolivia’s capital city La Paz extends throughout and beyond its crater-like valley etched into the Altiplano. The metropolitan region encompasses more than 2 million people and is the largest urban agglomeration in Bolivia. It includes El Alto, a poor and dynamic community perched on the rim of La Paz valley that, with the influx of unemployed tin miners and Aymara migrants, now surpasses La Paz city in population. 152
4.7 Money-changers on the streets of Lima’s historic center jostle to change dollars and Euros as well as “rotos” and “deteriorados”—broken and deteriorated bills. 153
4.8 The Rio de Janeiro-São Paulo-Campinas extended metropolitan region. 156 4.9 This panoramic view of Rio de Janeiro includes Sugarloaf Mountain (Pão de Açúcar)
at the entrance to Guanabara Bay, Corcovado Mountain with its majestic statue, Rodrigo de Freitas Lake, and the lush forests of Tijuca National Park. 158
4.10 A view of the Cantagalo district, located on steep hillsides between Copacabana and Ipanema beaches, illustrates the informal, adaptive geography of Rio’s favelas. 159
4.11 Once lined by elite mansions, the Avenida Paulista became the city’s corporate “Miracle Mile” after World War II. 163
4.12 The spectacular modern architecture of Brasília, designed by Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer, highlights the federal buildings located along the Monumental Axis (Eixo Monumental). Here we see the Ministry of Justice in the foreground with the iconic congressional complex in the distance. 165
4.13 Map of Brasília. 166 4.14 Lima’s central plaza, known as the Plaza de Armas, dates to the city’s founding and
served as the central point from which streets extended in the four cardinal directions consistent with the Laws of the Indies. 168
4.15 Growth of Lima, 1910–2000. 169–170 4.16 Villa El Salvador is among the oldest and most well-known shantytowns
(asentimientos humanos). Established as a land invasion south of Lima by migrant families from the Andean highlands in 1970, it epitomizes the self-help housing movement. It was awarded formal status as a district within metropolitan Lima in 1983. Today, it is home to some 400,000 people and hundreds of businesses. The pink buildings are schools. 171
4.17 Three young girls find time for fun as they assist their mothers who labor as ambulantes (street vendors) in the informal economy of Huancayo, a city in the Peruvian central Andes. 172
4.18 The Diagonal Norte (Northern Diagonal Boulevard), officially the Avenida Presidente Rouge Saenz Pena, highlights the imposing Obelisk monument in downtown Buenos Aires. 176
List of Illustrations xix
4.19 Recent renovation of Puerto Madero, long a deteriorated inner harbor, created a revitalized waterfront district adjacent to the downtown of Buenos Aires. 178
4.20 Eje Ambiental in historic Bogotá, where a dechannelized stream is part of a linear park along Avenida Jimenez. 180
5.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of Europe. 186 5.2 Roman Cities in Europe, second century ce. 190 5.3 Ljubljana, Slovenia, took advantage of the collapse of Communist rule to bring
out the medieval elements of the city’s center, including the Dragon Bridge and St. Nicholas Cathedral. 191
5.4 Much of the coal that fired the industrialization of cities came through the Welsh port of Cardiff. That era is commemorated with public art on the reclaimed waterfront, along with one of the chimerical animals from a Bob Dylan poem. 193
5.5 The Rhine-Ruhr Conurbation in Germany. 194 5.6 The Randstad Conurbation of the Netherlands. 195 5.7 Nation building is a function of every capital city’s landscape. In Amsterdam, a statue
says thank you to Queen Wilhelmina, who gave her subjects hope during World War II. Next to the Dutch flag is the U.S. flag. 196
5.8 Warsaw’s skyline, once dominated by the Stalinesque Palace of Culture and Science’s “wedding cake” architectural style, and the tallest building in the Eastern Bloc outside of Moscow, is today dwarfed by newer steel-and-glass skyscrapers. 199
5.9 Europe’s conurbations within the context of Europe’s “Blue Banana” and core- periphery conceptualizations. 200
5.10 The salon de thé (tea house) is a common element of urban landscapes in French- speaking North Africa. As Arab immigrants arrive in Brussels, they bring with them their preferences for particular tastes and social settings. 201
5.11 Here on Ludgate Hill in the City of London, a new immigrant from Bangladesh directs people to the nearest McDonald’s. In medieval times, this area would have been a shadowy tangle of narrow alleys that passed for streets. 208
5.12 Busy, pedestrianized shopping streets, such as this one in the heart of Dublin, are typical of the European city centers. 209
5.13 Model of Northwestern European City Structure. 214 5.14 Model of Mediterranean City Structure. 215 5.15 Model of Central and Eastern European City Structure. 217 5.16 The iron security gates at the entrance to Downing Street in London prevent the
public from getting close to the official residence of the Prime Minister. 219 5.17 Since the 1990s, terrorist threats have increased and so has the security zone in
London’s financial district, “The City.” 220 5.18 Paris evolved around an island in the Seine River: Île de la Cité. Today, it is most
famous for the cathedral of Notre Dame, whose spire is barely visible here. 222 5.19 Throughout Catalonia, signs of Catalan nationalism—and separatism—are to be
found. This banner, in Girona, speaks to the world in English. 224 5.20 Communism brought extensive industrial development (evident in the background)
and isolation to Plovdiv, but post-Communist cell phone networks now connect a new generation of Bulgarians to the world. 232
6.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of Russia. 234
xx List of Illustrations
6.2 New construction in cities around Russia (Vladivostok is pictured) relegates Soviet urban landscapes to the background as new commercial and residential buildings vie for valuable real estate locations. 238
6.3 Renovations in GUM shopping center on Red Square make it a top destination for tourists and Russia’s elite seeking high-end shopping experiences. 239
6.4 Since the fall of communism, automobile ownership in Moscow has soared, and with it has come urban gridlock. 240
6.5 New microrayon developments, with varied architectural styles and imposing gates and fences, are rapidly changing the face of Russia’s suburbs. This picture is from Balakovo. 240
6.6 Population Change in Russian Cities, 2002–2010. 242 6.7 The Church of Our Savior on the Spilled Blood, in St. Petersburg, was built on the
spot where Emperor Alexander II was assassinated in March 1881. Built from 1883 to 1907, the Romanov family provided funds for this glamorous cathedral. 244
6.8 Comparative Density Profiles in the built-up areas of Moscow and Paris. 249 6.9 Historic buildings in Vladivostok’s urban core crumble today from neglect in the
maritime climate of this port city. 250 6.10 A submarine in Kaliningrad, a former secret military city in the former Soviet Union,
is now used as a tourist attraction. 251 6.11 Space around many Russian homes, such as this one near Moscow, and apartment
buildings is devoted to subsistence agriculture during the short summer season. 254 6.12 Opened in 2010, “City Mall” in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk is the largest shopping mall
in the Russian Far East and boasts a microbrewery for beer and loudspeaker announcements in Russian and English. 255
6.13 Tsarist-era buildings in Vladivostok’s urban core are being revitalized in the post- Soviet era. 257
6.14 Street peddlers hawk a variety of fresh goods along the railroad tracks across eastern Sakhalin Island. 259
6.15 Increasing consumption and lagging public services are reflected in the garbage- strewn landscapes surrounding many Russian apartment buildings. 263
6.16 Iconic Moscow River and Kremlin view at night. 264 6.17 False-color image of Norilsk. Shades of pink and purple indicate bare ground (e.g.,
rock formations, cities, quarries,) where vegetation is damaged from heavy pollution. Brilliant greens show mostly healthy tundra-boreal forest. South and southwest of the city are moderately to severely damaged ecosystems, and ecosystems northeast of the river and away from the city and industrial centers are healthier. 269
6.18 New urban infrastructure (bridges, roads) in Vladivostok, built for the 2012 Asia- Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit, revitalizes this regional capital and port city in the Far East. 273
6.19 Suburban development on the fringes of compact Soviet-era cities, such as Balakovo, brings socioeconomic division and expansion into agricultural zones to previously mixed and compact urban settings across Russia. 274
7.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of the Greater Middle East. 276 7.2 The Traditional Middle Eastern City. 279 7.3 Rising above every Middle Eastern city are the minarets of mosques. One of the most
famous is the Koutoubia, the largest mosque in Marrakech. By tradition, the muezzin issues the call to prayers five times a day from the minaret. 280
List of Illustrations xxi
7.4 The traditional markets of Marrakech, Morocco, are some of the most well-known in the world. In Arabic-speaking countries they are known as souks or suqs. 281
7.5 The Armenians pre-dated the Roman Empire in becoming the world’s first officially Christian nation in 301 ce. To commemorate that event’s 1700th anniversary, the Republic of Armenia built a new cathedral in Yerevan, here seen on Palm Sunday. 283
7.6 The Urban Triangle of the Middle East shows the relative locations of major cities. These cities are in their correct geographical locations, but shown without the base map underneath. 287
7.7 As of 2015, there were 4 million refugees from Syria. Turkey has taken in almost 2 million, with many housed in camps like this one near Karkamish on the border with the self-proclaimed Islamic State, now in control of northern Syria. 289
7.8 Internal Structure of the Middle Eastern Metropolis. 290 7.9 The citadel, or cale, of Gaziantep, Turkey, occupies a strategically located hilltop that
dominates the fertile agricultural region near the Turkish-Syrian border. 291 7.10 The landscape of Amman, Jordan, shows the signs of global commercialization in the
form of this bilingual advertisement for Subway. 293 7.11 The skyline of Doha seems out of proportion to its role as capital city of a country,
Qatar, with only 2 million inhabitants. 294 7.12 Demonstrations to oust President Mohamed Morsi from power took place in cities
around the world as expat Egyptians took the streets of cities like Amsterdam, shown here on July 7, 2013. Although he was democratically elected, Morsi’s abuse of power enraged the public and the Egyptian military. 300
7.13 Coptic Cairo, now the city’s Christian “quarter,” is one of the historical nucleations that has survived from medieval times. Here communal urns provide the neighborhood with water while political posters try to attract attention. 302
7.14 The Dome of the Rock (venerated by Muslims) and the Western Wall (venerated by Jews) are symbols of a religiously divided Jerusalem. 304
7.15 In the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem, enough archaeological excavation has gone on to bring back the Cardo, or main street, of the ancient Roman city. 305
7.16 Elements of traditional and modern Arab culture seem to blend harmoniously in the world’s largest themed shopping mall, which was named after the medieval Arab geographer Ibn Battuta. It is located in Dubai. 307
7.17 Palm Jumeirah is one of three palm-tree shaped islands that are being built as a reclamation project in the Gulf. Dubai specializes in landscapes of spectacle that attract the attention of the world. 308
7.18 Ataturk, the revered father of modern Turkey, continues to be memorialized on the urban landscape. In this case, his visage is positioned to welcome those approaching Izmir from the airport. 312
7.19 The Sorek seawater desalination plant, one of the largest in the world and one of five in Israel, became operational in 2013. Israel is a world leader in the field despite the drawbacks: the immense amount of energy needed for desalination and the environmental costs of disposing of the brine. 314
7.20 When you have a business that is mobile, you can move with the market, which is exactly what this street vendor of qanafeh (a sweet pastry always made in round pans) does in Amman. 318
8.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of Sub-Saharan Africa. 322
xxii List of Illustrations
8.2 Chronic flooding necessitates near-constant, major efforts to drain residential areas of Pikine, an informal city on the outskirts of Dakar, Senegal. Many of SSA’s informal settlements are flood-prone, yet their residents often experience the deprivation of limited access to clean drinking water. 325
8.3 Bustling markets, such as this one in Monrovia, Liberia, are common features of Sub- Saharan cities. 326
8.4 The Victoria and Albert Waterfront is a major shopping destination, center of tourist activity, and gathering place for Cape Town’s diverse population. 328
8.5 Historical Centers of Urbanization in Africa. 331 8.6 The historic African CBD of Dar es Salaam, Kariakoo, has undergone rapid
gentrification in the twenty-first century, where the pace of new construction has outrun the ability of the government to provide basic services. 333
8.7 A dramatic air photo of Lusaka, Zambia, today shows the formerly all-white township of Roma. 335
8.8 A billboard advertising a new, high-security elite housing enclave, Silverest Gardens, on the outskirts of Lusaka, built by the Henan-Guoji Development Company. It is one of nine such neighborhoods built by this Chinese company in SSA cities since 2010. 336
8.9 Along Great East Road in Lusaka, Zambia, the informal economy punctuates the streets as vendors sharpen the pitches that they need to clinch each sale. 338
8.10 A downtown shopping street in Dodoma, Tanzania. Tanzania’s socialist government relocated the national capital from the colonial port of Dar es Salaam to the deliberately non-monumental new capital of Dodoma, beginning in the 1970s, as an attempt to overturn the colonial legacy. 340
8.11 A long line of drivers wait for gas at a station in Accra. One of the great ironies in many SSA cities appears in situations where Africans experience shortages of a major export commodity of their own country. Here, the irony is that Ghana is an exporter of petroleum, yet has not been able to keep up with demand in its own capital city. 344
8.12 Fishing boats at Soumbedione fish market in Dakar. 351 8.13 The influence of Dakar extends well inland to the landlocked states of Mali, Burkina
Faso, and Niger via the Trans-Sahel Highway. These residents of Mali’s capital, Bamako, share a language with the residents of Dakar: French. 352
8.14 African cities located in low-elevation coastal zones, such as Monrovia, Liberia, are vulnerable to severe flooding from sea-level rise. 357
8.15 Principal Urban Centers of Sub-Saharan Africa, many of which are primate capital cities. 360
8.16 By using billboards to help change human behavior, Lusaka, Zambia, tries to create a greener capital city as a role model for the nation. 361
8.17 Getting hair cut and styled is one of the basic services provided by every culture. Around Kaunda Square in Lusaka, entrepreneurs earn a bit more by adding telephone services to their business model. 363
8.18 Namushi and her grocery shop on Kaunda Square in Kinshasa. 365 9.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of South Asia. 368 9.2 As cities fill up with people, streets become more congested with not only cars, but
bicycles and camels as well. 373
List of Illustrations xxiii
9.3 The Golden Quadrilateral of express highways links the anchor cities of India’s urban hierarchy: Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai. 375
9.4 On a Delhi roadside, the driver of a cycle rickshaw takes time for a mid-day nap. 376 9.5 The Sikhs, neither Hindu nor Muslim, are a major part of India’s cultural diversity,
seen here in their main gurdwara, the place where they worship. 378 9.6 The dhobi-wallahs, or “washer-men” make their living washing (and drying)
clothes. 379 9.7 The Taj Mahal has become the single most recognized icon of India. It was built
in Agra as a tomb for Shah Jahan’s wife and is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. 380
9.8 The Red Fort, in Old Delhi, remains a potent feature of Indian nationalism. 381 9.9 To the left is a Muslim neighborhood and to the right a Hindu one in Old Delhi. 382
9.10 Labor is cheap in India, so porters are often called upon to transport bulk goods from one part of the city (in this case, Mumbai) to another. 383
9.11 A Model of the Colonial-based city in South Asia. 386 9.12 A Model of the Bazaar-based City in South Asia. 388 9.13 A produce vendor in Chennai typifies the bazaar-based city. 389 9.14 “Bollywood” films are popular all across the Indian subcontinent and beyond,
including here in Calcutta. 391 9.15 Marine Drive, with Nariman Point in the background, serves as the setting for the
annual Mumbai Marathon. 392 9.16 Delhi and Shajahanabad (Old Delhi). 394 9.17 Any service you can think of is available on the streets of India’s cities. Here in
the Karol Bagh neighborhood of Delhi, for a few rupees, you can get your pants pressed. 395
9.18 Fishmongers are widespread in Kolkata. Not only does the city have a huge consuming population, but it is also along the coast. 397
9.19 Infrastructure damage resulting from the Kathmandu earthquakes amounted to 10 billion US dollars. 405
9.20 Three generations of women position themselves on the curb to sell what produce they can to passersby in Mumbai. 406
10.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of Southeast Asia. 412 10.2 The Central Market in downtown Phnom Penh was built in 1937 in art deco style. It
is the soul of the city, a place where you can purchase just about anything. 415 10.3 “Plan of the Angkor Complex, ca. A.D. 1200.” 416 10.4 Angkor Wat, built between 1113 and 1150 by Suryavarman II, is one of but hundreds
of wats spread throughout Cambodia. Because it symbolizes Cambodia’s golden age, its image can also be found on the nation’s flag. 417
10.5 New residential, leisure, and commercial developments rise on the outskirts of Manila, taking the place of former sugar cane plantations. 418
10.6 In Pleiku, Vietnam, a woman makes a living by selling fresh fruits and vegetables— proudly displayed as in an American supermarket—to shoppers in the early morning hours. 418
10.7 For 130 years, Malacca was a Portuguese colony. Today, a miniature version of the fort has been rebuilt, primarily to enhance Malacca’s status as a World Heritage City. 421
xxiv List of Illustrations
10.8 A statue in Manila honors Raja Solayman, the city’s Muslim prince, who defended the town against the Spaniards in the 1500s. 423
10.9 Urban Growth in Southeast Asia, 1900–2005. 424 10.10 Fast food—or “good food fast”—is widely available on the streets of Southeast Asian
cities. Here, early morning breakfast is served in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon). 425 10.11 Bricktown is one of the historic, and now gentrified, neighborhoods of Kuala
Lumpur. It was settled by Indians, mostly Tamils, brought in by the British to make bricks. 426
10.12 A Generalized Model of Major Land Use in the Large Southeast Asian City. 433 10.13 The Singapore River was at the very heart of commercial life in Singapore. A hundred
years ago, it would have been packed with junks, with wharves and warehouses along both sides. 436
10.14 This colorful and finely detailed Indian temple in Singapore is one of the best-known cultural landmarks of the city. 437
10.15 When Kuala Lumpur’s Petronas Towers opened in 1999, they became the world’s tallest, a title they held until 2004. 440
10.16 A mosque, Jamek Bandaraya, backed by the downtown skyline, now occupies the original site of Kuala Lumpur, a “muddy confluence” of two streams seen in this picture. 441
10.17 Motorbikes are one way of breaking through traffic jams on Bangkok’s overcrowded streets. 443
10.18 Traditional Manila contrast with modern Manila as the city attempts to accommodate the rapidly expanding population by going up and spilling out onto the city’s streets. 446
10.19 If Ronald McDonald wants to sell fast food in Bangkok, he must adapt to Thai culture. Globalization is not a one-way street. 453
11.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of East Asia. 456 11.2 Foreign Penetration of China in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. 462 11.3 Map showing urbanized areas in Pearl River Delta and Hong Kong. Pink represents
urban areas. 463 11.4 The Osaka castle in the center of Osaka city played a major role in the unification of
Japan during the sixteenth century. 465 11.5 With Taipei 101, Taiwan’s capital reaches for new skylines, in stark contrast to
twentieth-century socialist-era development. 466 11.6 Tokyo Metropolitan Area and change in population density, 1970–2005. 468 11.7 One of Tokyo’s busy narrow side streets, with commercial and residential land use in
close proximity. Streets of this size and mix are quite common still even in the busy core of Tokyo and other large Japanese cities. 471
11.8 Beijing metropolitan area has been expanding outward, fueled by in-migration and local residents moving from the city center to the suburbs. The map shows population growth rates by subdistrict unit in the urbanized part of Beijing based on census data for 1982 and 2010. 472
11.9 Pockets of traditional courtyard houses remain in hutongs, or alleys, in the inner city of Beijing. Many of them have been torn down to make room for high-rise apartments and offices. Some “saved” are converted into shops in main hutongs. 473
11.10 Model of the City in the PRC. 474
List of Illustrations xxv
11.11 Millions of migrants eke out their living on the urban fringes of Beijing; some live in run-down village houses like this one. The photo was taken after a major rainstorm in summer 2012 in Chengzhongcun. 475
11.12 Shanghai’s economic influence extends to a network of cities and smaller towns beyond its boundaries. In this satellite image, pink highlights areas of concentrated commercial and residential use. 478
11.13 Since the early 1990s, Shanghai’s new CBD has arisen across the river in Pudong, centered on the futuristic TV tower surrounded by ultramodern skyscrapers. Pudong CBD is China’s financial district. 479
11.14 This view of Hong Kong Island, taken from Kowloon across the harbor, dramatically conveys the modernity and wealth of today’s Hong Kong. The Central Plaza building towers over the wave-like profile of the Convention Center, where the ceremony of the handover to China took place in 1997. 482
11.15 Also called the “Umbrella Movement,” the Occupy Central protest in 2014 was the largest civil disobedience movement since 1967. The protest was against the proposed “universal suffrage” system, which critics consider as not genuine. 483
11.16 Map of Taiwan. 485 11.17 The Potala Palace dominates Lhasa, the capital of Tibet. This city used to be the home
of Tibet’s traditional ruler, the Dalai Lama. 490 11.18 Migrant workers shine shoes on a street in Wuhan, the largest city in central China.
“Rural migrant workers,” numbered about 170 million in 2014, are everywhere in China’s major cities, doing all kinds of work. The huge army of cheap migrant labor is crucial to China’s success in being the “world’s factory.” 492
11.19 Cheonggyecheon Stream Restoration project in downtown Seoul during the Lantern Festival. 496
12.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of Australia and the Pacific Islands. 502 12.2 One of The Travelers on Melbourne’s Sandridge Bridge represents the convict era
in Australian history. The former railroad bridge is now a pedestrian crossing and sculpture garden. 506
12.3 Adelaide is the state capital and primate city of South Australia. It was founded as a planned capital city for a new British colony in the 1830s. 507
12.4 Canberra’s distinctive but controversial Parliament House is difficult to appreciate from the outside because much of the structure is underground. The inside is breathtaking, filled with beautiful art and materials native to Australia. 508
12.5 Built on an isthmus and connected to a rich hinterland, Auckland now hosts many activities found in major world cities, including the famous Sky Tower that dominates the skyline. 509
12.6 The Papua New Guinea High Commission, with its distinctive Pacific aesthetic, is located in Australia’s national capital, Canberra. Members of the Commonwealth of Nations exchange High Commissioners instead of Ambassadors. 511
12.7 Melbourne’s traditional image is being shattered today by skyscrapers like Eureka Tower (world’s tallest residential building when built) and Deborah Halpern’s Angel, a sculpture with roots in the aboriginal aesthetic of Australia. 513
12.8 Sydney is known as a city of suburbs and single-family homes such as this one. 516 12.9 New roles for women, and new problems, have emerged in Australian cities over the
past three decades. 517
xxvi List of Illustrations
12.10 The advantage of high population density and compact urban form is that you can walk or bike to Old Victoria Market in Melbourne for the freshest of fruits, and vegetables. 519
12.11 Changes over the past three decades have produced new types of urban localities in Australia. 519
12.12 Completed in 1932, the Sydney Harbour Bridge opened up the city’s North Shore. Tourists, tethered by lifelines, have been climbing the arch since 1998. 520
12.13 Now a UNESCO World Heritage site, the Sydney Opera House has become a symbol of the island continent. 521
12.14 Sydney’s skyline, typical of a world city, dominates the capacious harbor. Can you identify Sydney Tower? 523
12.15 Kings Park in Perth offers a view of the skyline that serves the commercial interests of Western Australia and the Indian Ocean rim. 526
12.16 Ponsonby Road is now a focal point of chic eateries and boutique shopping in Auckland. 529
12.17 Located on Auckland’s North Shore, Devonport’s landscape has been almost completely transformed by suburbanization. Nevertheless, a few visual reminders of the original inhabitants remain, including this Maori warrior. 531
12.18 In Newcastle, NSW, this ClimateCam billboard broadcasts figures on the city’s electricity consumption. These are updated hourly as a way of raising awareness about the city’s contribution to resource use, GHG emissions and climate change. 532
12.19 One of the challenges of urban governance in Australia is maintaining safe streets. Signs like this one in Sydney have been increasing rapidly as people everywhere become more security conscious. 533
13.1 Urban Populations: 1950, 2000, and 2050. 536 13.2 Global Urban Population: 2010–2050. 540 13.3 At close of business on Fridays in Portland, Oregon, placards are out to remind
commuters to enjoy their weekend. It’s good for their health. 542 13.4 Repurposing old buildings to serve as apartments and condominiums in the heart of
downtown is bringing life back to central cities. Every CBD has signs like this, but this one happens to be in Cincinnati, Ohio. 545
13.5 2015 commemorated the 50th anniversary of the “March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom” led by Martin Luther King, Jr. Here at his memorial on the National Mall, a new generation looks up to Dr. King. 546
13.6 In Seoul, Korea, open space is green space. Although it’s one of the world’s megacities, Seoul has made living with nature a priority of life and governance. 547
13.7 Even short rainstorms bring flooding to Norfolk’s streets and underpasses. The problem promises to worsen as sea levels rise and much of Norfolk subsides. 549
13.8 Is this carbon-neutral office building in Melbourne, Australia, the future of sustainable urban architecture? The colorful panels on the outside are components of the sun-shade system. What you can’t see are the night cooling windows, the green roof, the vacuum toilets, and the anaerobic digester. 552
13.9 The Shard, completed in 2012, is the latest addition to London’s collection of skyscrapers and the tallest building in the European Union. Globalization has bid a whole new generation of skyscrapers into construction. 556
List of Illustrations xxvii
13.10 Wireless networks, cell phones, and matrix barcodes bring urban landscapes to life, tell the stories of times past, and signal advances in technology that mark world cities. London is so wired, you can even talk to the long-gone goats. 558
13.11 What would you build here? Let your voice be heard. Here, people along 14th Street in Washington, DC, are being challenged to create the neighborhood they want by voting on ideas that they themselves come up with. 562
13.12 Ecumenopolis: The Global City. 565 13.13 The creative class responds to culture and the arts. Without them, cities decline.
That’s why the Chrysler Museum in Norfolk, Virginia, just invested $24 million in an upgrade and brought to town Florentijn Hofman’s Rubber Duck, at least for a short visit. 567
Boxes 1.1 Globalization and World Cities 5 1.2 Jellied Eels for the Urban Palate 21 1.3 Performance Art and Psychogeography 25 1.4 Cities and Stormwater Runoff 29 1.5 Planning for Blue Space 33 2.1 Neoliberal-Parasitic Economies in Chicago 58 2.2 The Death of the Shopping Mall? 63 2.3 Suburbs Still in Crisis 78 2.4 Returning to the Tap 91 2.5 Staying Cool in Toronto 94 3.1 From Cancún to Belize City 100 3.2 Industrial Free Zones and Transnational Urbanization 105 3.3 Gangs: A Violent Urban Social Development 110 4.1 Ethnic Geography of the Guianas 140 4.2 Water Wars in Cochabamba, Bolivia 146 4.3 Mega-Events: The 2014 FIFA World Cup and the 2016 Olympics in Brazil 161 4.4 Street Working Children in the Andes 172 4.5 Urban Security and Human Rights 182 5.1 Venice and the Challenges of Climate Change 207 5.2 Growing Power: Urban Agriculture in Europe 211 5.3 Security and Surveillance in London 219 5.4 Making the Spectacular Happen: Mega-events in European Cities 225 5.5 Urban Graffiti: Is the Writing on the Wall? 231 6.1 Where does Soviet Influence Begin or End? 237 6.2 New Capital Cities in the Post-Soviet Sphere: Astana’s Amazing Growth 253 6.3 Russia in Ukraine: Understanding the Annexation of Crimea 260 6.4 Islam, Language, and Space in Moscow 262 7.1 Green Space in Beirut 286 7.2 Home Space in Tehran 297 7.3 Istanbul’s Double-edged Crisis of Urban Ecology and Democracy 311 7.4 A Hopeful Vignette: Cairo’s Al-Azhar Park 318 8.1 Water, Water, Everywhere 327 8.2 Multiple Livelihoods Strategies 329 8.3 BRICS, Urban Investment, and the Middle Class 337
xxviii List of Illustrations
8.4 Kinshasa’s Imaginative and Generative Side 343 8.5 Crisis Mapping from Kenya to the Globe 350 9.1 Call Centers, SEZs, and Sweatshops 371 9.2 The Humble Rickshaw 376 9.3 Two Billion Life Years Lost 396 9.4 Festivals in City Life 401 9.5 Devastation in the Kathmandu Valley 404
10.1 A Geography of Everyday Life 428 10.2 From Hacienda to Mixed-Use Suburbia 434 10.3 A Thirsty Singapore 438 10.4 Satellite Cities in Southeast Asia 448 10.5 Water Security and Urban Wastewater 451 11.1 Japan’s Aging Cities 469 11.2 “Cities with Invisible Walls:” the Hukou System in China 476 11.3 “Orphans” of China’s Urbanization? 477 11.4 Isolation: Peripheral Cities 489 11.5 A Stream Returns to the City of Seoul 496 12.1 Hobart as a Gateway to Antarctica 515 12.2 The Geography of Everyday Life in Suburban Sydney 517 12.3 Green Buildings 518 12.4 Multiculturalism and Local Government in Australia 522 12.5 Gentrification and Ponsonby Road, Auckland 529 13.1 Engineering Earth Futures 539 13.2 Living with Water 549 13.3 Human Geographies of the Twenty-first Century 554 13.4 Seeing Cities on the Soles of Your Feet 568
Tables 1.1 Urban Patterns in More Developed Regions and Less Developed Regions
(in thousands) 10 1.2 The Largest Cities in History 13 2.1 Megalopolitan Areas of the United States and Canada 52 2.2 The World’s Most Globally Engaged, Competitive, and Connected Cities 77 3.1 The U.S.-Mexican Border Twin Cities Phenomenon: Population and Employment,
2009, 2010 104 3.2 Levels of Urbanization in Central America 109 4.1 Urbanization in South American Countries, 1850–2015 142 4.2 Major Metropolitan Populations of South America, 1930–2015 143 4.3 Percentage of National Population in Largest Metropolis, 1950–2015 144 5.1 Top 10 Boys’ and Girls’ Names in London 201 5.2 Popular Ethnic Food in European Cities 202 5.3 European Green City Index: Top 10 Cities 206 6.1 Percent Urban Population in Each Federal Okrug 241 7.1 Megalopolises of the Greater Middle East 288 8.1 Female and Male, age 15–24, in Informal Employment 339 8.2 Urban Population as Percentage of Total Population 339 9.1 South Asia’s Twelve Largest Urban Agglomerations 373
List of Illustrations xxix
9.2 Topological Characteristics of South Asian Cities 384 9.3 Earthquake Occurrences in Nepal 404
10.1 Components of Urban Growth in Southeast Asia (percentage of urban growth) 430 12.1 Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand: Changes in Distribution of National
Population 504 12.2 Population of Pacific Island Cities 505 13.1 World’s Most Populous Cities in 2015 541 13.2 World’s Most Populous Cities in 2030 541 13.3 Quality of Living and Eco-City Rankings 568
Preface
In 1982, Cities of the World debuted. It pre-
sented an innovative approach to the study
of urban geography. Renowned urban geog-
raphers, who were regional specialists, shared
their knowledge of and insight into the his-
tory, patterns, challenges, and prospects for
cities in eleven world regions. Cities of the
World was an immediate success. Subse-
quent editions built on this model—revis-
ing, updating, modifying, and enhancing the
approach. With each edition, the popularity
of the book swelled. It is commonly found
in courses on urban geography, urban and
regional planning, as well as courses in global
affairs, anthropology, history, and econom-
ics, at both the undergraduate and graduate
levels.
Thirty-four years later, we present the sixth
edition of Cities of the World—and we pre-
sent it in color! Color photographs, regional
maps, and graphics provide a more appeal-
ing and accurate depiction of many dimen-
sions of the urban regions under study. Just as
each subsequent edition of Cities of the World
has embraced the changes encountered in the
global and regional urban systems, so too does
this sixth edition. In this, we deepen our focus
on urban environmental issues, social and
economic injustice, security and conflict, and
daily life. Building on 2015 as the Year of Water,
we have introduced urban water issues and
concerns as a common undercurrent running
through all chapters. Author teams explore
how “water” affects cities and how cities affect
water in their respective regions—from gla-
cier loss to increasing aridity, sea-level rise,
increased flooding, potable water scarcity, and
beyond. We hope our new subtitle “Regional
Patterns and Urban Environments” captures
these innovations.
All thirteen chapters in this sixth edition
have been substantially revised, and some
introduce new author teams, whom we wel-
come warmly. They bring fresh perspectives
and expertise to the project. Most authors
have done extensive fieldwork in their region
and also traveled extensively in both rural and
urban areas. The organization of this edition
is similar to the previous five. The “book end”
chapters explore contemporary world urbani-
zation (chapter 1) and the future of cities
(chapter 13). The remaining eleven chapters
are devoted to urbanization and cities in major
world regions. Each chapter begins with two
facing pages; on the left side, a regional map
that shows the major cities and, on the right, a
table of basic statistical information about cit-
ies and urbanization in each region and a list
of ten salient points about that region’s urban
experience are provided. The regional chap-
ters conclude with a list of references that can
be used by the student and instructor for addi-
tional information about cities in that region
or specific cities.
xxxii Preface
We owe a debt of gratitude to many indi-
viduals who played major roles in helping this
sixth edition see the light of day. We thank all
chapter authors for providing timely, insight-
ful, and well-written chapters and Alexis
Ellis for her valuable cartographic contribu-
tion, and Donna Gilbreath for her assistance
in preparing the index. Susan McEachern of
Rowman and Littlefield has provided long-
standing support for this volume and previ-
ous ones. Her eye for detail, continuity, and
change is unmatched. Susan’s team at Row-
man and Littlefield worked to ensure the high
quality of this edition, and we thank them
for their commitment, timely support, and
attention to detail throughout the process.
Finally, we thank our families whose enthu-
siastic and selfless support made this project
enjoyable and possible.
As always, we welcome feedback from stu-
dents and teachers on ways to ensure that sub-
sequent editions will make learning about the
world’s cities and global urbanization more
useful, appealing, challenging, and rewarding.
We hope you enjoy this latest edition.
Stanley D. Brunn
Jessica K. Graybill
Maureen Hays-Mitchell
Donald J. Zeigler
Cities of the World
Fi gu
re 1
.1
M aj
or U
rb an
A gg
lo m
er at
io ns
o f
th e
W or
ld . So
ur ce
: Un
it ed
n at
io ns
, W
or ld
U rb
an iz
at io
n Pr
os pe
ct s:
2 01
4 Re
vi si
on .
1
World Urban Development JESSICA K. GRAYBILL, MAUREEN HAYS-MITCHELL,
DONALD J. ZEIGLER, AND STANLEY D. BRUNN
KEy URbAN FACTS
Total World Population (2015) 7.3 billion
Percent Urban 54%
Total Urban Population 3.9 billion
Most Urbanized Counties Microstates such as Monaco and
Nauru (100%)
Singapore (100%)
Belgium (98%)
Least Urbanized Countries Burundi (12%)
Papua New Guinea (13%)
Uganda (16%)
Annual Urban Growth Rate (2010–2015) 0.9%
Number of Megacities (>10 million) 28
Agglomerations with 500,000 + Population 1009 (53% of world population)
Countries with Most Urban Agglomerations China (278), United States (275), India (112),
United Kingdom (140), Russia (59)
Cities with Highest Densities Dhaka, Bangladesh (112,700/sq mi, 43,500/sq km)
Hyderabad, Pakistan (104,300/sq mi, 40,300/sq km)
Mumbai, India (83,900/sq mi, 32,400/sq km)
Largest Megacities (2014) Tokyo (37.8 million)
Delhi (24.9 million)
Shanghai (23.0 million)
Ciudad de México (20.8 million)
São Paulo (20.8 million)
World Cities 88
Global Cities London, New York, Tokyo
4 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. The world’s population is growing rapidly, but the world’s urban population is growing
four times as fast.
2. In 2007, Earth became a majority-urban planet, yet the proportion of people living in cities
varies widely from 12 percent in Burundi to 100 percent in Singapore.
3. The scale of urbanization is increasing as evidenced by the emergence of megacities, conur-
bations, and megalopolises around the world.
4. Some countries’ patterns of urbanization follow the rank-size rule, while other countries
are characterized by urban primacy or dual primacy.
5. The evolution of cities is best understood as a three-stage process: preindustrial cities,
industrial cities, and postindustrial cities.
6. Cities are usually classified by function as market centers, transportation centers, or special-
ized service centers.
7. Four classic models have been proposed to explain the spatial organization of land uses
within cities: concentric zone model, sector model, multiple nuclei model, and inverse con-
centric zone model.
8. Urban management issues revolve around the environment, population, urban services,
race and ethnicity, housing, employment, privacy, governance, and globalization, among
others.
9. As the world continues to urbanize, sustainable development challenges will be increasingly
concentrated in cities.
10. Urban water issues, ranging from water quality and quantity to the challenges of sea-level
rise, occur at the intersection of nature and society.
Comparing maps of the world from 2015
and 1900 would show two features that have
become strikingly different over time and
space: proliferation of independent nations
and mushrooming numbers and sizes of cities.
A century ago, about a dozen major empires
divided the world; today, there are 195 inde-
pendent countries, most carved out of pre-
vious empires. Continued disintegration of
imperial realms gave birth to the world’s most
recent newly independent state, South Sudan,
and its capital city of Juba. Likewise, a century
ago, the number of the world’s major cities
was small and concentrated in the industri-
alized countries of Europe, North America,
and Japan. Today, the greatest numbers of cit-
ies, and the largest cities, are found in former
colonial regions of the developing world and
in China (Figure 1.1). Around the year 1800,
perhaps 3 percent of global population lived
in urban places of 5,000 people or more. By
1900, more than 13 percent did and by 2000,
this percent skyrocketed to more than 47 per-
cent. In 2007, for the first time in human his-
tory, over half of Earth’s human population
made the city their home. The rapid pace of urbanization is accompanied by globalization and the creation of world cities, the outcome of technological advances in transportation
and communication (Box 1.1). Our global
Key Chapter Themes 5
Box 1.1 Globalization and World Cities
Peter taylor, northumbria University, England
Although there is a large literature on “world” or “global” cities, little evidence has been gathered on what actually makes such cities so important: their connections with other cit- ies across the world. thus, if world cities are indeed the crossroads of globalization, then we need to consider seriously how we measure intercity relations. it was just such thinking that led to the setting up of the Globalization and World Cities (GaWC) network as a virtual center for world cities research. GaWC currently carries out three strands of research:
• Comparative City Connectivity Studies: these focus on relations between chosen cities as they respond to particular events. in one study, Singapore, new york, and London were compared in the way in which their service sectors responded to the 1997 Asian financial crisis. in another study, relations between London and Frankfurt were studied in the wake of the launch of the Euro currency. the generic finding of this work is that city competitive processes are generally much less important than cooperative processes carried out through office networks within the private sector.
• Elite Labor Migrations between Cities: Moving skilled labor around to different world cities is found to be a key globalization strategy for financial firms wanting to embed their businesses into the world-city network. For instance, London firms regularly send staff to Paris, Amsterdam, and Frankfurt to provide “seamless” service across European cities. the prime finding of this research is that a transnational space of flows is pro- duced as a necessary prerequisite for firms accumulating financial knowledge.
• Global network Connectivity of Cities: A world-city network is an amalgam of the office networks of financial and business service firms. this network has three levels: a network level of cities in the world economy, a nodal level of cities as global service centers, and a subnodal level of global service firms that are the prime creators of the world-city network. this specification directs a data collection that enables the global network connectivities of world cities to be calculated.
GaWC research goes beyond world-city formation to study world-city network formation. the focus has been on this complex process within economic globalization. For a full global urban analysis, further research is required within other important strands of globalization. the Study Group’s website is: http://www.lboro.ac.uk/gawc/.
6 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
urban habitat is increasingly connected by the
flows of people, goods, services, and capital
that unite cities, people, and environments
across time and space. Urban institutions
drive globalization, the hallmark of twenty-
first-century economic geography.
Yet, our urban planet also pulsates with prob-
lems at the human-nature interface (Figure
1.2). They range from local concerns about air
quality, to regional problems of water quality
and quantity, to global environmental change,
including rising average global temperature
and sea levels and changes to the global hydro-
sphere-atmosphere circulation patterns. Due
to the interconnectedness of people, cities, and
regions, urban problems must be approached
on multiple scales. Climate change is trans-
forming environments worldwide (albeit dif-
ferentially) and the consequences of climate
change are already being felt at the local level,
such as in coastal cities confronted by rising sea
level and in cities where temperature increases
are expected over the next century. Chicago, for
instance, is already planting more shade trees,
choosing species that will thrive in a warmer
climate. In 2014, in anticipation of warmer
school days, the city installed air-conditioning
in schools for the first time.
Worldwide urbanization has dramatic,
revolutionary implications for the history
Figure 1.2 Urban Environmental Risks. this conceptual diagram indicates the generalized, possible risks and concerns for the environment of urban and urbanizing places at (i) local, regional and global scales and (ii) across short- and long-term time horizons. because individual places will experience different suites of environmental concerns, this diagram is intended to pique discussion of possible urban environmental changes. Source: Jessica Graybill.
The World Urban System: Prospects until 2050 7
of ever-expanding urban agglomerations on human society; life-sustaining environ-
mental systems that provide water, food, and
multispecies habitats; resource development;
and governments facing increased social dis-
parities, cultural pluralism, and diversity of
political expression? Can the sustainable city movement improve health and well-being for
all of Earth’s inhabitants? How does the rise of
urbanism create new understandings and uses of, and desires for, nature by humanity?
THE WORLD URbAN SySTEM: PROSPECTS UNTIL 2050
In 1800, the world stood on the brink of
1 billion. In only 130 years, humanity added
a second billion, and in only 11 years, the last
of civilization—as dramatic as were earlier
agricultural and industrial revolutions. In
the industrial countries of Europe, North
America, Australia, and some of Asia—the
more developed countries (MDCs)—urbani-
zation accompanied and was the consequence
of industrialization. Although far from being
utopian, cities in those regions brought pre-
viously unimagined prosperity and longevity
to millions. Industrial and economic growth
combined with rapid urbanization to produce
a demographic transformation that decreased
population growth and enabled cities to
expand apace with economic development.
In the developing countries of Latin Amer-
ica, Africa, and most of Asia—the less devel-
oped countries (LDCs)—urbanization has
occurred only partially due to industrial and
economic growth. In many of these countries,
it is primarily a result of rising expectations
by rural people who migrate to cities seeking
escape from misery. This rush to the cities,
unaccompanied until very recently by signifi-
cant declines in natural population growth,
has resulted in the explosion of urban places
in LDCs.
Although there are exceptions (most nota-
bly in South America where urbanization lev-
els are high), most highly urbanized nations
experience high standards of living. However,
even in the MDCs, where life for most urban
residents is incomparably better than for those
living in the cities of LDCs, there are serious
concerns about the future of the city. What,
for example, is the optimal city size? What
should be the role of the capital city? Are cities getting too large to provide effective adminis-
tration and humane and uplifting urban envi-
ronments? Is the growth of megacities and metacities unmanageable? Will the megalop- olis or conurbation become the norm for the twenty-first century? What will be the impact
Figure 1.3 Growth of World and Urban Population, 1950–2030. Source: Un, World Urbanization Prospects: 2005.
8 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
slowly decline thereafter, decreasing to 3.2 bil-
lion in 2050. These global trends are driven
mostly by the dynamics of rural population
growth in lesser developed regions. But, the
sustained increase of the urban population
combined with the pronounced deceleration
of rural population growth will result in an
increasing proportion of the population living
in urban areas. Globally, the level of urbani-
zation is expected to rise from 54 percent in
2015 to 66 percent in 2050.
Among cities of different sizes, the world
urban population is not distributed evenly.
Over half of the world’s urban dwellers live
in cities or towns with fewer than half a mil-
lion inhabitants. The greatest numbers of
people live in cities with less than 1 million
people, but the phenomenon of the megacity is increasing worldwide. There are 28 megaci-
ties worldwide, each with at least 10 million
inhabitants, accounting for 12 percent of the
world urban population. The number of meg-
acities is projected to increase to 41 by 2030,
accounting for approximately 12 percent of
the world urban population.
Until 1975, just three megacities existed
worldwide: New York, Tokyo, and Mexico City.
Today, Asia has 11 megacities, Latin America
has 4, and Africa, Europe, and North America
have 2 each. Tokyo, the capital of Japan, is the
world’s most populous urban agglomeration,
comprised of Tokyo and 87 surrounding cit-
ies and towns. If it were a country, it would
rank 35th in population size, at 37.2 million
inhabitants. Tokyo now qualifies as a metac- ity according to the United Nation’s descrip- tion for urban agglomerations with more than
20 million inhabitants. Following Tokyo, the next largest urban agglomerations are Delhi,
Shanghai, Mexico City, Mumbai, and São
Paulo, each with 21 million inhabitants; and
New York-Newark and Los Angeles in the
billion. Between 1950 and 2008, the world’s
population increased more than 2.5 times,
but the world’s urban population increased
almost 4.5 times (Figure 1.3). Fifteen years
into the twenty-first century, world human
population is over 7 billion and over half live
in urban settings. This exponential growth of
human population and the rise of cities as the
dominant habitat for humans changes both
urban and rural places, but at different rates
in different places worldwide.
Economics, trade, culture, religion, and
environment are just a few of the linkages that
connect cities worldwide. Urban landscapes are also connected to nonurban people, places,
and phenomena that impact the city, its growth
(or decline), and the health and well-being
of urban residents. The world urban system,
then, describes people and their economic,
social, cultural, and environmental activities,
which connects urban people and phenomena
from local to global scales. Some of the most
important trends in our current world urban
system are related to continued human popu-
lation growth and spatial distribution.
The United Nation’s World Urbanization
Prospects (2014) provides a valuable overview
of urbanization trends for the next several
decades. Overall, world urban population is
expected to increase by 62 percent by 2050,
from 3.9 billion in 2014 to 6.3 billion in 2050.
Virtually all of the expected growth in the
world population will be concentrated in the
urban areas of the lesser developed regions. Slightly counterintuitive to the knowledge
that urban regions are growing is the fact that
the rate of growth of the world urban popula-
tion is slowing down. From 2025 to 2050, the
urban growth rate is expected to decline to 1.3
percent per year. While urban population will
increase, world rural population is expected to
reach a maximum of 3.4 billion in 2020 and
The World Urban System: Prospects until 2050 9
Latin America and the Caribbean, the concen-
tration of people in large cities is marked: one
in every five urban dwellers in those major
areas lives in a large urban agglomeration.
Historically, the process of rapid urbaniza-
tion started first in today’s more developed
regions. In 1920, just less than 30 percent
of their population was urban and by 1950,
more than half of their population was living
in urban areas. In 2015, high levels of urbani-
zation, surpassing 80 percent, characterized
Australia, New Zealand, and Northern Amer-
ica. Europe, with 73 percent of its population
living in urban areas, is the least urbanized in
the developed world.
More developed regions of the world had a
higher percentage of their populations living
in urban areas in both 1950 and 2010. In abso-
lute numbers, however, there were more urban
dwellers in the MDCs in 1950; by the end of the
century, this had changed (Table 1.1). Unfor-
tunately, urban development has not kept
up with urban growth throughout Middle
and South America, Africa, and the Middle
East, and much of Asia. Latin America and
the Caribbean, for instance, have caught up
to the MDCs in degree of urbanization, but
economic development, health care, and edu-
cation lag. Poor housing quality is a striking
characteristic in these regions, standing in
stark contrast to cities in the MDCs. Sub-
Saharan Africa remains the least urbanized
and the least developed region in the world.
Latin America’s urban explosion may be over,
but in Africa, India, and China, the urban
population explosion continues. Only in 2010
did China reach urban majority status and it
is expected to gain momentum as the century
proceeds.
While increases in urban population have
been felt worldwide, the pace of urban change
is most dramatic in the world’s developing
United States, with approximately 19 million
inhabitants. In 2025, the world’s most popu-
lous urban agglomeration will remain Tokyo,
with 38 million inhabitants, although its popu-
lation will scarcely increase. It will be followed
by two major megacities in India: Delhi with
29 million inhabitants and Mumbai with 26
million. Megacities are experiencing very dif-
ferent rates of population change than other
kinds of cities. Generally, their rate of growth
is slow, at less than 1 percent per year. Meg-
acities exhibiting these slow rates of growth
include all those located in developed coun-
tries and the four megacities in Latin America.
Outdone only by the metacity, megacities
represent the extreme of the distribution of
cities by population size. They are followed
by large cities with populations from 5 mil-
lion to just under 10 million, which in 2015
numbered 43 and are expected to number 63
in 2030. Three-quarters of these “megacities in
waiting,” which house 8 percent of the world
population, are located in developing coun-
tries. Cities with more than a million inhab-
itants but fewer than 5 million are numerous,
and every fifth person, statistically, lives in this
medium-sized city. Smaller cities, with popula-
tions from 500,000 to 1 million inhabitants, are
even more numerous and account for about 10
percent of the overall urban population. The
number of these cities is expected to decrease
in the next couple of decades, to house just
under half of the world’s urban population.
Distribution of the urban population by
city size class varies among world regions.
Europe is exceptional in that 67 percent of
its urban dwellers live in urban centers with
fewer than 500,000 inhabitants and only 8
percent live in cities with 5 million inhabitants
or more. Distribution of the urban population
in Africa by size of urban settlement resembles
that of Europe. In Asia, North America, and
10 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Table 1.1 Urban Patterns in More Developed Regions and Less Developed Regions (in thousands)
World pop 2014 MDR Urban LDR Urban
Urban 3,880,128 980,403 289,9725
Rural 3,363,656 275,828 3,087,828
TOTAL 7,243,784 1,256,231 5,987,553
World pop 2050 projected
Urban 6,338,611 1,113,500 5,225,111
Rural 3,212,333 189,610 3,022,723
TOTAL 9,550,944 1,303,110 8,247,834
Source: United Nations, World Urbanization Prospects: 2014
Revision.
regions (Figure 1.4). Among the less developed
regions, Latin America and the Caribbean
have an exceptionally high level of urbaniza-
tion, higher than that of Europe. Africa and
Asia, in contrast, remain mostly rural, with
40 percent and 42 percent, respectively, of
their populations living in urban areas. By
mid-century, Africa and Asia are expected
still to have lower levels of urbanization than
other world regions. This is quickly changing
in some countries; for example, the largest
urban growth is expected in India, China, and
Nigeria until at least 2050.
The greatest number of cities and the great-
est number of large cities (3 million or more
Figure 1.4 Urban Population of World Regions, 1950, 2014, 2050. Source: Un, World Urbanization Prospects: 2005 and 2014.
World Urbanization: Past Trends 11
America. Taking the long view of the overall
process of urbanization, it is noteworthy that
the movement of people out of rural into
urban areas occurs at different rates and for
different reasons in different countries, caus-
ing continuous evolution of the world urban
system over time and space.
WORLD URbANIzATION: PAST TRENDS
Early Urbanization: Antiquity
to Fifth Century ce
The first cities in human history were located
in Mesopotamia, along the Tigris and Euphra-
tes Rivers, probably about 4000 bce. Cities
were founded in the Nile Valley about 3000 bce
in the Indus Valley (present-day Pakistan), by
2500 bce in the Yellow River Valley of China by
2000 bce, and in Mexico and Peru by 500 ce
(Figure 1.6). These early cities are thought to
have been relatively small. Ur in lower Meso-
potamia, for instance, was the largest city in
inhabitants) are now found in LDCs. This
can also be seen in a list of the world’s largest
urban areas, where those in the LDCs now out-
number those in the MDCs. Of the 20 largest
urban agglomerations in 1950, 13 were in the
MDCs and 7 were in the LDCs. The 20 largest
urban agglomerations in 2000 included only
five in the MDCs, located in only three coun-
tries: Japan (Tokyo and Osaka), the United
States (New York and Los Angeles), and
France (Paris). Today, Mexico City is larger
than three-quarters of the world’s independ-
ent states. Since 1975, less developed regions
are urbanizing at much more rapid rates com-
pared to more developed regions, across all
city sizes (Figure 1.5).
Amid the continuing trend of urban growth
worldwide, some cities experience population
decline over time, especially in regions where
overall human population is not increasing or
where urban economic viability is stagnant.
Many cities currently experiencing decline are
located in parts of Asia, Europe, and North
Figure 1.5 Urban Population in MdCs versus LdCs by Size Class of Urban Settlement, 1975–2015. Source: Un, World Urbanization Prospects: 2001 and 2014 Revisions.
12 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Fi gu
re 1
.6
Sp re
ad o
f U
rb an
iz at
io n,
A nt
iq ui
ty t
o M
od er
n ti
m es
. So
ur ce
: Ad
ap te
d fr
om A
. J.
R os
e, P
at te
rn s
of C
it ie
s (S
yd ne
y: t
ho m
as n
el so
n, 1
96 7)
. 21
. Us
ed b
y pe
rm is
si on
.
World Urbanization: Past Trends 13
produce more food and other essential goods
than necessary for survival for themselves
and their families. That surplus established
a division of labor among specialized occu-
pations and the beginning of commercial
exchanges. Cities were the settlement form
adopted by those members of society whose
direct presence in places of agricultural pro-
duction was not necessary. These cities were
religious, administrative, and political cent-
ers and represented a new social order, but
one that remained dynamically linked to rural
society. In these ancient cities were specialists,
such as priests and service workers, as well
as a population that appreciated the arts and
the use of symbols for counting and writing.
the world 6,000 years ago with a population
of about 60,000. In fact, most cities of antiq-
uity held only 2,000 to 20,000 inhabitants
without significant increase in the number
of cities overall. The largest ancient city was
Rome, which Peter Hall has called “the first
great city in world history.” In the second cen-
tury ce, Rome may have had 1 million inhab-
itants, making it the world’s first city of that
size. Between the second and ninth centuries,
however, Rome’s population declined to less
than 200,000. In fact, the world’s largest cities
in 100 ce were completely different from the
largest cities in 1000 ce (Table 1.2).
Ancient cities appeared where nature and
the state of technology enabled cultivators to
Table 1.2 The Largest Cities in History
Largest Cities in the Year 100 Largest Cities in the Year 1000
1 Rome 450,000 1 Cordova, Spain 450,000
2 Luoyang, China 420,000 2 Kaifeng, China 400,000
3 Seleucia (on the Tigris), Iraq 250,000 3 Constantinople (Istanbul), Turkey 300,000
4 Alexandria, Egypt 250,000 4 Angkor, Cambodia 200,000
5 Antioch, Turkey 150,000 5 Kyoto, Japan 175,000
6 Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka 130,000 6 Cairo, Egypt 125,000
7 Peshawar, Pakistan 120,000 7 Baghdad, Iraq 125,000
8 Carthage, Tunisia 100,000 8 Nishapur (Neyshabur), Iran 125,000
9 Suzhou, China n/a 9 Al-Hasa, Saudi Arabia 110,000
10 Smyrna, Turkey 90,000 10 Pata (Anhilwara), India 100,000
Largest Cities in the Year 1500 Largest Cities in the Year 2000
1 Beijing, China 672,000 1 Tokyo, Japan 34,450,000
2 Vijayanagar, India 500,000 2 Ciudad de México (Mexico City), Mexico 18,066,000
3 Cairo, Egypt 400,000 3 New York–Newark, USA 17,846,000
4 Hangzhou, China 250,000 4 São Paulo, Brazil 17,099,000
5 Tabriz, Iran 250,000 5 Mumbai (Bombay), India 16,086,000
6 Constantinople (Istanbul), Turkey 200,000 6 Shanghai, China 13,243,000
7 Guar, India 200,000 7 Kolkata (Calcutta), India 13,058,000
8 Paris, France 185,000 8 Delhi, India 12,441,000
9 Guangzhou, China 150,000 9 Buenos Aires, Argentina 11,847,000
10 Nanjing, China 147,000 10 Los Angeles–Long Beach–Santa Ana, USA 11,814,000
Sources: Historical cities: Tertius Chandler, Four Thousand Years of Urban Growth: An Historical Census (St. David’s University Press,
1987); http://geography.about.com/library/weekly/aa01201a.htm; Year 2000 data: UN, World Urbanization Prospects: 2005 Revision,
http://www.un.org/esa/population/publications/WUP2005/2005wup.htm
14 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
only slowly or not at all. The few large cities
declined in size and function. Thus, the West-
ern Roman Empire’s fall in the fifth century
ce marked the effective end of urbanization in Western Europe for over six hundred years.
The major reason for the decline of Euro-
pean cities was a decrease in spatial inter-
action. After the collapse of Rome and the
dissolution of the empire that it commanded,
urban localities became isolated, turning
to self-sufficiency to survive. From the very
beginning, cities have survived and increased
in size because of trade with their rural hin-
terlands and with other cities, near and far.
The disruption of the Roman transportation
system, the spread of Islam in the seventh and
eighth centuries, and the pillaging raids of
the Norse in the ninth century almost com-
pletely eliminated trade between cities. These
Other attributes of early cities included taxa-
tion, external trade, social classes, and gender
differences in the assignment of work. Farms,
villages, and smaller towns surrounded each
city, where exchange of goods, ideas, and peo-
ple, and the complexity of technology and the
division of labor was limited. Trade, then, was
a basic function of ancient cities, which were
linked to the surrounding rural areas and to
other cities by a relatively complex system
of production and distribution, as well as by
religious, military, and economic institutions
(Figure 1.7).
The Middle Period: Fifth to
Seventeenth Century ce
From the fall of the Roman Empire to the
seventeenth century, cities in Europe grew
Figure 1.7 the original adobe wall around bukhara, Uzbekistan is several meters thick, a reminder of the ancient culture and history associated with this city along the Silk Route. Source: Photo by Jessica Graybill.
World Urbanization: Past Trends 15
Mercantilism, though based on new eco-
nomic practices, had one important element
in common with the system of the previous
period. It restrained and controlled individual
merchants in favor of the needs of society.
However, the rising middle class of merchants
and traders opposed any restrictions on their
profits. They opposed economic regulation
and used their growing power to demand free-
dom from state control. They desired an end
to mercantilism. As the power of the capital-
ists increased, the goal of the economy became
expansion, and economic profit became the
function of city growth. While the new market
economy provided the means for social recog-
nition, the social costs were high. The great-
est hardship fell on those receiving the fewest
benefits—women, poor farmers, and mem-
bers of the rising industrial working class. The
new force of capitalism pushed aside the last
vestiges of feudal life and created a new cen-
tral function for the city—industrialization. It
was capitalism that ushered in the Industrial
Revolution and led to the emergence of the
industrial city.
While Europe experienced a process of
decline and rebirth of the preindustrial city, areas of the non-Western world experi- enced quite different patterns. In East Asia,
for example, the city did not decline as in
medieval Europe. In China, numerous cities
founded in antiquity have remained continu-
ously occupied and economically viable for
centuries. Moreover, long before any city in
Europe again grew to a size to rival ancient
Rome, very large cities were thriving in East
Asia. Changan (present-day Xi’an), for exam-
ple, reputedly had a population of more than
1 million people when it was the capital of
Tang China in the seventh century. Kyoto,
the capital of Japan for over a thousand years
(and modeled after ancient Changan), had a
events, plus periodic attacks by Germanic and
other northern groups, resulted in an almost
complete disruption of urban and rural
interaction. Both rural and urban popula-
tions declined, transportation networks dete-
riorated, entire regions became isolated, and
people became preoccupied with defense and
survival.
Although urban revival did occur six hun-
dred years after the fall of the Roman Empire
via fortified settlements and ecclesiastical
centers, growth in population and production
remained quite small. The reason is simply
that exchange was limited—conducted largely
with people of the immediate surrounding
region. Most urban residents spent their lives
within the city walls. Thus, urban communi-
ties developed very close-knit social struc-
tures. Power was shared between feudal lords
and religious leaders. The economically active
population was organized into guilds—for
craftspersons, artisans, merchants, and others.
Social status was determined by one’s position
in the guild, family, church, and feudal admin-
istration. Gender roles were also well defined.
Despite the rigorous societal structure, mer-
chants and the guilds saw innovative possibili-
ties in “free cities,” where a person could reach
his or her full potential within a community
setting.
Over time, commerce expanded and linked
cities to expanding state power, resulting in a
system called mercantilism. The purpose of
mercantilism was to use the power of the state
to help the nation develop its economic poten-
tial and population. Mercantile policies pro-
tected merchant interests by controlling trade
subsidies, creating trade monopolies, and
maintaining strong, armed forces to defend
commercial interests. Cities were mercantil-
ism’s growth centers, and specialization and
trade kept the system alive.
16 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
cities in the vast realm of Latin America that
reflected European cultures. In Sub-Saharan
Africa, the indigenous cities of various Afri-
can kingdoms, such as Mali, Songhay, Axum,
and Zimbabwe, had existed for centuries but
were also impacted by European colonialism.
By the nineteenth century, they were largely
destroyed, and Europeans created new com-
mercial cities, usually coastal, that quickly
dominated the region.
Hence, the European-created city became
the model for urban growth and develop-
ment worldwide with the materialization of
this vision of the city in Europe and through
its export to colonial empires after 1500 ce. In
some regions, it was imposed on indigenous
societies that were exterminated or displaced
(as in North and South America, Australia,
and the Pacific). In regions with long histo-
ries of indigenous cultures and urban life, it
existed alongside and transformed indigenous
cities (as in most of Asia, the Middle East, and
Africa).
Industrial and Postindustrial Urbanization:
Eighteenth Century to the Present
Only after the Industrial Revolution, which
began around 1750, did significant worldwide
urbanization occur. Industrial cities, drawing
first on water power and then on steam gener-
ated from coal, saw an increase in the scale of
manufacturing. The factory system was born,
the demand for labor increased, and rural-to-
urban migration swelled the size of cities, first
in Great Britain, then in Europe and North
America. By the nineteenth century, cities
emerged as important places of population
concentration. In 1900, only one nation, Great
Britain, could be regarded as an urbanized
society in the sense that more than half of its
inhabitants resided in urban places. During
population exceeding 1 million by the middle
of the eighteenth century. Although most of
the ancient cities of Asia had populations of
less than 1 million, they were still far larger
than cities in Europe until the commercial-
industrial revolutions there. The principal
explanation for this historical pattern of urban
growth lies in the very different cultures and
geographical environments, plus the sites and situations of the great cities that anchored Asian civilizations.
Although empires waxed and waned in
Asia, just as in Europe, premodern cities there
continued to serve as vital centers of political
administration, cultural and religious author-
ity, and markets for agricultural surplus. Only
with the arrival of Western colonialism did
those societies and their cities begin to be
threatened. Several centuries of Western colo-
nialism in Asia added a new kind of city to the
region, a Western commercial city sometimes
grafted onto a traditional city, sometimes cre-
ated anew. In either case, the new colonial city came eventually to dominate eastern Asia’s
urban landscape. That dominance has con- tinued into the contemporary period.
In the Greater Middle East, the preindus-
trial city also existed and thrived through the
centuries, long before Europeans began colo-
nizing the region. But once colonialism was
fully asserted in the region, the same process
of grafting and creating new Western com-
mercial cities occurred, with consequences
similar to those in eastern Asia.
In Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America,
the urban experience varied somewhat from
that of much of Asia and the Middle East. In
Latin America, the indigenous city—and the
societies that created that city, such as the
Mayan, Incan, and Aztec—was obliterated
by Spanish conquest and colonization. The
Spanish and the Portuguese thus created new
City Functions and Urban Economies 17
on the characteristics of a particular site and
more on being centrally located with respect
to their market areas. These centers tend to be
located within the trade areas of larger cities:
people living in small cities must go to larger
cities to make certain purchases for which
there is not a sufficient market locally. There
is thus a spatial order to settlements and their
functional organization. Central place theory,
as developed by geographer Walter Christaller
in the 1930s, explained the regular size, spac-
ing, and functions of urban settlements as
they might be distributed across a fertile agri-
cultural region, for instance. In central place
theory, the largest cities, or highest-order
centers, are surrounded by medium-sized cit-
ies that are in turn surrounded by small cities,
all forming an integrated part of a spatially
organized, nested hierarchy. The locational
orientation of market centers is quite different
from the locational orientation of transporta-
tion and specialized function cities.
Transportation cities perform break-of-
bulk or break-in-transport functions along
waterways, railroads, or highways. Where
raw materials or semi-finished products are
transferred from one mode of transport to
another—for example, from water to rail or
rail to highway—cities emerge as processing
centers or as trans-shipment centers. Unlike
central places, whose regularity in location
is accounted for by marketing principles,
transportation cities are located in linear
patterns along rail lines, coastlines, or major
rivers. Frequently, major transport cities are
the focus of two or more modes of transpor-
tation, for example, the coastal city that is
the hub of railways, highways, and shipping
networks.
Today, of course, almost all cities have mul-
tiple transportation linkages. Exceptions tend
to be isolated towns, such as mining centers
the twentieth century, however, the number
of urbanized nations increased dramatically.
In the United States, the 1920 census revealed
that a majority of Americans lived in cities
for the first time. The great industrial cities of
Manchester and Birmingham blossomed in
England during this period. Scotland saw the
rise of Glasgow. In the United States, econo-
mies based on manufacturing built Chicago,
Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, and St. Louis. In the
early and mid-twentieth century, the automo-
bile industry transformed another set of cit-
ies: Detroit in the United States, Turin in Italy,
Tolliati in Russia, and Adelaide in Australia.
CITy FUNCTIONS AND URbAN ECONOMIES
City Functions
Some cities are born because a strategic
location must be defended; others serve the
demands of trade and commerce; others serve
governmental administration or religious
pilgrimage, and still others thrive from turn-
ing primary commodities into manufactured
goods. Geographers have traditionally classi-
fied cities into three categories based on their
dominant functions: (1) market centers (trade
and commerce); (2) transportation centers
(transport services); and (3) specialized ser-
vice centers (such as government, recreation,
or religious pilgrimage). Some cities serve
a single function—the “textile cities” of the
southeastern United States, for instance—but
functional diversity is more common.
Cities categorized as market centers are also
known as central places because they perform
a variety of retail functions for the surrounding
area. Central places offer multiple goods and
services (from grocery stores and gas stations
to schools and corporate headquarters). Small
central places, or market centers, depend less
18 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
mix of primary, secondary, tertiary, and qua-
ternary activities within urban regions as they
have changed over time helps identify specific
stages of humanity’s economic evolution (Fig-
ure 1.8).
The association between urbanization and
industrialization has been characteristic of
Europe, North America, Japan, Australia, and
New Zealand. That is, cities and industries
grew synchronously. Across Africa, Asia, and
Latin America, many urbanizing countries
have not experienced a corresponding increase
in the manufacturing sector of the economy.
Instead, their service sectors—small retailers,
government servants, teachers, professionals,
and bankers—provide jobs for growing urban
populations. Also included are many service
workers in the informal economy, including
people willing to perform odd jobs (watching
parked cars or cleaning houses) and work-
ing in unskilled service occupations, such as
street vending, scavenging, and laboring at
construction sites. In the informal sector, bar-
ter and the exchange of services often take the
place of monetary exchanges, thus bypassing
government accounting and taxation.
Basic and Nonbasic Economic Activities
The economic base concept states that two
types of activities or functions exist: those that
are necessary for urban growth and those that
exist primarily to supplement those necessary
functions. The former are called basic eco-
nomic activities. They involve the manufac-
turing, processing, or trading of goods or the
providing of services for markets located out-
side the city’s boundaries. Examples include
automobile assembly and insurance under-
writing. They are the key to economic growth.
Economic functions of a city-servicing nature
are called nonbasic functions. Grocery stores,
in Siberia that may have only air or rail con-
nections or primitive seasonal roads to the
outside. Cities performing single functions,
such as recreation, mining, administration, or
manufacturing, are called specialized function
cities. A very high percentage of the popula-
tion participating in one or two related activi-
ties is evidence of specialization. Oxford,
England, is a university town; Rochester, Min-
nesota, is a health-care town; Norfolk, Vir-
ginia, a military town; Canberra, Australia,
a government town; and Cancún, Mexico, a
tourist town. Specialization is also evident in
cities where the extraction or processing of a
resource is the major activity. Cities labeled as
mining and manufacturing cities have much
more specialization than those with diversi-
fied economic bases.
Sectors of the Urban Economy
The economic functions of a city are reflected
in the composition of its labor force. Prein-
dustrial societies are associated with rural
economies. These economies have the largest
percentages of their labor force engaged in the
primary sector: agriculture, fishing, forestry,
mining. Preindustrial cities have historically
been commercial islands in seas of rural pop-
ulations. The Industrial Revolution triggered
the emergence of cities oriented to manufac-
turing, the secondary sector of the economy. It
created a demand for labor in factories, and a
larger percentage of the population began liv-
ing in urban areas. As factory workers added
their buying power to the city’s economy, the
service sector, or tertiary economic activities,
grew as well. The quaternary sector, a more
advanced stage of the service sector, consists
of information- and intellect-intensive ser-
vices, which play an increasingly important
role in the world economy. Identifying the
City Functions and Urban Economies 19
cities have lost their manufacturing base and
have sought to create service industries for
which there is a larger market (Box 1.2). The
economic base of the postindustrial city, in fact, is to be found in the tertiary and qua-
ternary sectors of the economy. Silicon val-
leys developed in the late twentieth century
to service the needs of the computer indus-
try. In the early twenty-first century, biotech
valleys are becoming the economic base of
choice. Cities such as Geneva, Singapore, San
Francisco, and Boston are competing to have
biotechnology firms move into their regions.
Money from biomedical and pharmaceuti-
cal research provides an economic base tied
to high-level applications of technology and
brainpower.
restaurants, beauty salons, and so forth are
nonbasic economic activities because they
cater primarily to residents within the city
itself (Figure 1.9). Income generated by a
city’s economic base is channeled back into
the city’s nonbasic sector, where employees in
those industries purchase groceries, gasoline,
insurance, entertainment, and other everyday
needs and wants.
The economic base of some cities is
grounded in manufacturing industries, the
secondary sector of the economy. Manches-
ter, England, and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
are prime examples of older industrial cit-
ies whose growth and prosperity depended
upon world markets for cotton textiles and
steel, respectively. Since World War II, both
Figure 1.8 Labor Force Composition at Various Stages in human history. Source: Adapted from Ronald Abler et al., Human Geography in a Shrinking World (belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 1975), 49.
20 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
services than smaller cities. Conversely, condi-
tions can create negative circular and cumu-
lative causation—a downward spiral. Thus, it
is easy to understand why city mayors work
so hard to promote their respective cities as
favorable sites for investment and new busi-
ness locations.
THEORIES ON THE SPATIAL STRUCTURE OF CITIES
Geographers have long been intrigued by
the internal spatial structure of cities. Com-
ponents of that structure include industrial
zones, commercial districts, warehouse rows,
residential areas, parks and open space, and
transportation routes, among others. Multiple
As a city’s economic base increases, it has a
multiplier effect throughout the community.
Growth (and conversely, decline) becomes a
cumulative process in which growth begets
growth (and vice versa). This is known as the
principle of circular and cumulative causa-
tion. For instance, one of the major ways cities
grew in the past was by attracting more manu-
facturing enterprises. Each new factory stim-
ulated general economic development and
population growth. Business output increased
due to a greater demand for products. Rising
profits increased savings, causing investments
to rise. Increased productivity resulted in
greater wealth. The growing population then
reached a new level, or threshold, resulting
in a new round of demands. Larger cities are
able to offer a greater number and variety of
Figure 1.9 Street peddlers in Shakhrisabz, Uzbekistan, the birthplace of tamerlane (timur) sell goods from China and turkey to local Uzbek customers in this ancient Silk Route city. Source: Photo by Jessica Graybill.
Theories on the Spatial Structure of Cities 21
Box 1.2 Jellied eels for the urban Palate
timothy Kidd, old dominion University
the gastronomical scene of a city is often a significant cultural marker showcasing changes in ethnic composition, shifting taste preferences, and availability of ingredients. Cities often have their own unique dishes, restaurants, drinks, and street food. Street food ranges from the doner kebab in istanbul to hot dogs in new york to balut in Manila, typically sold from stalls or vans in parts of the city with high foot traffic. the U.n. estimates that 2.5 billion people eat such street food everyday because it is faster and cheaper than restaurant meals. As fast food franchises have gone global, however, the nature of the take-away meal has been altered. While there are often local variations on foreign-based fast food menus (e.g., Mcdonald’s McAloo Tikki potato burger in india), there is still a homogenized feel to such establishments. in some cases, including London, global franchises coupled with changing demographics have been deleterious for traditional street food purveyors.
in London’s historically poor East End, the remnants of uniquely English fast food still exist. Perhaps most famous of all traditional dishes are jellied eels. the thames River estuary provided an excellent habitat for eels, and fish traps known as eel bucks lined the waterway to reap the bounty. the plentiful eels became something of a delicacy among the poor, immi- grant East Enders. Fishmongers sold them in great markets like Spitalfields to restaurants and to street hawkers known as “piemen.” by the first half of the 1800s, however, London’s industrial expansion brought severe pollution that had a decidedly negative effect on the thames fishery.
the decline in fish stocks heralded the beginning of a new East End dining tradition: the eel, pie, and mash shop. these eateries served meat pies made from beef or mutton with mashed potatoes (“mash”) doused with parsley-infused, green-eel gravy. often the restau- rants were similar in their interior décor, sporting tiled floors and walls, marble counter tops, and wooden benches. From the Victorian era until the end of World War ii, eel, pie, and mash shops boomed. today, there are probably fewer than 100 pie and mash shops left in the East End, many thriving on nontraditional items such as vegetarian pies.
in the late twentieth century, considerable numbers of bangladeshis moved into the East End. Soon, curries and kedgeree became more popular than the traditional jellied eels. how- ever, in the 1990s and 2000s, the traditional English fare had a bit of a renaissance when celebrity chefs like Gordon Ramsey began serving upscale versions. With more sit-down restaurants and pubs selling eels, the once-common street stalls saw business falter. Vari- ous media including the bbC lamented the 2013 closure of the famous tubby isaac’s after 94 years of serving jellied eels from a food cart.
22 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Chopped into bite size pieces with bones left in and boiled with herbs, the eels are left to cool in their own gelatinous stock and then served with chili vinegar. it is said to be an acquired taste. Perhaps preferences for pizza or chicken tikka are proving more popular for younger generations than this most traditional English dish. Eel aficionados, however, appear to have a new source for their delicacy: supermarket chains. Since the recession of 2008, large stores such as Morrison’s, Sainsbury’s, and tesco have started selling jellied eels, with sales rapidly growing as customers seek cheap protein just as they did in the 1800s. What was once the quintessential London street food can now be found as far away as Scotland and northern ireland. in London, the East End’s most popular street food lives on in toponyms like the culturally famous Eel Pie island in the River thames, and in the Eel Pie Recording Studios founded by guitarist Pete townsend of the Who.
theories have been developed to describe and
explain the pattern of land use and the distri-
bution of population groups within cities. The
four most widely accepted theories, or mod-
els, of city structure are the concentric zone
model, the sector model, the multiple nuclei
model, and the inverse concentric zone model
(Figure 1.10). All evolved from observations
of urban landscapes that suggested that differ-
ent land uses were predictably, not randomly,
distributed across the city.
The Concentric Zone Model
A concentric zone theory was first concep-
tualized by Friedrich Engels (co-author of
the Communist Manifesto) in the mid-nine-
teenth century. In 1844, Engels observed that
the population of the industrial city of Man- chester, England, was residentially segregated
based on class. He noted that the commer-
cial district (offices plus retail and wholesale
trade) was located in the center of Manches-
ter and extended about half a mile radially.
Besides the commercial district, Manchester
consisted of unmixed working people’s quar-
ters, which extended a mile and a half (2.3 km)
around the commercial district. Next, extend-
ing outward from the city, were the comfort-
able country homes of the upper bourgeoisie.
Engels believed this general pattern to be more
or less common to all industrial cities.
Engels may have described the pattern first,
but most social scientists consider E. W. Bur-
gess, a University of Chicago sociologist, to
be the father of the concentric zone model.
According to Burgess, the growth of any city
occurs through radial expansion from the city
core, forming a series of concentric rings, or a
set of nested circles that represents successive
zones of specialized urban land uses. The five
zones that Burgess described during the 1920s,
before the automobile transformed Chicago,
were: (1) the central business district (CBD)
and its retail and wholesale areas; (2) the zone
of transition, characterized by stagnation and
social deterioration; (3) the zone of factory
workers’ homes; (4) the zone of better residen-
tial units, including single-family dwellings
and apartments; and (5) the commuter zone,
extending beyond the city limits and consist-
ing of suburbs and satellite communities.
The process that Burgess used to explain
these concentric rings was called invasion and
Theories on the Spatial Structure of Cities 23
Figure 1.10 Generalized Patterns of internal Urban Structure. Source: Adapted from various sources.
succession. Each type of land use and each
socioeconomic group in the inner zone tends
to extend its zone by invasion of the next outer
zone. As the city expands, population groups
are spatially redistributed by residence and
occupation. Burgess further demonstrated
that many social characteristics—the per-
centage of foreign-born groups, poverty, and
delinquency rates—are spatially distributed
in a series of gradients away from the central
business district. Each tends to decrease out-
ward from the city center.
The Sector Model
Homer Hoyt, an economist, developed the sec-
tor model in the 1930s. Hoyt examined spatial
variations in household rent in 142 American
cities. He concluded that general patterns of
housing values applied to all cities and that
those patterns tended to appear as sectors,
not concentric rings. According to Hoyt, resi-
dential land use arranges itself along selected
highways leading into the CBD, thus giving
land-use patterns a directional bias. High-rent
residences were the most important group in
explaining city growth because they tended to
pull the entire city in the same physical direc-
tion. New residential areas did not encircle the
city at its outer limits, but extended farther
and farther outward along select transporta-
tion axes, giving the land-use map the appear-
ance of a pie cut into many pieces. The sectoral
pattern of city growth is partially explained by
a filtering process. When new housing is con-
structed, it is located primarily on the outer
edges of the high-rent sector. The homes of
community leaders, new offices, and stores
are attracted to the same areas. As inner, mid-
dle-class areas are abandoned, lower-income
groups filter into them. By this process, the
city grows over time in the direction of the
expanding high-rent residential sector.
The Multiple Nuclei Model
In 1945, two geographers, Chauncy Harris and
Edward Ullman, developed a third model to
explain urban land-use patterns, the multiple
nuclei model. According to their theory, cities
tend to grow around several distinct nodes,
thus forming a polynuclear (many-centered)
24 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
hole in the doughnut is the central city (with
poor, mostly nonwhite, blue-collar, working-
class residents, large numbers of whom are
on welfare, and a declining tax base and econ-
omy). The ring of the doughnut is the suburbs
(rich, mostly white, middle- and upper-class,
white-collar employment, and an expanding
tax base and economy). Old, often declining
manufacturing tends to be found in the hole;
new, often high-tech manufacturing tends to
be located in the suburban ring, in the edge
cities. In the twenty-first century, however,
city centers are reinventing themselves by
building more residential quarters, upgrad-
ing infrastructure, invigorating the shopping
experience, showcasing the arts (Box 1.3), and
emphasizing mixed land-use development.
The Inverse Concentric Zone Model
The preceding three theories of urban spatial
structure apply primarily to cities of the MDCs
and to American cities in particular. Many cit-
ies in the LDCs follow somewhat different
growth patterns. A frequent one is the inverse
concentric zone pattern, which is a reversal of
the concentric zone model. Cities where this
pattern exists have been called preindustrial; that is, they are primarily administrative and/
or religious centers (or were at the time of
their founding). In such cities, the central area
is the place of residence of the elite class. The
poor live on the periphery. Unlike most cit-
ies in the MDCs, social class in these places is
inversely related to distance from the center of
the city. The reasons for this pattern are two-
fold: (1) the lack of adequate and dependable
transportation systems, which thus restricts
the elites to the center of the city so they can be
close to their places of work, and (2) the func-
tions of the city, which are primarily admin-
istrative and religious/cultural, are controlled
pattern, which is explained by four factors. (1)
Certain activities are limited to particular sites
because they have highly specialized needs. For
example, a retail district must be widely acces-
sible, which is best found in a central location,
while a manufacturing district needs trans-
portation facilities. (2) Related activities or
economic functions tend to cluster in the same
district because their activities are more effi-
cient as a cohesive unit. An example is spatial
clustering of automobile dealers, tire shops,
and auto repair and glass shops. (3) Some
related activities, by their very nature, repel
each other. A high-class residential district,
for example, will normally locate away from
a heavy manufacturing district. (4) Certain
activities, unable to generate enough income
to pay the high rents of certain sites, may
be relegated to more inaccessible locations.
Examples may include some specialty shops.
The number of distinct nuclei occurring
within a city is likely to be a function of city
size and age of development. Auto-oriented
cities, which often have a distinctly horizontal
rather than vertical form, include industrial
parks, regional shopping centers, and suburbs
layered by age of residents, income, and hous-
ing value. Rampant urban sprawl is likely to be
reflected in a mixed pattern of industrial, com-
mercial, and residential areas in peripheral
locations. Geographer Peirce Lewis describes
this sprawling urban landscape as the galactic metropolis because the nucleations resemble a galaxy of stars and planets. Some of those
nucleations become cities in the suburbs, what
some call edge cities. Edge cities are, in effect,
the CBDs of newly emerging urban centers
scattered through the newer suburban ring
surrounding older central cities. This pattern
reinforces what has been described as the typi-
cal urban spatial model for most U.S. urban
areas, the doughnut model. In this model, the
Theories on the Spatial Structure of Cities 25
Box 1.3 Performance art and Psychogeography
Katrinka Somdahl-Sands, Rowan University
the performance of Go! Taste the City took place along seven blocks of nicollet Avenue in Minneapolis. the bodyCartography Project, and olive bieringa as its representative, trans- gressed the norms of city streets by adding a new practice: dance. bieringa actively engages with city streets to expose those edges within urban environments that lie below the surface of social consciousness. For her Minneapolis audience, she made it possible to experience the city in an entirely new way.
the most common way of being aware of our bodies moving through city spaces is as a pedestrian. the habitual practice of walking unintentionally conveys societal conventions regarding the “appropriateness” of certain bodily actions. the way one walks can reinforce (or disrupt) cultural practices of racial, ethnic, class, and gender differentiation. the act of walking, usually an unconscious act, becomes a kind of performance. dance, on the other hand, actively and consciously manipulates the aspects that make walking a powerful point of study. it uses the physicality of the body to articulate complex thoughts and feelings that cannot be easily put into words—represented. dancing in city streets questions the rational- ist view that dominates much of modern life.
down nicollet Avenue, olive bieringa skipped, slid, and swirled; raced, did headstands, and rolled around on the ground; swayed in the wind produced by passing automobiles; darted in and out of the dappled sunlight produced by street-side trees; shifted effortlessly between moments of quiet and bustle; laid in the street until an approaching bus forced her back to the sidewalk; and danced on mounds of dirt produced by construction projects. All of her self-propelled movement created a particular sense of place.
the Situationists international’s (Si) notion of psychogeography and use of the derive, or drift, help us situate bieringa’s performance. Psychogeography explores the hidden, non- physical connections between spaces, acknowledging how the built environment conditions our access and feelings on city streets. drift is intended as a nonverbal discourse on urban- ism’s terrain and the encounters found there. bieringa’s dance was responding to the psycho- geography of nicollet Avenue. She actively interacted with elements and individuals of the city that most take for granted or try to avoid. bieringa’s race, gender, and occupational sta- tus were explicitly juxtaposed against the expectations of comportment. When she behaved “normally” she was invisible, yet when she spun through intersections or crawled in a park she was seen. Women are expected to be workers or consumers in public space. Participat- ing in city life in other ways becomes a fundamentally transgressive and transformative act. bieringa was not the stereotypical woman in the city. She used her female body to disrupt (transgress) what women “do” on city streets. Consequently, bieringa was able to reveal the power relations behind why some bodies are more noticeable than others.
26 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
than in China and countries of the former
Soviet bloc, where various forms of the social- ist city were created and where internal spatial structures were quite unlike those described
by any of these four theories. The legacy of
those socialist patterns lingers, even as free-
market forces transform those cities.
URbAN CHALLENGES
Managing the Environment
Air and water pollution, excessive noise lev-
els, water quality, visual blight, and land
clearing for urban expansion are among the
many serious urban environmental problems
worldwide (Figure 1.2). Cities in the MDCs
have the means to address these problems, but
cities in the LDCs often regard such concerns
as less important than immediate economic
and well-being concerns. For instance, cities
with the greatest air pollution are no longer
affluent London (formerly nicknamed “the
Big Smoke”) and Los Angeles (once dubbed
“Smog Central”), but developing cities like
Shanghai, Mexico City, and São Paulo. An
additional environmental problem arises
from the expansion of urban areas into
nearby agriculturally productive land. Urban
expansion swallows up about 2 million acres
(809,600 hectares) in China and 1 million
acres (404,600 hectares) in the United States
of farmland annually. Moreover, global cli-
mate change adds new dimensions to urban
environmental problems experienced as water
by the elite and concentrated in the center of
the city (with its government buildings, cul-
tural institutions, places of worship, etc.).
As many developing countries industrial-
ize, newer growth industries tend to locate
on city peripheries, often in industrial parks
or enterprise zones established by the govern-
ment for the purpose of attracting domestic
and foreign investors. City centers tend to be
too congested for industrial plants of any con-
siderable size and urban elites often do not
want large industrial plants near their places
of work and residence. Hence, emerging grad-
ually in many of the larger cities of the LDCs is
the pattern of the multiple nuclei model, with
new industrial parks serving as the nuclei. In
other words, the inverse concentric zone pat-
tern, while still valid in many LDCs, is merg-
ing with the multiple nuclei pattern.
As useful as these four models are, they
must be viewed as generalizations about an
extremely complex mix of factors that influ-
ence urban land use (Figure 1.11). Elements
of more than one model are present in any
city. Moreover, each of the models must be
viewed as dynamic because ongoing changes
in economic functions, social and administra-
tive services, transportation, and population
groups continually alter the size and shape of
specific sectors or zones (Figure 1.12). Fur-
thermore, the complexities of applying these
theories multiply when working with non-
Western cultures, economic systems, and
urban places. Nowhere is this more apparent
nicollet Avenue took on a whole new meaning for those who saw it under the careful guid- ance of olive bieringa. by engaging audience members, both at the level of the mind and the body, she asked her audience to consciously consider how meaning was entwined in their urban environment. one does not need to “dance” down a street to become conscious of the psychogeography that is already there; one only needs to slow down enough to see them.
Urban Challenges 27
Figure 1.11 these cartograms indicate the amount of territory classified as urban in countries worldwide (not all countries are included). Source: demographia World Urban Areas 11th Annual Edition: 2015:01, January 2015. http://www.demographia.com/db-worldua.pdf
28 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
described as a cause of problems than itself
a problem. Size presents a particularly severe
challenge in less developed regions, where the
economic base of cities is inadequate to cope
with stresses created by increasing human
habitation of urban places. A concomitant
factor of excessive size is overcrowding, mean-
ing too many people occupy too little space,
but it does not always equate to population
density. Some cultures—and some people—
are more adapted to high-density living than
others. It is sometimes difficult to compre-
hend the magnitude and effects of the mass
of humanity that lives in—and is moving
to—larger cities such as Manila, Shanghai, or
Cairo, especially for citizens of MDCs today,
becomes scarcer; heat waves more frequent,
prolonged, and severe; and sea levels rise.
Global climate change will affect cities differ-
ently depending on their physical locations
(e.g., coastal or inland, desert or tropical), but
scientific consensus by the world’s top climate
scientists, as reported in the Intergovernmen-
tal Panel on Climate Change Fifth Assessment
Report in 2014, indicates changing environ-
mental conditions for most cities within the
next century (Box 1.4).
Managing Population Size and Growth
Excessive size of urban regions, in popula-
tion and in geographical area, might best be
Figure 1.12 the Frontenac hotel was built by the Canadian Pacific Railway. As the most well- known signature architecture of Quebec City, it still functions as tourist magnet even though most no longer come by train. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Urban Challenges 29
Box 1.4 Cities and Stormwater runoff
Michael h. Finewood, Pace University
With the goal of restoring the biological, chemical, and physical integrity of the country’s waterways, the Clean Water Act (CWA) is the United States’ seminal water pollution law. it has been successful in returning many rivers and streams to a swimmable, fishable, and drinkable status. however, the design of the CWA differentiates between two types of pollu- tion. Point sources flow from a specific source (e.g., a pipe) and are federally regulated; they are permitted and enforced. the CWA does a relatively good job at managing these sources of pollution. on the other hand, nonpoint sources flow diffusely across the landscape during and after rain or snowmelt. they are regulated in a more haphazard manner because the CWA must rely on a combination of best management practices, federal encouragement, lawsuits, grants, and technical assistance.
Metropolitan regions are among the largest sources of nonpoint source pollution in the United States, making it a critical issue for metropolitan environmental planning. For east- ern, postindustrial cities (e.g., Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and new york City), nonpoint source pollution from stormwater runoff embodies the wicked nature of urban water governance. When it rains enough in these cities, impervious surfaces such as roads and rooftops prevent water from percolating into the soil. instead, stormwater tends to pool and run off hardened surfaces to various low points in the city, such as drains or nearby waterways.
there are two fundamental challenges here. First, stormwater runoff overwhelms sew- age treatment plants. in many cities, the volume of runoff has increased as our cities have expanded outward, hardening the landscape with roads and rooftops. Existing urban water conveyance systems and treatment plants were not designed to handle growing volumes of stormwater; they can’t keep up with the growth. this is particularly deleterious when sewer and stormwater systems are combined. in this case, when enough water overwhelms the system, it introduces sewage and other pollutants into local rivers and streams. And, this leads to the second point.
When stormwater runs across hardened surfaces, it picks up pollutants from cars, power plant emissions, and other sources, which then make their way into rivers and streams. As cities experience what can often be just a fraction of an inch of rain, the systems overflow, and sewage and polluted stormwater back up or run off into local waterways. Add to this scenario climate change and increasingly fragmented communities, and it becomes clear as to why this is such a wicked problem. nonetheless, federal, state, and local regulations compel metropolitan regions to address the issue.
but here is the good thing. there are some innovative ways that communities are try- ing to address stormwater challenges. From technical approaches, such as sustainable drainage systems, to community-driven approaches, such as ecodistrict planning, munici- palities are realizing that multidisciplinary, collaborative, and community-based pro- jects have created the most overall benefits, while meeting water quality regulations.
30 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
services for all species. For example, as cities in
the arid and semi-arid western United States
continue to increase in population and spatial
extent, many regional and city leaders have
two major concerns: (1) providing adequate
water supplies, both in quantity and quality,
for rising demand and (2) managing increased
human-wildlife contact as suburbanization
encroaches on natural habitats and water sup-
plies of, for example, bobcats, mountain lions,
and coyotes. A drastic example of water sup-
ply concerns is that of Lake Powell, on the
Colorado Rover, the second largest reservoir
in the United States. After years of diminish-
ing snowfall (and thus river flow and lake fill)
in the Rocky Mountains, this reservoir is now
filled to only 45 percent of its capacity, which
was full only 15 years ago. The Colorado River
and Lake Powell serve ranches and agricul-
tural zones across the western states, includ-
ing those in California, which provides most
of the nation with fresh produce year round.
These water features are also a key component
in the water delivery system for the ever-grow-
ing desert cities in the Southwestern United
States, such as Las Vegas in Nevada and Phoe-
nix in Arizona.
Managing Urban Services
With so many people in cities, local govern-
ments are challenged to provide all of the neces-
sary human services for residents—education,
who are accustomed to less hectic paces of
urbanization and are unfamiliar with extreme
overcrowding in their cities. Government-
directed land-use planning is often used as an
antidote to the uncontrolled size and growth
of cities; and, in some countries, planning has
included new towns as instruments of popu- lation redistribution.
The rate of population growth—or
decline—may challenge cities as well. Some
cities, especially in LDCs, are growing so fast
that economic development cannot keep up.
Hyperurbanization describes what is happen-
ing in the world’s most rapidly growing cities.
Indeed, introduction of the term “metacity”
by the United Nations indicates that growth
of the very largest urban places, with over
20 million inhabitants, will only continue as
urbanization continues. Conversely, some
cities in the developed world may be stagnat-
ing or declining. Whether in Japan, Russia,
Germany, or the United States, the problems
of no-growth cities are very similar. They
are often home to industries with outdated
technology, high production costs, expensive
labor, an aging workforce, and products with
declining demand. In the developing world,
these cities are generally victims of deindus-
trialization. They have not contended with
transition from manufacturing to service-
based economies.
In growing urban places, concern exists
about the future of ecosystem functions and
in other words, urban water governance strategies that are locally negotiated, with a wide range of stakeholders participating in the process, can produce outcomes that create multiple values for communities. think here of a river walk that serves as a recreational space, ripar- ian restoration, and expanded floodplain to mitigate flooding; or green infrastructure that captures stormwater before it is introduced into the system, while simultaneously enhancing biodiversity and increasing community greenspace.
Urban Challenges 31
Managing Slums and Squatter Settlements
Most cities in the developing world have
slums or squatter settlements, poorer commu-
nities that are not fully integrated, socially or
economically, into the development process.
Squatter settlements have various names in
different countries: barriadas or asentimientos
humanos in Peru, favelas in Brazil, geçekondu
in Turkey, bustees in India, and bidonvilles
in former French colonies. Slums tend to be
found in old, run-down areas of inner cities
(sometimes, paradoxically, on very valuable
land). Squatter settlements, usually located
on the outskirts of cities in the developing
world, are typically newer and comprised of
makeshift dwellings erected without official
permission on land not owned by squatters.
They may be constructed of cardboard, tin,
adobe bricks, mats, sacks, or any other avail-
able materials. They tend to lack essential ser-
vices, sometimes even electricity. Because of
health care, pharmacies, clean water, sew-
age disposal, garbage pick-up, police and fire
protection, disaster relief, public parks, mass
transit, among numerous other essential
services (Figure 1.13). How can a city in the
developing world that is doubling in popula-
tion approximately every ten years maintain
the economic growth needed to provide for
so many new inhabitants, particularly when
those new residents are poor? Even in the
world’s most developed countries, providing
social and environmental services to sprawl-
ing, energy-inefficient suburban and exurban
regions strains municipal budgets. For exam-
ple, many urban school districts in the United
States struggle to fund students every school
year, creating social inequalities within cit-
ies and deepening urban-suburban divides.
Environmentally, cities may struggle to pro-
vide sufficiently clean water supplies for an
ever-growing population, as demand rises but
water supplies do not.
Figure 1.13 Even in rich cities such as Macao, one of China’s Special Administrative Regions, scavengers find a niche in the urban ecosystem by collecting cardboard and other items that have value as recyclables. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
32 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Norway, and France have increased discussion
of how and why such horrific events occur,
and how society might act to reduce them.
Urban environmental devastation and crisis,
such as Hurricane Sandy that struck the East
Coast of the United States in 2012, or the 2015
earthquakes in the Kathmandu valley in Nepal
show that urban human populations can, and
do, come together in times of need and often
for the good of society. As cities continue to
grow and continue to confront human-made
and environmental disasters, urban leaders
and planners will be challenged to develop
systems of people and places (Box 1.5) that
can help develop a sense of responsibility and
ethical citizenship.
Managing Unemployment
Virtually everything connected with the city is
related to the economic health of its popula-
tion, and economic well-being is dependent
on people having jobs. In capitalist econo-
mies, however, employment is not guaranteed.
The result is often unemployment or under-
employment. In LDCs, too many people may
be competing for too few jobs, driving down
labor costs. In MDCs, large segments of urban
populations may lack the skills to find jobs in
high-end service sectors. Sometimes, the result
is underemployment: people take jobs that are
not commensurate with their skills. These
jobs pay less than a living wage, meaning that
some must take more than one job to survive
and others must supplement their income
with employment in the informal sector of
the economy with long hours and no fringe
benefits. In cities of the developing world,
underemployment rates of 30–40 percent are
not uncommon. Women and children, recent
migrants, and the elderly are often the most
victimized by employment concerns.
their rudimentary construction and lack of
a plan for long-term development, slums are
often sites for rampant environmental and
health problems, often related to the pres-
ence of open sewage and other waste that,
left untreated, infest water sources and cre-
ate unsanitary living conditions. Concern
especially arises due to population mobility:
as people move through a city to work, buy
necessary items and enjoy themselves, diseases
can spread quickly throughout an urban com-
munity. While slums are not, of course, the
only source of diseases, the closeness of large
human populations in cities with slums brings
into question how these regions will plan for
overall well-being and health amid poverty
and overcrowding.
Managing Society
Perhaps one of the most insidious effects of
hyperurbanization throughout the world is a
reduced sense of social responsibility and con-
nection to the environment. As people com-
pete for space and services, antisocial or even
sociopathic attitudes may emerge. City life can
bring out the worst in human behavior. Peo-
ple exhibit social pathologies when they must
queue for services, think nothing of despoiling
public property, disregard traffic regulations,
or show a disregard for fellow citizens’ rights.
When large cities provide neither a sense of
community nor a respected police presence,
crime soars. Social norms that constrain
unscrupulous behavior in rural areas may be
absent in cities.
On the other hand, city life can also bring
out the best in human behavior, especially
after a crisis. Entire communities can come
together after tragic events, whether caused
by humans or nature. For example, high-pro-
file shooting incidents in the United States,
Urban Challenges 33
Box 1.5 Planning for Blue Space
don Zeigler, old dominion University
thanks to water, “blue space” makes its appearance in almost every city. Many of the world’s largest urban areas are located near the “ocean blue,” and most others are located near “rivers blue.” And, even if a city is not situated on the shore of a sea or river, there is likely to be a spring in town or at least a little “fountain blue.” in the industrial Era, blue space was often sacrificed to economic development. thanks to the research of Wallace nichols, recently published in the book Blue Mind (Little brown, 2014), we now know that was a big mistake: Water makes us healthy. We always knew that life was impossible without water, but now we know that good mental health derives from water as well. Experiments with human subjects have shown that urban landscape images bring on feelings of suffocation, and rural landscape images bring on feelings of peacefulness. how do you trick the human mind into feeling peaceful in a city? by using water to its best advantage, by building parks along riverfronts, by encouraging urban water sports, by infusing the language of fountains and gurgling rivulets into a city’s soundscape, and by planning for viewsheds that take in water vistas. neuroscientists tell us that the sights and sounds of water trigger the release of dopamine and oxytocin in the human body. the result is that people are happier.
Figure 1.14 neuroscientists now tell us that the presence of water sharpens the intellect and enhances feelings of well-being. Selecting a place along the Charles River in boston might be the best thing a student could do to maximize study time. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
34 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Managing Racial and Ethnic Issues
Unemployment, underemployment, and
other factors breed a variety of subsidiary
problems related to race, ethnicity, and class
status. For example, increasing ethnic diversity
in some parts of Europe and racial diversity
in the United States sometimes creates ten-
sion among parts of the populations in these
countries who perceive that cultural diversity
may threaten their culture, way of life, or abil-
ity to prosper economically. Such tensions
are high in the United Kingdom related to
long-term migrant (or guest) workers from
other cultures, such as Indians, Pakistanis, and
Bangladeshis. The United States is also seeing
a resurgence of high emotions about the role
of race and the place of diverse peoples in the
so-called American melting pot (Figure 1.15).
Additionally, the number of people con-
sidered to be refugees worldwide reached the
highest number ever in 2015, over 20 mil-
lion people. According to the United Nations,
developing countries host over 85 percent
of the world’s refugees, a burden that only
adds complexity to the developing world’s
urban places, including refugee camps that
act like cities. For more developed places
with relative economic prosperity, such as
the United States, illegal immigration contin-
ues as migrants, primarily from Mexico and
other Latin American countries, come seek-
ing a better life. These people, along with legal
immigrants and refugees, commonly settle in
cities, as do Cuban refugees in Miami, Florida.
Compounded with preexisting underlying
racial tensions, refugees and new migrants
may come into conflict with (1) community
elites who find their power diluted, (2) groups
with whom they compete for jobs, often other
minorities, and (3) majorities who have com-
pletely different languages, religions, and
worldviews. Throughout the world, many cit-
ies must manage severe centrifugal forces gen-
erated by cultural diversity.
Managing Privacy
The tentacles of wireless communication pen-
etrate deeply into our private lives, especially
as increasing amounts of information about
us are stored in “The Cloud,” reservoirs of
information stored on computer servers in
cyberspace. We voluntarily provide so much
information to both public and private sectors
and assume that it is secure and appropriately
So, don’t underestimate the role of water in making cities better places to live (Figure 1.14). Water resources have more than economic benefits; the social, emotional, and cognitive ben- efits are equally as important in a society that depends on the “creative class” for new ideas. if cities have bodies of natural water in their midst, they should be treasured, opened up to the public, and developed as necessities of urban life. if cities have polluted their near-shore waters, industrialized their flood plains, or buried their streams in culverts, they should be brought back to life as natural resources that are essential to urban mental health. these are big ideas, new ideas, and transformative ideas. they are currently being promoted by the blue Mind Movement, an extensive network of scientists with specialties in human emotions and cognition. in 2015, their annual conference in Washington, dC, operated under the theme of “Urban blue.”
Urban Challenges 35
responses when dealing with situations of
potential conflict, especially regarding race,
ethnicity, or gender.
Managing Modernization and Globalization
One phenomenon sweeping cities, especially
larger ones, is the dilemma of Westernization
versus modernization. The problem facing the
LDCs is how to raise living standards without
abandoning traditional cultural values and
ways of life. Some might argue that tradition
and modernization are incompatible, that
modernization automatically entails change,
and that change will likely take the form of
Westernization. Certainly, there are ample
signs of Westernization (some call it homoge-
nization or globalization) of the world’s major
cities in the forms of skyscrapers, modern
used. Yet, once “out there,” this data is beyond
our control. Likewise, there are also involun-
tary means of collecting information about
us. We may be forced to yield biometric data,
making it possible, for instance, for cities to
track residents. With e-tracking devices such as
cell phones, information is created about our
whereabouts 24 hours a day, and geographic
information systems (GIS) can be used—by
private or governmental entities—to map it
out and store it permanently. Moreover, sur-
veillance in cities is becoming increasingly
common. We have accepted Closed-Circuit
TV cameras on our streets or airport security
checks because we feel they make us safe. But,
they also deprive us of privacy (Figure 1.16).
An example of this conundrum is the pro-
posed use of body cameras for on-duty police
officers as a way to monitor appropriate police
Figure 1.15 the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom took place under the leadership of dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and others in 1963. the 50th anniversary of the march and the “i have a dream” speech took place in 2013 to keep the dream alive. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
36 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
major financial centers in Europe to Asia and
from North to South America. Trade barriers
are being reduced between countries. Trans-
national corporations and nongovernmental
organizations promote a “world without bor-
ders.” The net result is an easier flow of people,
money, credit, and products across bounda-
ries that once separated people with different
ideologies and economies.
There are potential problems because
change in the flow of goods and people also
means change in the ways humans use their
environments. As globalization continues,
local to global environments also transform as
we demand more from them and create new
production, consumption, and waste patterns.
architecture, the automobile society, advertis-
ing, mass consumption, and so forth. None-
theless, as anyone who has lived in cities of
the LDCs can attest, traditional cultural values
and lifestyles persist even in the most modern
metropolis. Almost the entire world—rural
and urban—is adjusting to changing global
economies. Globalization means the move-
ment of products, money, information, and
human talent around the world in ever-larger
quantities at ever-lower costs and in ever less
time.
Mayors and governing councils must now
think globally and locally. Companies produce
items for global, not local or regional, mar-
kets. Money is transferred electronically from
Figure 1.16 banksy is a well-known graffiti artist whose works materialize on the urban landscape while no one is watching. in London, his unauthorized critique of CCtV appeared overnight on Royal Mail Service property. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Urban Challenges 37
critical, but important for leading a satisfying
urban life, is consideration of noise pollution
from automobile traffic. One glance at traffic
in the primate city of Moscow, Russia, indi- cates how trying it can be to live in places suf-
fering the consequences of car culture.
Managing Urban Governance
Urban governments worldwide face chal-
lenges related to the balance between revenues
and expenditures. Few governments have the
funds to meet every need, so priorities must
be established. Those priorities may be set
by higher levels of government (sometimes
authoritarian) or by the democratic process
locally. In any case, the task of governing or
administering services to a growing city is
daunting, whether the city is New York or
Mumbai. In some countries, like the United
States, problems arise because urban areas
are fragmented among so many jurisdictions,
some overlapping. In other countries, many
in the developing world, government bureau-
cracies are bloated with excess employees,
are suspected of serving elites, and generally
have a hard time combating pressing urban
problems.
Increasingly, urban governance includes
decision making about the environment in
and around urban areas. As human popula-
tions in cities increase and as consumption
of ecological goods and services—land, water,
and local and regional biomes—increases in
and around urban areas, it is recognized that
environmental governance is closely related to
urban governance. Every year, cities increase
their attempts to address environmental con-
cerns for and with urban residents, worldwide.
While cities in the MDCs are currently further
ahead in addressing urban environmental
governance, especially in Europe, some cities
For example, when Starbucks first opened in
Seattle, Washington, in 1971, the company
purchased coffee beans directly from grow-
ers and sold them locally in Seattle. Today,
Starbucks is a global company that purchases,
roasts, and sells coffee beans, coffee drinks,
and many other consumer items worldwide.
Largely because of Starbucks’ branding cam-
paigns, the globalization of “coffee-house cul-
ture” has increased the ecological footprint
of coffee production (more beans produced
in ecologically marginal areas), consumption
(more coffee—and water to make it—con-
sumed worldwide), and waste (coffee grounds,
disposable cups). This example shows that
while globalization means we can travel any-
where in the world and feel somewhat at
home, there are also environmental concerns
that are often hidden from consideration in
our increasingly global lifestyle.
Managing Traffic
Another obvious effect of urbanization, pro-
duced largely by increasing numbers of motor
vehicles, is traffic congestion. Superficially, this
might be understood as a mere nuisance, an
aggravation of less consequence than survival-
level problems such as employment, housing,
and social services. Nonetheless, traffic con-
gestion is a serious dilemma that chokes off
the movement of people and goods in many
cities to the point of standstill. Consequences
include economic inefficiency (time loss and
resource waste), social stress, and pollution,
all of which diminish a city’s development
potential and bespeak concerns about cli-
mate change at the largest scales. Health and
well-being are also affected by traffic. As num-
bers of vehicles increase in cities, incidents
of asthma, other respiratory concerns, and
carbon monoxide levels also increase. Less
38 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
a broad subfield of geography devoted to the
study of urban people, places, and phenom-
ena. The concepts and definitions in the glos-
sary below have been italicized and bolded
throughout this chapter.
Capital City
“Capital” comes from the Latin word for
“head,” caput. Capital cities are literally “head
cities,” the headquarters of government func-
tions. Every country has a national capital and
a few (e.g., South Africa, Bolivia) have more
than one. Capital cities are seats of politi-
cal power, decision-making centers, and loci
of national sovereignty. Their landscapes are
in the LDCs, notably Curitiba in Brazil, are
taking steps that will make them forerunners
for addressing environmental concerns and
some aspects of sustainability.
CONCEPTS, TERMS, AND DEFINITIONS
Geographers approach the study of cities
through the discipline’s major subfields: eco-
nomic, political, cultural, and environmental
geography (Figure 1.17). Geography’s intra-
and interdisciplinary approach to the study of
the drivers and outcomes of urban processes
and patterns requires an understanding of
concepts and terms used in urban geography,
Figure 1.17 Urban Geography: Where it All Comes together. Source: Authors.
Concepts, Terms, and Definitions 39
European city was grafted onto an existing
indigenous urban place, becoming the domi-
nant growth pole for that city and typically
overwhelming the original indigenous center
in size and importance. Examples include
Shanghai, Delhi, and Tunis and Mexico City,
built atop Tenochtitlan, the Aztec capital.
Either type of colonial city would eventu-
ally give rise to a dual city: one part modern
and Western and another part traditional and
indigenous.
Conurbation
As urban areas expand, they engulf smaller cit-
ies in the urban expansion zone, turn nearby
towns into full-fledged cities, sometimes
stimulate the development of new cities, and
bump into other expanding urban areas. Of
twentieth-century European origin, this term
is commonly used in Europe, for example,
to speak of the Randstad conurbation in the
Netherlands or the Rhine-Ruhr conurbation
in Germany. In the United States, the Dallas-
Fort Worth Urban Area is a good example of
a conurbation.
Galactic Metropolis
Geographer Peirce Lewis coined the term
“galactic metropolis” to describe how economic
and spatial structure—especially transporta-
tion and communications technologies in the
United States—reinforced connections among
seemingly disparate spatial elements that cre-
ated a geometry that favored urban centers.
For example, urban places are linked closely
with surrounding orbits of suburban commu-
nities; small towns are drawn to urban phe-
nomena by the gravitational forces of nearby
cities; and rural areas are part of ubiquitous
political discourse, television entertainment,
charged with the symbols of solidarity, real
or imagined; their museums are attics of the
nation; and their locations symbolize the cen-
tral role they play in national urban systems. In
some countries, national capitals share power
with provincial capitals. As a class of cities,
they are among the best known worldwide.
City
The term “city” is essentially a political desig-
nation referring to a large, densely populated
place that is legally incorporated as a munici-
pality. However, a settlement of any size may
call itself a city, whether it is large or small.
Towns are generally smaller than cities. Some-
times, geographers refer to “the city” as not
just a place, but a concept denoting multiple
phenomena associated with urban settings.
Colonial City
Although virtually gone today, the colonial
city has profoundly impacted urban patterns
throughout much of the world, especially
in places that were dominated by European
imperial powers, beginning around 1500 ce
and culminating in the nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. The colonial city was
unique because of its focus on commercial
functions, its peculiar situation requirements,
and blend of Western urban forms with tra-
ditional indigenous cultures. Two different
types of colonial cities existed, depending on
the ages of the colonial enclave and the native
or indigenous settlement. In one type, the
European city was created where no signifi-
cant urban place had existed previously. This
led to in-migration of local peoples, drawn by
economic opportunities created under colo-
nial rule. Examples include Mumbai, Hong
Kong, and Nairobi. In the other type, the
40 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
cities strung along a megalopolitan corridor.
Megalopolis, like metropolis, is derived from
the ancient Greek word for city, polis.
Metacity
The United Nations describes the metacity, or
hypercity, as a spatially sprawling conurbation
of more than 20 million people. When Tokyo
grew larger than 20 million in the 1960s, it
became the first metacity in the world. By
2020, eight additional metacities are antici-
pated: Mumbai, Delhi, Mexico City, Sao Paulo,
New York, Dhaka, Jakarta, and Lagos. Metaci-
ties are described as polycentric and with dif-
fuse governance, which allows for continued
growth to occur throughout. Often, the central
city stagnates due to the shift of the economic
base to city edges and suburban places, where
space is less regulated; and due to the daily
commutes from densely populated outlying
villages or suburbs to the multiple nuclei for
economic activity located across the metacity.
As humans continue to choose urban habitats,
the biological and physical worlds in and near
urban places also change. Urban ecologists—
interdisciplinary scientists who are interested
in understanding the forms and functions of
urban environments—see metacities as a new
form of urbanization with distinct ecological
and social attributes that we must research in
new ways if we are to understand how urban
places may become more sustainable for
humans and other species in the long term.
Metropolis and Metropolitan Area
The term “metropolis” originally meant the
“mother city” of a country, state, or empire.
Today, it is used loosely to refer to any large city.
A metropolitan area includes a central city (or
cities) plus all surrounding territory—urban,
and news coverage that ignores the boundaries
between types and sizes of places.
Industrial City
An industrial city has an economy based
on the production of manufactured goods,
sometimes light industrial products (e.g.,
food, textiles, footwear) and sometimes heavy
industrial items (e.g., motor vehicles, appli-
ances, ships, machinery). Factories and found-
ries anchor these urban landscapes. Although
small-scale manufacturing characterized even
preindustrial cities, the invention of the steam
engine begat ever-larger factories and cities.
Megacity
Megacity is used colloquially to designate the
very largest urban places, usually concep-
tualized as an urban core and its peripheral
expansion zone. A city with more than 10 mil-
lion inhabitants may be called a megacity. In
1950, only New York City exceeded 10 million.
Today, 28 cities worldwide fit that category,
and one out of every 8 people worldwide lives
in a megacity.
Megalopolis
Originating in twentieth-century North
America, geographer Jean Gottmann first
applied the term “megalopolis” in 1961 to
the urbanized northeastern seaboard of the
United States from Boston to Washington.
Its coinage focused attention on a new scale
of urbanization to describe the coalescence of
metropolitan areas at the regional scale. That
coalescence is channeled along transportation
corridors that connect cities. It is evident in the
magnitude of vehicle traffic, telephone calls,
electronic exchanges, and air transport among
Concepts, Terms, and Definitions 41
of the new town, in the West at least, tends to
follow the British Garden City concept, with
its emphasis on manageable population size,
pod-like housing tracts, neighborhood service
centers, mixed land uses, much green space,
pedestrian walkways, and a self-contained
employment base (akin to premodern vil-
lages). Three types of new towns have been
developed: (1) suburban-ring cities such as
Reston, Virginia, in the United States; (2) new
capitals such as Brasilia, Brazil; and (3) eco-
nomic growth poles such as Ciudad Guyana,
Venezuela.
Preindustrial City
The preindustrial city—sometimes called the
traditional city—identifies a city that was
founded and grew before the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries and thus typically had
quite different characteristics from industrial
cities. Elements of the traditional city are still
part of urban landscapes, particularly in the
developing world, even though there are no
longer any pure preindustrial cities in exist-
ence. Remnants of the traditional city include
central markets (many survive in Europe, Asia,
and Latin America and are slowly returning in
the United States), pedestrian quarters where
streets are too narrow for cars, walls and gates
now serving as visual reminders of the past,
and intimidating architecture (palaces and
cathedrals) that preceded industrialization.
Postindustrial City
A relatively new type of city, the postindustrial
city, has emerged, particularly in the world’s
wealthiest countries. Its economy is not tied
to manufacturing but instead to high service
sector employment. Cities that are mainly
the headquarters for corporations or for
suburban, or rural—that is integrated with
the urban core (usually measured by commut-
ing patterns). In the United States, the term
Metropolitan Area (MA) is officially used, of
which there are three types: Metropolitan Sta-
tistical Areas (MSAs), Primary Metropolitan
Statistical Areas (PMSAs), and Consolidated
Metropolitan Statistical Areas (CMSAs). The
U.S. Bureau of the Census has been desig-
nating metropolitan areas since 1950. While
terminology and criteria have changed since
then, the core definition has remained the
same, in that metropolitan areas (1) have
an urban core of at least 50,000 people, (2)
include surrounding urban and rural territory
that is socially and economically integrated
with the core, and (3) are built from county
(or county-equivalent) units. In Canada, their
counterparts are officially termed Census
Metropolitan Areas (CMAs), which have an
urban core of at least 100,000 people.
New Town
The new town, narrowly interpreted, is a
twentieth-century phenomenon and refers to
a comprehensively planned urban community
built from scratch with the intent of becoming
as self-contained as possible by encouraging
the development of an economic base and a
full range of urban services and facilities. New
towns emerge for multiple reasons: reliev-
ing urban overcrowding; controlling urban
sprawl; providing optimum living environ-
ments for residents; serving as growth poles
for the development of peripheral regions;
creating or relocating a national or provincial
capital. The new-town movement began in
Britain and later diffused to other European
countries, the United States, the Soviet Union,
and to newly independent countries in the
post–World War II era. The idealized form
42 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Rank-Size Rule
The rank-size rule represents an alternative to
primacy. This concept evolved out of empiri-
cal research on the relationships among cities
of different population sizes in a country. The
rule states that the population of a particular
city should be equal to the population of the
country’s largest city divided by its rank. In
other words, the fifth-largest city in a country
should be one-fifth the size of the largest city.
A deviation from this ranking may mean that
the urban system is unbalanced and possibly
characterized by urban primacy.
Site and Situation
Why are cities located where they are? What
are the drivers, patterns, processes, and out-
comes of urban growth? Concepts used by
urban geographers to answer these and related
questions are site and situation. Site refers to
the physical characteristics of the place where
a city originated and evolved, such as surface
landforms, underlying geology, elevation,
water features, coastline configuration, and
other aspects of physical geography. Montre-
al’s site, for instance, is defined by the Lachine
Rapids, historically the upstream limit of
oceangoing commerce. Paris’ site is defined by
an island in the Seine River, known as the Île
de la Cité, which gave the city defensive advan-
tages and offered an easy bridging point across
the Seine. New York City’s site is defined by
a deepwater harbor. A city’s origin is often
wrapped up in site characteristics.
Situation refers to the relative location of
a city. It connotes a city’s connectedness with
other places and surrounding regions. Some
cities are centrally located at trade route junc-
tions while others are isolated. A city’s growth
and decline depend more on situation than
on-site characteristics. In fact, a good relative
governmental and intergovernmental organi-
zations are examples, as are those specializing
in research and development (R&D), health
and medicine, and tourism/recreation. With
increasing numbers of people employed in
tertiary and quaternary occupations, espe-
cially in fields such as finance, health, leisure,
R&D, education, and telecommunications
and in various levels of government, cities
with concentrations of these activities have
economic bases that contrast sharply to cities
with industrial economic origins.
Primate City
A type of city defined solely by size and func-
tion is the primate city. Coined by geographer
Mark Jefferson in the 1930s, this term refers
to the tendency of some countries to have
one exceptionally large city that is economi-
cally dominant and culturally expressive of
national identity. A true primate city is at least
twice as large as the second-largest city, but the
gap is often larger. Paris, for instance, is seven
times larger than France’s second-largest city
Lyon and Moscow is four times larger than
St. Petersburg in Russia. In general, primacy
is more typical of the developing world where
primate cities exceed the size of the next larg-
est city by many times and typically are former
colonial capitals. In a few instances, countries
may be characterized by dual primacy, where
two large cities share a dominant role, such as
Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo in Brazil. The
presence of a primate city in a country usually
suggests an imbalance in development: a pro-
gressive core, defined by the primate city and
its environs, and a lagging periphery on which
the primate city may depend for resources and
migrant labor. Some understand the relation-
ship between core and periphery as a parasitic
one.
Concepts, Terms, and Definitions 43
growth trends are reforming socioeconomic
and political processes in addition to the built
environment. Although China is still under
Communist Party rule, for example, com-
petitive enterprise transforms its urban land-
scapes. Only North Korea, and to some extent
Cuba, continue to maintain cities under the
principles of communism.
Suburbia
Suburbia is a product of twentieth-century,
automobile-centric development. While there
situation can compensate for a poor site.
Venice, for instance, triumphed as a center
of the Renaissance, not because of its site (so
water saturated it is sinking), but because of
its relative location at the head of the Adriatic
Sea with access to good passes through the
Alps. New York City emerged as the United
States’ most populous city in the early nine-
teenth century, not because of a superior site,
but because of a superior situation. After the
opening of the Erie Canal in 1825, New York
had access to the resource-rich interior of the
United States via the Great Lakes.
Socialist and Post-socialist City
Cities that evolved under communist regimes
in the former Soviet Union, Eastern Europe,
China, North Korea, Southeast Asia, and Cuba
have given us the concept of the socialist city.
Communism was characterized by massive
government involvement in the economy, cou-
pled with the absence of private land owner-
ship and free markets. Communism produced
cities that were distinct in form, function,
and internal spatial structure (Figure 1.18).
Although most communist regimes collapsed
in the late twentieth century, central planning
and the command economy have left a lasting,
visible impression on these urban landscapes.
However, most socialist cities of the world
are now experiencing rapid change and a post-
socialist city is emerging. Cities evolving under
post-socialist regimes are breaking away from
the urban plans that were so strictly enforced by
communist or socialist governments. Social-
ism’s compact, comprehensively planned cit-
ies were structured internally and regionally
to be self-sufficient, but this is changing today
as individuals and businesses make their own
decisions about where to locate residences and
businesses in freer market economies. New
Figure 1.18 these heroic statues in front of the opera house in novosibirsk, Russia, are typical of former socialist cities. Statues, paintings, posters were all designed to inspire the populace to sacrifices lives of personal comfort for the sake of national welfare. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
44 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
technologies, erecting energy-efficient build-
ings, reinvigorating mass transportation
systems, encouraging walking and cycling,
increasing population densities to reduce
sprawl, expanding open space, planting trees
and flowers, and cultivating reliance on local
food webs. Curitiba in Brazil and Seattle and
Portland in the U.S. Pacific Northwest were
early leaders of the sustainable city movement.
For these exemplary cities, one of the key ele-
ments of urban sustainability has been the
involvement of urban residents in decision-
making processes about the future of humans
and the environment. Indeed, without inclu-
sion of citizens in knowledge building and
governance, our cities may never approach
becoming sustainable.
Urbanism
Urbanism is a broad concept that generally
refers to all aspects—political, economic, and
social—of the urban way of life. Urbanism is
not the process of urban growth, but rather
the end result of urbanization. It suggests that
the urban way of life is dramatically different
than the rural way of life: as people leave the
country and move to the city, their lifestyles
and livelihoods change.
Urbanization
Urbanization has two main phases. The
important variables in the first phase are
population density and economic functions.
A place does not become urban until its work-
force is detached from the soil; trade, manu-
facturing, and service provision dominate the
economies of urban places. The important
variables in the second phase are social, psy-
chological, and behavioral. As a population
becomes increasingly urban, for instance,
is no single definition, the United States
Bureau of the Census provides some key
defining characteristics of suburban areas: an
intermediate population density, landscapes
dominated by trees, grassy yards and single-
family owner-occupied houses; separation of
residential, commercial, and industrial land
uses; political jurisdictions that are independ-
ent of the urban area’s incorporated central
cities. Planned suburban spaces in North
America began with the rise of industrialism
at the end of the nineteenth century and the
societal preference for personalized greens-
pace around private homes, especially for the
growing class of wealthy industrialists. Today,
suburban development occurs worldwide as
cities continue to expand outwards and as
access to automobile ownership rises.
Sustainable City
With increasing knowledge of our human
impact on global environments—terrestrial,
marine, and atmospheric—there is increas-
ing interest in finding gentler ways of living
on our planet that consider its actual carrying
capacity. A sustainable city should meet the
needs of the present without sacrificing the
ability of future generations to meet their own
needs. Ambiguity in the phrasing of this idea,
however, leads to variable interpretations and
actions toward sustainability in urban settings
worldwide. In an ideal scenario, a sustainable
city attempts to create well-being for multiple
species in four domains: ecology, economics,
politics, and culture.
No city is yet a sustainable city, but thou-
sands of cities around the world are lessening
their environmental impacts by reducing reli-
ance on fossil fuels and thus greenhouse gases
emissions, reducing consumption, recycling
urban wastes, utilizing water conservation
Concepts, Terms, and Definitions 45
New Zealand the figure is 1,000; in Argentina
2,000; in Ghana 5,000; and in Greece 10,000.
In the United States, the Bureau of the Census
defines places as urban if they have at least
2,500 people.
Urban Landscapes
Urban landscapes, visible and invisible, are
the manifestations of the thoughts, deeds, and
actions of human beings. They are charged
with clues to the economic, cultural, political,
and environmental values of the people who
created them (Figure 1.19). At the macroscale,
geographers may look at the vertical and hori-
zontal dimensions of the landscape—at city
family sizes become smaller because the value
placed upon children changes.
Urban Agglomeration
As an urban place increases in size and popu-
lation, existing and newly created metropoli-
tan areas are commonly adjoined as a result
of urban and suburban sprawl. This results in
a spatially extensive clustering of urban areas
that border one or more central cities. While
the definition of an urban agglomeration var-
ies worldwide, the physical contiguity created
by continued urban and suburban expansion
around a central urban place, or places, pro-
vides a general understanding of this term.
Urban Area
As cities expand, boundaries between urban,
suburban, and rural areas become increas-
ingly blurred, especially in industrialized
countries where automobile transportation
fosters urban sprawl. Thus, the urban(ized)
area is defined as the built-up area where
buildings, roads, and essentially urban land
uses predominate, even beyond the political
boundaries of cities and towns. The urban
area is commonly considered to be a city and
its suburbs.
Urban Place
As a place increases in population, it eventu-
ally becomes large enough that its economy is
no longer tied to agriculture or other primary
activities. At that point, a rural place becomes
an urban place. The minimum number of
inhabitants for a place to be considered urban
varies significantly from country to country.
In Denmark and Sweden, only 200 people are
required for a place to be classified as urban; in
Figure 1.19 Matsu’s followers in taipei love parades. With their big ears, these maidens remind everyone to listen to the voices of enlightened beings. Matsu is the goddess honored over and above all others on the island of taiwan. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
46 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
city is separate from the country and offers a
model of the New Urbanism.
Beatley, T. 2010. Biophilic Cities: Integrating Nature
into Urban Design and Planning. Washington, DC:
Island Press. Argues that urban greening is not
only about nature itself but also about humans
interacting more with natural landscapes.
Davis, M. 2007. Planet of Slums. New York: Verso. A
documentation of poverty in cities of the devel-
oping world.
Forman, R. T. 2014. Urban Ecology: Science of Cities.
New York: Cambridge University Press. Presents
models, patterns, and examples of human-
dominated ecosystems in cities and presents
new urban ecology principles.
Hall, P. 1998. Cities in Civilization. New York: Pan-
theon. Looks at the world’s great cities during
their golden ages, with an emphasis on culture,
innovation, and the arts.
Knox, P., ed. 2014. Atlas of Cities. Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press. A taxonomy of cities
that looks at different aspects of their physical,
economic, social, and political structures.
LeGates, R. T., and F. Stout, eds. 2011. The City
Reader. New York: Routledge. An anthology of
classic and contemporary titles about urban
history, design planning, social, and environ-
mental problems.
Parnell, S., and S. Oldfield, eds. 2014. The Routledge
Handbook on Cities of the Global South. New
York: Routledge. A discussion on the meaning
of the city in, or of, the global south.
Sassen, S. 2001. The Global City: New York, London,
Tokyo, 2nd ed. Princeton, NJ: Princeton Uni-
versity Press. Explores the world’s three leading
centers for international transactions and their
impact on the global urban hierarchy.
Soderstrom, M. 2006. Green City: People, Nature
and Urban Places. Montreal: Véhicule. An
examination of 11 cities and their interactions
with the natural environment.
skylines and urban sprawl. At the microscale,
they may look at architectural styles; signage;
activity patterns near busy intersections;
urban foodways; or resource use (for instance,
water savings). Interpreting, analyzing, and
critiquing the landscape is a traditional theme
of urban geography.
World City
World cities function as command-and-con-
trol centers of the world economy (Box 1.1).
They offer advanced, knowledge-based pro-
ducer services (businesses serving businesses),
particularly in the fields of accounting, insur-
ance, advertising, law, technical expertise, and
the creative arts. The top tier cities, defined
by their financial centrality, are called global
cities, of which there are three: New York,
London, and Tokyo. One rung lower are sec-
ond-tier world cities: Paris, Frankfurt, Los
Angeles, Chicago, Hong Kong, and Singapore,
among others. Beyond that are several dozen
more cities—Amsterdam, Moscow, Sydney,
Toronto, San Francisco, and others—which
draw strength from particular mega-regions or
from particular cultural and economic niches.
Even cities such as Mecca and Jerusalem may
be termed world cities because their influence
is felt worldwide within particular religious
communities.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Amin, A., and N. Thrift. 2002. Cities: Reimagining
the Urban. Cambridge, England: Polity, 2002.
Challenges the notion that the contemporary
Fi gu
re 2
.1
M aj
or U
rb an
A gg
lo m
er at
io ns
o f
th e
Un it
ed S
ta te
s an
d Ca
na da
. So
ur ce
: Un
it ed
n at
io ns
, de
pa rt
m en
t of
E co
no m
ic
an d
So ci
al A
ff ai
rs ,
Po pu
la ti
on d
iv is
io n
(2 01
4) , W
or ld
U rb
an iz
at io
n Pr
os pe
ct s:
2 01
4 Re
vi si
on , ht
tp :/
/e sa
.u n.
or g/
un pd
/w up
/.
2
Cities of the United States and Canada LISA BENTON-SHORT AND NATHANIEL M. LEWIS
KEy URbAN FACTS
Total Population 361 million
Percent Urban Population 82%
Total Urban Population 292 million
Most Urbanized Country Canada (82%)
Least Urbanized Country United States (81%)
Number of Megacities 2
Number of Cities of More Than 1 Million 50 cities
Largest Cities (Metacities) New York (19 m), Los Angeles (12 m),
Chicago (9 m), Toronto (6 m)
Number of World Cities (Highest Ranking) 14 (New York, Chicago, Toronto, Los Angeles,
San Francisco, Washington, Miami, Boston,
Atlanta)
Global City New York
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. After 1950, the United States and Canada became metropolitan societies, as the majority of
their populations came to live in metropolitan areas.
2. The United States and Canada comprise one of the most urbanized regions of the world,
with an urban hierarchy composed of small, medium, large, and multimillion cities.
3. The most pronounced changes in urban land-use patterns include a declining core and
expanding suburbs; however, in some cities, the core has seen a resurgence.
4. Cities in the United States and Canada have been recently shaped by the intensification of
economic globalization and greater competition in the global urban hierarchy.
5. Reliance on the automobile and weak investment in public transportation has resulted in
cities with low population densities and growing sprawl.
50 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
6. A long history of industrialization has left cities dealing with numerous environmental
issues, including air, land, and water pollution, all of which threaten to erode the quality of
life for many urban residents.
7. Immigration, now from a more diverse set of countries than ever, is transforming numer-
ous cities in North America as immigrants gravitate toward long-established immigrant
magnets and newly emerging gateway cities.
8. In a post-9/11 world, heightened concerns about security have been transforming urban
space through the installation of security cameras and the fortressing of selected spaces.
9. The United States and Canada are recovering from the 2008 economic recession, but many
are still learning to cope with deindustrialization and the rise of the service economy.
10. Cities in drier regions of the continent face water scarcity challenges; cities along the coast
face rising sea-level challenges; and cities everywhere face water quality challenges.
Many urban scholars suggest that the world is
in the midst of the Third Urban Revolution, a
complex phenomenon that began in the mid-
dle of the twentieth century. It is defined by
a massive increase in urban populations, the
development of megacities and giant metro-
politan regions, and the global redistribution
of economic activities. As former manufac-
turing cities decline, new industrial cities,
service-sector hubs, and tech-poles emerge
elsewhere. Cities of the United States and
Canada (hereafter, “North America” in this
chapter) embody the dynamic trends of this
Third Urban Revolution (Figure 2.1). In both
countries, a rising percentage of the popula-
tion resides in cities. In 2015, over 85 percent
of the U.S. population lived in urban areas. In
Canada, this figure was slightly less, though
almost half of its urban population lived in
just six cities: Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver,
Calgary, Ottawa, and Edmonton (Figure 2.2).
Experts predict that by 2050 the proportion
of North America’s population that is urban
could be greater than 90 percent. Without a
doubt, urbanism is the norm in the United
States and Canada. But urban norms con-
tinue to change: Central cities have become
the loci of the new urban spectacle; inner
cities are peppered with sites of gentrified
renaissance as well as rampant poverty and
crime; inner suburbs are showing signs of
decline; and exurban development continues
apace as gated communities and mixed-use
developments sprawl into the former coun-
tryside. The new lexicon that has emerged to
describe many North American cities—“post-
modern,” “global,” “networked,” “hybrid,”
“splintered”—offers some hint as to the rich
complexity and deep contradictions of the
Third Urban Revolution. Yet, much remains
to be said and done before we can make sense
of the new forms of urbanism that character-
ize the twenty-first-century North American
city.
Large city-regions are emerging as the new
building blocks of national and global econo-
mies. The largest one in the United States is
the urbanized Northeastern seaboard, a region
referred to as Megalopolis by Jean Gottmann
in the 1950s. Megalopolis stretches from the
southern suburbs of Washington, DC, north
through Baltimore, Philadelphia, and New
York to Boston and its northern suburbs. It is
responsible for 20 percent of the nation’s gross
domestic product. In 1950, the area that came
to be known as Megalopolis had a population
of almost 32 million people. Today, the popu-
lation is over 50 million.
Key Chapter Themes 51
North American megalopolitan regions,
modeled conceptually after Gottmann’s Meg-
alopolis, are defined as clustered networks of
metropolitan regions that have populations of
more than 10 million. In North America, there
are 11 megalopolitan regions (Table 2.1).
Collectively, they constitute only 20 percent
of the nation’s land surface but comprise 67
percent of the population. From 2010 to 2040,
they will account for approximately three-
quarters of all predicted growth in population
and construction.
Yet another term used to describe areas
transformed by global investment, sophisti-
cated communications, and widespread cor-
porate and individual mobility is the global
city-region. In an era of globalization, cit-
ies increasingly function as the nodes of the
global economy; and it is more appropriate to
see cities or networks of cities in their regional
(rather than local) contexts. As a result of
globalization, city-regions such as Los Angeles,
San Diego, Seattle, and New York are transi-
tioning from national or regional economic
capitals to more integrated cities of the world.
Toronto, which has traditionally been the
focus of an East-West Canadian economy, has
increasingly turned its attention to North-
South economic opportunities created by the
North American Free Trade Agreement. Dis-
tinguishing features of global city-regions are
global businesses and an elite work force, con-
trasting sharply with disadvantaged, insular
residential cities.
Numerous transformations that are occur-
ring in contemporary North American cities
contrast with long-held myths. One myth is
that cities in the United States and Canada
lack historic character. Yet many cities, notably
Savannah, Charleston, Boston, Montreal, and
Quebec City, have active preservation and res-
toration programs. Another myth is that the
Figure 2.2 toronto’s unique City hall was built in the 1960s to brand the city. Canada’s largest city is also a hub for international travelers, such as these young men from india. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
52 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
ubiquitous skyscrapers, freeways, shopping
malls, office parks, and bland suburban boxes
described as “distinct” to North American
cities (Figure 2.3) are actually found in cities
throughout the world.
U.S. and Canadian cities vary tremendously
in size, form, and fortune. In the United States,
recent urban growth has been robust in west-
ern and southwestern cities, while many cities
in the East and Midwest such as Detroit and
Buffalo have seen economic and demographic
decline. In Canada, the fastest growing metro-
politan areas are the Prairie cities of Calgary
and Edmonton; but within urban regions,
there has been a deconcentration of popula-
tion in central cities and growth in suburbs
and exurban zones (i.e., former rural areas).
HISTORICAL OVERVIEW
North America’s cities are almost all less than
300 years old. Their origin and evolution are
best understood by examining them in the
historical context.
Colonial Mercantilism: 1700–1840
Beginning in the late sixteenth century, the
Spanish, Dutch, French, and British estab-
lished colonies in eastern North America in
order to gain access to raw materials. Each
European power exercised control over com-
mercial trade networks to maintain its own
advantage. These regulations resulted in an
export-based market where American com-
modities such as sugar, timber, furs, and
tobacco were developed to satisfy Europe’s
changing patterns of consumption. During
the colonial era, North American cities were
very small in both population and physical
size. They served primarily as export centers
for raw materials destined for Europe. The
largest cities during this era were found along
the Atlantic coast (e.g., Boston and Phila-
delphia) and along rivers (e.g., Quebec City
and Montreal). Along the St. Lawrence River,
Montreal controlled the northern route into
the center of North America. Near the mouth
of the Mississippi River, New Orleans con-
trolled the southern route into the continent.
Table 2.1 Megalopolitan Areas of the United States and Canada
Area Anchor Cities
Cascadia Vancouver, Seattle, Portland, Eugene
NorCal San Francisco, San Jose, Oakland, Sacramento
Southland Los Angeles, San Diego, Las Vegas
Valley of the Sun Phoenix, Tucson
I-35 Corridor Kansas City, Oklahoma City, Dallas, San Antonio
Gulf Coast Houston, New Orleans, Mobile
Piedmont Birmingham, Atlanta, Charlotte, Raleigh
Peninsula Tampa, Orlando, Fort Lauderdale, Miami
Midwest Chicago, Madison, Detroit, Indianapolis, Cincinnati
Northeast Richmond, Washington, Philadelphia, New York, Boston
Golden Horseshoe Toronto, Hamilton, Buffalo
Source: Adapted from the Metropolitan Institute at Virginia Tech.
Historical Overview 53
The growth of cities during the colonial
era was greatly influenced by the popularity
of various North American exports. Quebec
City was founded by Samuel de Champlain in
1608. The French settlement served mainly fur
traders and missionaries. Settlers established
relations with the indigenous Algonquins,
who traded beaver pelts in return for metal
knives, axes, cloth, and other goods. Since
beaver pelts were highly prized and expen-
sive in European markets, trade flourished
between the settlers, Algonquins, and French
merchants. The physical layout of Quebec is
typified by narrow, winding streets and a city
wall—complete with watchtowers—built by
the conquering British.
The city of New Orleans owes its develop-
ment to the Mississippi River. French traders
and Jesuit priests traveled along the Missis-
sippi in search of pelts, converts, and allies.
The city of New Orleans was founded by
a French merchant company in 1718. The
first settlers in New Orleans encountered the
watery geography of a giant delta: half marsh,
half mud, a floating, spongy raft of shifting
vegetation. The city was located 120 miles
(73 km) from where the river flows into the
Gulf of Mexico. Sited at a bend in the river
close to Lake Pontchartrain, the settlement’s
advantageous location enabled the portage of
goods from the lake to the city. It was easier to
ship goods to the lakeshore and then overland
Figure 2.3 Skyscrapers, such as the Wrigley building in Chicago, became the cathedrals of urban commerce as steel-frame construction and the elevator enabled the design of ever taller buildings. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
54 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
to the city than to sail up the ever-shifting
Mississippi River. As an outpost of the French
empire, New Orleans became part of a global
network of colonial possessions that stretched
across the Americas, Africa, and Asia. Even
so, the city grew slowly. A 1764 map shows
that one-third of the planned-city blocks
were empty. The city plan was marked by the
French tradition of “long lots” fronting on the
river, rather than irregular or square parcels
of land.
In contrast to New Orleans and Quebec
City, Philadelphia was designed using a grid
system that incorporated four large mar-
ket squares. English Quaker William Penn
founded the city in 1681 and sited it at the
confluence of the Delaware and Schuylkill
Rivers. Penn’s grid was a reaction to the dis-
order stemming from the narrow alleyway
and curved roads that he had observed in
his hometown of London. His symmetrical,
orderly plan became the template for Phila-
delphia’s later growth. The city became a busy
shipping port for external goods (feed, food,
and tobacco destined for England) as well as
a market town for frontier products (rifles
and Conestoga wagons) used in the westward
expansion. Philadelphia also gained status as
a major banking center and became home to
the first U.S. stock exchange in 1790.
For much of the colonial era, cities were
“walking cities.” They rarely covered more than
a few square miles or had more than 100,000
people. The outward expansion of many
North American cities was limited by geo-
graphic features such as rivers and hills. Plan-
ners often avoided the high ground because it
was difficult to pump water or to get horse-
drawn fire services uphill. Early forms of pub-
lic transport, primarily carts and carriages,
were also ill-equipped to handle steep slopes.
Economic growth, however, would later bring
new forms of transportation, and cities would
begin to grow outwards and upwards.
Industrial Capitalism: 1840–1970
During the era of industrial capitalism, the
U.S. and Canadian economies shifted away
from exporting raw materials to manufactur-
ing finished goods. An industrial economy is
one dominated by mechanized factory pro-
duction, which began in the United States
in 1793 (Figure 2.4). In 1800, approximately
7 percent of the U.S. population was urban.
By 1900, it was more than 40 percent, and by
1920, the country had become a majority-
urban nation. Urban growth went hand-in-
hand with industrialization. The economic
foundations of the industrial city were the
coal mine, the iron furnace, and the reliable
power of the steam engine. All of this industri-
alization was accompanied by unprecedented
growth in cities, in terms of both population
size and geographic area. By 1830, the east-
ern seaboard cities of New York, Philadelphia,
and Baltimore were the main industrial cit-
ies in the United States. Industrial expansion
also fueled growth in North America’s inte-
rior. Cities located along rivers and lakes took
advantage of advances in transportation, such
as canals and railroads, to become important
hubs in the distribution of goods (Figure 2.5).
By the 1860s, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, St. Louis,
Chicago, Toronto, and Cincinnati emerged
as key gateways alongside already established
Montreal and New Orleans. In Canada, Win-
nipeg became the hub of rail service for the
west, and Edmonton and Calgary emerged as
major regional service centers by the 1870s.
Between1885 and 1935, the U.S. economy
completed its transformation from an agricul-
tural and mercantile base to an industrial-cap-
italist one. In the early twentieth century, the
Historical Overview 55
Figure 2.4 Slater’s Mill is today an historical landmark in Pawtucket, Rhode island; it marked the beginning of the factory system in the United States. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Figure 2.5 the Erie Canal, running through downtown Syracuse, new york, was critical in pushing new york City to the top of the U.S. urban hierarchy.
56 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
emergence of powerful national corporations
and large-scale assembly-line manufacturing
prompted robust economic growth. While
many of the biggest cities were still located in
the Northeast, midwestern cities such as Chi-
cago, Detroit, and Cleveland had grown into
vital industrial centers by the 1920s. During
this time, Canada also experienced significant
growth in its western cities, spurred by the dis-
covery and development of oil and natural gas
fields near the urban centers of Calgary and
Edmonton.
Industrialization in North American cities
involved more than just the proliferation of
factories. Many key inventions had changed
the look of the cities and transformed their
spatial patterns. The use of iron, and then
steel, in building construction launched the
era of skyscrapers. In the 1880s, the electric
street-trolley helped make mass transit pos-
sible and laid the foundations for twentieth-
century suburbanization by allowing people
to live farther away from city centers. Conse-
quently, most industrial cities grew outwards
at the edges as well as upwards in the center.
The end of World War II marked a signifi-
cant turning point for cities in North America.
Many U.S. and Canadian corporations merged
or expanded into large multinational firms and
achieved dominance in the North American
market. The United States became the world’s
largest and richest economy. The late 1940s
also began an era of widespread automobile
ownership and suburbanization. Reliance on
private vehicles and weak investment in public
transportation resulted in low population den-
sities and increased sprawl, particularly for cit-
ies in the West. Cities such as Los Angeles, San
Diego, Houston, Phoenix, Dallas, Denver, and
Vancouver grew horizontally as much as they
did vertically. From 1950 onward, the United
States became simultaneously more urban
and more suburban. Urban regions continued
to grow overall, but there was also an exodus
of people moving out from city cores to newly
built suburbs. To lure suburbanites back to the
city, municipalities undertook immense urban
renewal and infrastructure projects including
highways, bridges, and civic centers. By the
late 1960s, however, three significant changes
materialized that would have profound
changes on cities throughout North America:
globalization, deindustrialization, and decen-
tralization (Figure 2.6).
Postindustrial Capitalism: 1975–present
By the 1970s, the era of global capitalism had
begun and many corporations were moving
manufacturing operations out of North Amer-
ica to developing countries where lower labor
costs and tax breaks promised higher profit
margins and larger market shares. In cities
such as Pittsburgh, Syracuse, Buffalo, Akron,
Cleveland, and Detroit, companies fired or
relocated workers, closed factories, and moved
out of the region or country. These industrial
cities became “Rustbelt” cities, vibrant manu-
facturing centers that had degenerated into
ghost towns. Even high-growth cities such
as Los Angeles and San Francisco struggled
to cope with the social and economic conse-
quences of a decline in manufacturing-based
employment. This decline marked a critical
shift in the North American economy. Michael
Moore’s 1989 documentary Roger and Me
chronicled massive job losses and factory clos-
ings in Flint, Michigan, which was then home
to General Motors. GM laid off 40,000 peo-
ple in Flint in the 1980s, a figure that repre-
sented half of Flint’s GM workforce and one
of the largest layoffs in American history. For
many industrial cities, high unemployment
rates continue to impact local economies. In
Historical Overview 57
Figure 2.6 Signs of deindustrialization, such as this abandoned steel mill, marked the landscapes of industrial-era cities such as Pittsburgh during the 1980s. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
response, political and economic leaders have
begun creating strategies to bolster employ-
ment and investment, especially in sectors
such as services and tourism.
At the same time that many cities in the
United States saw economic decline, oth-
ers experienced rapid growth. Cities such as
Seattle, Orlando, Miami, Phoenix, and San
Diego successfully blended an existing indus-
trial base with an expanding service sector.
Newer city-regions, such as Atlanta, Charlotte,
Dallas-Fort Worth, and Silicon Valley (an
urban techno-pole between San Francisco and
San Jose), came into their own at this time.
Silicon Valley is home to Apple and Hewlett-
Packard, leaders in the high-technology sector
that emerged after the 1980s.
The economies and populations of many
cities became increasingly decentralized dur-
ing this era. Decentralization occurs when city
centers lose either population or jobs. A decline
in the tax base, which limits municipal funding
for social services, results in disinvestment in
education and infrastructure. Residents and
jobs leave the center of the city for the suburbs
or other metropolitan and even nonmetropol-
itan areas. 1970 marked the first time there was
an actual decline in central-city populations,
and by 1980 the trend was intensifying. Most
people were relocating to the suburbs.
The rise of the service sector, also known
as the tertiary sector, has also played a criti-
cal role in urban development. Finance, insur-
ance, real estate, education, medical services,
wholesale and retail trade, and information
and communication technologies, among
others, have replaced manufacturing as key
components of North American urban econo-
mies. The service sector is highly diverse. Some
jobs are low-level and pay minimum wage or
slightly more; they include data entry, clean-
ing services, and retail (e.g., servers at a res-
taurant). Other jobs, referred to as quaternary
activities, generate far higher wages. These
58 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
Box 2.1 neoliberal-Parasitic economies in Chicago
Geographers david Wilson and Matthew Anderson have written about the rise of neoliberal- parasitic economies. this has coincided with an increase in Latino immigration to U.S. cities. Chicago’s experience is notable as its Latino population rose from essentially nonexistent in 1970 to 754,000 in 2005. Latino’s are now 30 percent of Chicago’s total population. With Mexican-origin residents alone occupying roughly 30 percent of the jobs in Chicago’s formal and informal service sector, this pool of immigrant labor has provided local businesses with an expanding source of dependable low-wage labor over the past ten years. the neighbor- hood of Little Village has become both the “Mexico of the Midwest” and the epicenter for parasitic economy formation in Chicago.
A “parasitic economy” is a set of businesses that target spatially immobile people and operates by plundering them despite their limited base of resources and wealth. in the domains of retail provision, housing provision, and work, people are exploited in similar ways as the sub-prime mortgage market has targeted other low-income populations (i.e., African-Americans).
Embedded in this landscape, along with day-labor sites, temporary agencies, and conveni- ence stores, is a host of parasitic institutions, such as payday lenders, pawn shops, and check cashers (Figure 2.7). Payday lenders service populations in need of credit through short-term cash loans typically at high interest rates, often as high as 20 percent. With bills often due before payday, these loans are in high demand as few other options are afforded to this spa- tially confined population. however, due to high interest rates, many are unable to pay and are forced to refinance, deepening their indebtedness. Pawn shops also provide fixed-term
Figure 2.7 Pawn shops are examples of the parasitic economies that mark the poorer sections of many American cities and suburbs. Source: Photo by Lisa benton-Short.
Models of Urban Structure 59
loans to customers who use assets (rather than credit checks) as collateral to back the loans. these loans are also often renewed at high interest rates to avoid appropriation of the col- lateral by pawnshop owners.
Check cashers, perhaps the most parasitic of these institutional forms, serve those paid by check but who lack bank accounts (due to bad credit, indebtedness, etc.). these agencies cash checks for fees that may range from 3 to 10 percent of the check’s value. these busi- nesses also write checks for customers (for $10–15 fees) as a means of paying bills. With no bank access, this has become a particularly popular service. the largest of these, in assets and stores, are Western Union, Segue, and Money Express, together numbering 19 stores in Little Village and representing the penetration of global financial capital into this local formation’s operation.
Residents who repeatedly use these services (i.e., turning checks into cash or other checks), due to few other options, accumulate additional costs in fees that often amount to thousands of dollars annually. yet, with employment typically at $8.00/hour, many have no realistic way to pay off their loans, which keeps them perpetually indebted. Arriving in America with dreams of a better life, and returning money to households in Mexico, they often become disillusioned with their new circumstances.
Source: david Wilson and Matthew Anderson. 2014. “Urban Economic Restructuring,” in L. benton- Short (ed.), Cities of North America: Contemporary Challenges in US and Canadian Cities. Rowman and Littlefield.
include research and development, brokerage
services, banking, medicine, law, advertising,
computer engineering and software develop-
ment. Richard Florida has referred to those
employed in these types of service-sector jobs
as the “creative class.” Cities have expended
tremendous efforts to attract the “creative
class” to reignite their economies.
MODELS OF URbAN STRUCTURE
There are two general features that character-
ize most North American cities. The first is
the grid system. The second is sprawl—the
low-density horizontal spread of development
from the central city.
The average city in the United States
and Canada has the following land-use
distribution: 30 percent residential; 10 percent
industrial/manufacturing; 4 percent com-
mercial; 20 percent roads and highways; 15
percent public land, government buildings,
and parks; and 20 percent vacant or unde-
veloped land (Figure 2.8). The patterning of
these land-use categories differs according to
the age of the city. For example, cities estab-
lished prior to 1840 tend to have very dense,
compact cores. In cities that developed in the
early twentieth century, industrial activities
might be located outside the core area to take
advantage of advances in transportation facil-
ities such as railroads. Still other cities that saw
development occur after 1950 have deconcen-
trated cores with expansive residential zones
due to the automobile and the emergence of
suburbs. The majority of North American cit-
ies, however, have both high-rent and low-rent
60 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
residential areas in the inner core, and a grad-
ually increasing gradient of housing prices as
one moves from the inner suburbs to the outer
suburbs. Patterns of expansion and land-use
sometimes follow the concentric zones model
developed by Burgess in the 1920s, the sector
model developed by Hoyt in the 1930s, or the
multiple nuclei model developed by Harris
and Ullman in the 1940s.
The grid plan, which imposes a rectangular
street grid on urban space, dates from antiquity.
The grid provides a simple, rational format for
allocating land by setting streets at right angles
to one another. Despite a multitude of geog-
raphies and topographies, many cities laid out
on a grid share common design features: a lack
of sensitivity to the physical environment, the
imposition of the grid regardless of topog-
raphy, a focus on straight lines (geometry
over geography), and an underlying sense of
control over urban space. The 1734 map of
Savannah shows the rigid adoption of the grid
(Figure 2.9). Similarly, San Francisco imposed
a grid on one of the most varied topographies
of any North American city.
The grid plan became nearly universal in
the construction of new towns and cities in
the United States and Canada. It allowed for
the rapid subdivision of large parcels of land.
As U.S. cities grew outward, however, particu-
larly after the mid-twentieth century, the grid
became less prevalent. Suburbs offer a free-
form pattern of growth, complete with cul-de-
sacs and winding lanes that contrast sharply
with the grid-plan city. When cities and sub-
urbs merge, the grid merges into a series of
loops, curves, and open spaces; and its rigidity
begins to disappear.
Figure 2.8 Roads and highways take up an enormous one-fifth of urban land in the United States, exemplified by this iconic photo of the Los Angeles freeway system. Source: Photo by Lisa benton-Short.
Models of Urban Structure 61
In contrast, under the influence of New
Urbanism, some recent suburbs have returned
to the grid system. New Urbanism longs nos-
talgically for lost community and the high-
density cities of the past. New Urbanist design
principles emphasize walkability, mixed-use
“town centers” and higher-density residen-
tial areas. Ironically, New Urbanism, which is
a response to suburban sprawl, has had less
impact on redesigning cities than it has on the
redesign of suburbs. The most cited example
of New Urbanism is the town of Celebration,
Florida, a community initially planned and
built by the Disney Corporation. Celebration’s
design elements include low-rise, high-density
residential areas where garages are at the back
of the residences; walkways and porches allow
for pedestrian movement; and a vibrant, car-
free, mixed-use downtown facilitates more
human interaction in public spaces.
The edge city offers yet another model of
urban structure. Edge cities consist of pre-
dominately large-square-footage office space
located beyond the central city. The journalist
Joel Garreau coined the term “edge cities” and
defined them as having:
Figure 2.9 “View of Savannah, as it stood the 29th March, A.d. 1734.” Source: Report on the Social Statistics of Cities, Compiled by George E. Waring, Jr., U.S. Census office, Part ii, 1886. Courtesy of the University of texas Libraries, University of texas at Austin (http://www.lib.utexas. edu/maps/historical/savannah_1734.jpg).
62 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
• more than 5 million square feet of office
space, enough to house up to 50,000
office workers (as many as some tradi-
tional downtowns).
• more than 600,000 square feet of retail
space, the size of a medium shopping mall.
• more jobs than bedrooms.
• no resemblance to cities developed
before 1960.
These edge cities attract large numbers of
service-sector workers during the day, but
empty each night as residential areas are scarce.
Garreau identified 123 places as being true
edge cities, including two dozen such areas in
greater Los Angeles, 23 in metro Washington,
DC, and 21 in greater New York City. Tyson’s
Corner, Virginia, west of Washington, is an
example of an edge city.
Today, edge cities are being rethought.
Since edge cities were built in and around
major highway intersections, traffic conges-
tion in these areas has become a problem.
Pedestrian access is poor and public transpor-
tation is nearly absent. Additionally, as devel-
opment continues in and around edge cities,
they may “merge” into megalopolitan areas
that comprise multiple residential and com-
mercial/business nodes well outside the urban
core. The recent demand for urban living has
had an impact on edge cities. Many “com-
mercial strips” and edge cities that were once
obsolete are now increasing in density. One of
the most interesting transformations is occur-
ring in Tyson’s Corner, which planners pro-
pose to transform into a walkable, sustainable
urban center. By 2050, Tyson’s will be home
to 100,000 residents and 200,000 jobs. Plans
call for new attention to urban design and the
pedestrian realm; growth will be focused at
Metro stops; and new parks and public facili-
ties will be constructed. The superblocks of
streets that are six lanes wide will be broken up
as the city transitions from an auto-oriented
suburban place into a more pedestrian-ori-
ented urban destination. It is possible the edge
cities of the twentieth century will be trans-
formed into new spatial forms during the next
decades (Box 2.2).
DISTINCTIVE CITIES
New York City: A Global Metropolis
New York City is the largest city in the United
States and the one most frequently identi-
fied as the financial and cultural capital of the
country. With 8.4 million people in its five
boroughs, and over 19 million in the metro-
politan area, New York is the only metropolis
in North America to rival the megacities of
Asia and Latin America in terms of population
size. As a true “global city,” New York is often
the starting point for global economic and
cultural trends. Recent events, however, have
shown that New York—like any other city—is
far from invincible. The World Trade Center
attacks of 2001, the blackout of 2003, and the
real estate crisis of 2008 and 2009 have shown
that New York City’s global and regional con-
nectedness can be a source of vulnerability as
well as status.
Despite these setbacks, New York contin-
ues to lead the world in commerce and indus-
try. The Port of New York and New Jersey,
traditionally the main connection between
the Atlantic Ocean and the interior of North
America (via the Erie Canal), now handles
the third-highest tonnage of ship cargo in
the United States and is counted among the
world’s top-20 busiest ports. New York—along
with Los Angeles—continues to dominate
the nation’s manufacturing base with over
20,000 establishments, but it has also gained
Distinctive Cities 63
Box 2.2 the Death of the Shopping Mall?
Figure 2.10 As architecture critic Michael Sorkin has observed, “Like the suburban house that rejects the sociability of front porches and sidewalks for private back yards, malls look inward, turning their backs on the public street.” Source: Photo by Lisa benton-Short.
A trend has been underway for some time—the fall and overhaul of the American shopping mall. From 1970 to 2000, enclosed shopping malls were constructed all over north America (Figure 2.10). Long trips to downtown department stores had fallen out of favor and the suburbs were the destination for new, clean, and air-conditioned shopping. during these three decades, about 1,500 malls were built in America’s suburbs.
but, since 2000, the mall has been on the decline. With shoppers and investment return- ing to the downtown, suburban malls are dying. in the next decade, as many as half of the malls in America could be torn down or reconfigured. in many suburbs, in fact, dead malls are already highly visible. Signs fade, facades crumble, and weeds sprout in parking lots. there is even a website that keeps track of such sorry decay: deadmalls.com defines a “dead mall” as one with a high vacancy rate, low consumer traffic, and that may appear dated or deteriorating. but, does all of this mean the death of the shopping mall?
developers in the United States have begun building a new type of shopping center known as the “lifestyle center.” Lifestyle centers were developed, in part, to counter the problems associated with the spatial segregation of suburban sprawl. ironically, developers of lifestyle centers looked to traditional downtowns as an inspiration. buildings are often made to look
64 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
traction and thrived in the increasingly valu-
able “creative industries” (Figure 2.11). These
sectors are concentrated in different portions
of the city, with music and theater in Times
Square, fashion in the Garment District, inte-
rior design and architecture in Chelsea and
SoHo, and advertising on Madison Avenue.
These industries not only benefit from city
tax incentives for television and film, but also
from the talent available at nearby educational
institutions, such as Julliard (music), the Pratt
Institute (design), and the Fashion Institute of
Technology.
New York sits in a strategically important
location where mainland New York State
meets the Atlantic Ocean, Long Island, south-
western Connecticut, and northeastern New
Jersey. This region is commonly called the
“tri-state area.” The hard metamorphic rock
making up Manhattan Island has allowed for
intense vertical development of skyscrapers.
Central Park, a product of the urban parks
movement of the Progressive Era, is the only
extensive open space on the island of Manhat-
tan. First inhabited by the Algonquin Indians,
the island was purchased and settled by the
Dutch in 1624 and named New Amsterdam.
By 1800, New York City, with its 60,000 resi-
dents, had become the largest city in the coun-
try. It has maintained this position since then,
now forming the center of the Boston-to-
Washington Megalopolis. Along with Tokyo
and London, New York is one of the three tra-
ditional “global cities” that anchor world trade,
commerce, banking, and stock transactions.
Even as New York becomes ever more glob-
ally interconnected, the city is in many ways
socially, economically, and spatially frag-
mented. Despite its world-city status, New
York has always struggled with its reputation
for poor sanitation and high crime. Many
geographers have argued that these problems,
rather than being truly corrected, are tempo-
rarily suppressed, confined to particular areas
of the city, or relocated to the outer boroughs
and suburbs. New York has frequently located
environmentally hazardous projects, such as
expressways and incinerators, in poor and
racialized neighborhoods (e.g., South Bronx,
Sunset Park) where public purview is reduced
like multiple storefronts that have evolved over time. Shops open directly to the sidewalk. Lifestyle centers feature mixed uses (retail, office, and residential space), pedestrian walk- ability, and are designed to open toward the street, thereby creating outside public spaces that include wide sidewalks, plazas, parks and public squares. Some might include libraries, movie theatres, or civic amenities. Unlike traditional shopping malls with anchor department stores like nordstrom or Macy’s, lifestyle centers focus more on specialty retailers such as Ann taylor, Williams Sonoma, talbots, banana Republic, nicole Miller, Eddie bauer, Pottery barn, Liz Claiborne, the Gap, and Restoration hardware
Lifestyle centers have become common in both affluent suburbs and revitalized down- towns. they are now among the most popular retail formats in America. in 2002, there were only 30 lifestyle centers in the United States; by 2004 there were 120; today about 19 lifestyle centers are constructed each year. Lifestyle centers continue to proliferate, even as conventional shopping malls are declining.
Distinctive Cities 65
and resistance is less likely. The city has also
tried to reconfigure itself as a safe, livable city
and tourist destination. In the 1990s, New
York implemented “quality of life” laws that
criminalized panhandling and homelessness
while policing and securitizing (e.g., through
closed-circuit cameras) highly trafficked and
visible public spaces. Even places that previ-
ously served as important sites of public pro-
test, such as the steps of City Hall, are now
frequently fenced off or guarded.
Gentrification has undoubtedly driven the
fragmentation of New York City. Although
gentrification is commonly understood as
the product of gradual, localized, ground-up
improvements to neighborhood properties,
much of the gentrification in New York since
2000 has been driven by corporate developers
and municipal interests. The New York Urban
Development Corporation, for example,
has forcibly purchased many Times Square
properties for redevelopment. Privately man-
aged business improvement districts (BIDs)
are now responsible for many of the public
space improvements (e.g., beautification, sig-
nage). As many economic geographers have
observed, the competitive advantage of the
creative industries located in New York is con-
tingent on the successful “branding” of the
neighborhoods in which they are located. By
the same token, previously decaying neigh-
borhoods such as the Meatpacking District
(Manhattan) and Williamsburg (Brooklyn)
strive to attract creative firms and workers by
cultivating their status as the city’s next arts
destination or nightlife center. Although this
intra-urban neighborhood competition has
expanded the range of living space available
for the upper class and the upwardly mobile,
it has also priced out middle-class residents
Figure 2.11 Peter Woytuk sculptures, playing off of new york’s nickname, the big Apple, became a public art exhibit that extended all along broadway, this one on the Upper West Side. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
66 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
of neighborhoods such as Park Slope (Brook-
lyn), Harlem, and the Lower East side of Man-
hattan. Critics of gentrification have claimed
that rapid redevelopment, securitization, and
branding of urban space creates “Disneyfied”
fantasy cities and “entertainment machines”
that put tourists and business tenants ahead
of residents.
Immigration has been central to both the
identity of New York City and the individual
identities of its neighborhoods. Over 12 mil-
lion immigrants from Ireland, Germany, Italy,
Poland, Greece, and elsewhere arrived in New
York City during the late 1800s and early
1900s. During the past three decades, how-
ever, newcomers from Latin America and Asia
have comprised the bulk of the immigrant
population. Despite being one of most ethni-
cally diverse areas in the United States, New
York City is still highly segregated. Real estate
agents, who serve as gatekeepers to the city’s
properties, often sort new immigrants toward
neighborhoods dominated by their respective
ethno-racial groups. Such practices, however,
reinforce self-segregating tendencies, ethno-
racial ghettos (e.g., Puerto Ricans in the Bronx,
Dominicans in Washington Heights), and
mutual antipathies between groups. New York
thus remains a city of extremes. Within a rela-
tively small area, extreme wealth meets with
extreme poverty, global integration encounters
local fragmentation, and individualistic eco-
nomic gain sits side by side with the increasing
management and regulation of public space.
These dichotomies, however, are likely to guar-
antee New York’s place as a fascinating site of
geographic study for years to come.
Los Angeles: Outward Glitz, Inner Turmoil
Los Angeles contrasts sharply with New York
City. The large, sprawling city covers 498
square miles (1290 sq km), has multiple busi-
ness districts (e.g., Hollywood, Beverly Hills),
and depends on complex, often congested,
networks of highways to connect the various
“nuclei” of the city. The sprawl of the city, typ-
ified by concrete structures, superhighways,
and low-lying residential and commercial
developments (e.g., strip malls) extends north
through the San Fernando Valley (“The Val-
ley”) and eastward into the “Inland Empire”
of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties.
With a metropolitan-area population of about
13 million, the city of Los Angeles itself is the
nation’s second largest, a position that it took
from Chicago during the 1980s. Yet, like New
York, Los Angeles is also a city of extreme con-
trasts. Both the immense wealth of Beverly
Hills and the endemic poverty and disorder
of South Central Los Angeles have been fix-
tures in the U.S. media and the American cul-
tural imagination. A young, politically liberal
population in the arts and entertainment sec-
tor stands in stark contrast to the Republican
families (and the conspicuous consumption)
featured in the Real Housewives of Orange
County and of Beverly Hills. And in a city
perhaps less beholden to dominant notions of
social class and pedigree than New York City,
Boston, or Chicago, gated communities—
intended to protect and contain wealth—
abound in many areas.
Since the mid-twentieth century, Los Ange-
les has been perhaps best known for its role
as a premier “entertainment machine.” Coined
by Richard Lloyd and Terry Nichols Clark, the
entertainment machine comprises the vari-
ous industries that cities use to respond to
postindustrial elites that want to experience
their own cities as if they were tourists. These
practices impact considerations about the
proper nature of amenities to provide in con-
temporary cities. While Lloyd and Clark used
Distinctive Cities 67
Chicago as their case study, Los Angeles dif-
fers in that it is an entertainment machine not
only for its own residents, but for a global film
and television industry. Following the arrival
of the Southern Pacific and Santa Fe railroad
lines in 1876 and 1885, and the construction of
an artificial port in 1914, Los Angeles became
a West Coast metropolis that would truly rival
New York and Philadelphia. The port, now
referred to as Los Angeles-Long Beach, pro-
vided an export hub for the West’s growing oil
industry as well as an entrepôt for cruise ships
and imported goods from Asia. Today, Los
Angeles is known for being a national leader
in clothing and luxury goods manufacturing,
but especially film and television. Three major
film studios (Paramount, 20th Century Fox,
and Universal) are located within the city lim-
its, while NBC television studios are located in
Burbank, and CBS in Culver City. Many prom-
inent cable television networks (e.g., Bravo,
MTV, and VH1) are also located in Los Ange-
les, and the reality shows that now dominate
North American cable television often depict
mansion-and-driver lifestyles associated with
the city’s wealthiest jurisdictions. The demo-
graphics of Hollywood in particular reflect the
legions of starving actors aiming to land a job
with the film studios and television networks.
The median household income hovers around
$35,000, low for Los Angeles, and the average
household has about two dwellers. Renters
occupy well over 90 percent of the housing
units. The percentages of never-married men
(55 percent) and never-married women (40
percent) are among the country’s highest.
Although Los Angeles has a shorter history
of international immigration than New York—
most of the city’s migrants were from within
the United States before the 1960s—the city is
one of the most diverse in the United States.
More than a third of the city’s population is
foreign born, with the most recent waves of
immigrants coming from Latin America—
particularly Mexico—and Asia. The newness
of immigration also poses challenges for Los
Angeles. Most immigrants are not English
speaking, and both Los Angeles and Califor-
nia have debated whether to continue inte-
grating foreign languages (especially Spanish)
into school curricula and signage, or to make
English the sole official language. New immi-
grants in the Los Angeles area also tend to be
poor and experience discrimination in hous-
ing, employment, and education. While these
immigrants help support the quintessentially
“southern California lifestyle” by working in
service industries ranging from gardening to
dry cleaning, they often live in spatially and
economically marginalized neighborhoods
such as East Los Angeles and Compton. The
economic disadvantage of the city’s most vul-
nerable groups has created levels of organized
and gang-related crime that are among the
highest in the country. According to the Los
Angeles Police Department, the city is home
to 45,000 gang members, organized into
about 450 gangs. Among them are the Crips
and Bloods (African American), the Sureños,
(Mexican), and Mara Salvatrucha (mainly of
Salvadoran descent). The preponderance of
organized crime groups has led to the city
being referred to as the “Gang Capital of
America.”
Los Angeles is also marked by a number
of environmental problems, such as traffic
congestion and pollution. In this sprawling,
automobile-dependent city, most residents
commute and more than 7 out of 10 workers
drive to work alone. All of the streetcar lines
in Los Angeles were closed in 1963 in favor
of freeway development. Although the city
reinstituted a commuter rail system in 1990,
its five lines—designed mostly to connect
68 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
property owners began to leave, many resi-
dents lost their homes due to foreclosure and
eviction. Unemployment, the crack cocaine
epidemic of the 1980s and 1990s, and result-
ing drug-related violence and property crimes
gave Detroit unwelcome notoriety as one of
the most crime-ridden cities in North Amer-
ica. Detroit’s woes have continued. In 2010, it
was estimated that about one-third of the city,
some 40 square miles (104 sq km), was vacant.
The current joke is that the only expanding
business in Detroit is demolition.
Redevelopment has become a buzzword
in Detroit since, but redevelopment strat-
egies have garnered mixed results. In the
mid-1990s, three casinos opened in Detroit’s
downtown. In 2000, Comerica Park replaced
historic Tiger Stadium as the home of the
Detroit Tigers, and in 2002 the NFL Detroit
Lions returned to a new downtown stadium,
Ford Field. The 2004 opening of “The Com-
puware” gave downtown Detroit its first sig-
nificant new office building in a decade. The
city hosted the 2005 Major League Baseball
All-Star Game and Super Bowl XL in 2006,
both of which prompted more improvements
to the downtown area. Currently, Detroit is
constructing a riverfront promenade park as
part of the Detroit International Riverfront
Project and is working with Canada on a
second bridge that will connect Detroit and
Windsor, Ontario.
Even so, the new infrastructure has not nec-
essarily improved economic growth. Detroit
remains one of the nation’s poorest cities.
Currently, almost 40 percent of residents
live below the poverty level, and the popula-
tion (83 percent African American, 9 percent
white, and 7 percent Hispanic) remains highly
segregated. Abandoned housing ranks as one
of the city’s most persistent problems. In 2010,
a total of 78,000 housing units were vacant or
downtown Los Angeles and the surrounding
suburbs—are insufficient to provide an ade-
quate alternative to car transport. The traffic
congestion, coupled with an unfavorable basin
location and dry climate, has made Los Ange-
les the smoggiest city in the country. Although
smog alerts have decreased since the 1970s—
when there were almost 100 per year—the
National Lung Association has consistently
ranked Los Angeles as the first or second most
polluted city in the United States. Los Angeles
also has insufficient water resources to sup-
port its population. Transfers of water from
northern California and the Colorado River
have reached their limits, and when combined
with the frequent droughts, the only alter-
natives seem to be conservation and a turn
toward the sea. In 1990, the first desaliniza-
tion plant opened along the California coast.
Finally, the ever-present threat of earthquakes
is announced by several low-grade tremors
each year. The potential for devastation is real,
and emergency planning is a priority item for
schools, businesses, and police.
Detroit and Cleveland: Shrinking Cities
Overall, the U.S. national economy has seen
growth and prosperity; however, some cities
confront a declining or stagnant economy and
a shrinking population. In 1950, the popu-
lation of municipal Cleveland, Ohio, was
900,000, but by 2014 it had fallen to 390,000.
Detroit, Michigan, was once home to both
GM and Ford and was dubbed “Motor City”
or “Motown.” It was home to 1.8 million resi-
dents in 1950. Today, its population is well less
than half of that number. These two former
urban industrial giants have experienced a
severe reversal of fortune.
In Detroit, as high-paying manufacturing
jobs became scarce and both corporations and
Distinctive Cities 69
abandoned and 55,000 of those were in fore-
closure. Detroit, already suffering from dein-
dustrialization in the twentieth century, was
also one of the U.S. cities hit hardest by the
2008 foreclosure crisis.
Cleveland has also struggled against the
legacy of deindustrialization in order to
reinvent itself in a more competitive global
economy. Initiatives to rebuild Cleveland have
replicated the formulae that many Northeast-
ern and Midwestern cities have employed:
new museums, sports stadiums, convention
centers, renovated industrial warehouse dis-
tricts for housing and retail, and waterfront
development. Pundits dubbed these efforts
“the Cleveland Comeback.” One of the city’s
most successful projects has been the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, which
opened to the public in 1995. The building,
located on the shore of Lake Erie, was crucial
in regenerating Cleveland’s waterfront area.
New downtown stadiums for the city’s profes-
sional sports teams have also aided revitaliza-
tion. The Gateway Sports Complex cost $360
million and included an open-air stadium for
baseball and an indoor arena for basketball.
Currently, the city is redeveloping the water-
front along both Lake Erie and the Cuyahoga
River as a destination for tourists and locals
alike. The city has also become a regional and
national player in health services and bio-
medical technologies by capitalizing on the
wealth of educational and medical facilities
in the region. Both the Cleveland Clinic and
University Hospitals have announced bil-
lions of dollars of investment in new facilities.
Despite these efforts, some experts claim that
the Cleveland comeback has stalled. Between
2000 and 2007, Cleveland suffered one of the
largest proportional population losses in the
country, shrinking by 8 percent. In addition,
many of Cleveland’s inner suburbs continue
to decline and overall urban growth remains
negligible. The case studies of Detroit and
Cleveland show that both cities continue to
experience mixed results in efforts to realign
and reinvigorate their economies.
Montreal: Moving Uphill from Upheaval
While most North American cities’ economic
and demographic destinies have been shaped
by global economic trends, Montreal’s have
been shaped by cultural identity and the
resultant political clashes. In French-speaking
Quebec, beginning in the 1960s, many resi-
dents abandoned the Roman Catholic Church
and traditional family structures and now
frequently opt for common-law relationships
instead. Consequently, the provincial fertil-
ity rate—the number of children per woman
of childbearing age—has stayed below 1.5.
Yet Montreal was perhaps less affected by the
modernization imperatives of its 1960s’ gov-
ernment than it was by the Quebec separatist
movement that emerged at the same time. For
most of Canada’s history, Montreal had served
as the unofficial corporate and cultural capi-
tal of the country, hosting the World Expo in
1967 and the summer Olympics in 1976. But
even as these events were held, Montreal was
in a state of unrest. Between 1963 and 1970,
the paramilitary Quebec Liberation Front
became responsible for over 160 violent inci-
dents, which killed eight people and injured
many more, including the bombing of the
Montreal Stock Exchange in 1969 and the
October Crisis of 1970 where a British Trade
Commissioner was kidnapped and an anti-
separatist Quebec labor minister was mur-
dered. This extremism, however, belied more
mainstream efforts to ensure that the province
of Quebec, and especially Montreal, remained
French. In 1976, Law 101 made French the
70 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
official language of government, commerce,
and educational instruction in Montreal, and
took extra efforts to ensure that newcom-
ers and their children would have to learn
French. Unfortunately, many corporations
and their workers, who were used to operating
in an English business milieu, decided to leave.
Major firm headquarters, such as those for TD
Canada Trust and Canadian Pacific Rail, left
the city. Between 1990 and 2011, Montreal lost
21 of its Canadian top-500 companies (a loss
of 25 percent), with most moving to Toronto.
Referenda for independence in 1980 and in
1995 cemented Montreal’s fate as a corporate
second-fiddle to Toronto. While both refer-
enda failed (albeit only barely), they created an
atmosphere of hostility between many French
Quebeckers and the remaining Anglo minor-
ity as well as immigrants—who had been
blamed in French media for the failures of the
dual referenda. Despite the post-1980 provin-
cial immigration policies designed to prior-
itize French language ability and connection
to the province rather than solely education
and skills (as in the rest of Canada), immigra-
tion to Montreal has grown during the past
two decades—even if not to the same extent
as in Toronto. In his book Creating Diversity
Capital, Blair Ruble argues that the growth
of immigration in ethnically and racially
bifurcated cities such as Montreal (French-
Canadian/Anglo-Canadian) and Washington,
DC (black/white) has allayed some of the ten-
sions between opposing groups and allowed
for forms of cultural hybridity; for exam-
ple, the crowning of a bilingual, West Indian
queen in Montreal’s St. Patrick’s Day parade.
Yet immigrants have not necessarily been
the key player in Montreal’s slow rebound
from the decline of the late twentieth cen-
tury. The new global order that prioritizes
cultural cachet over corporate rankings and
specialized merchants over mass manufac-
turing means that Montreal’s unique history
and culture—coupled with cheap rents from
housing subsidies and the after-effects of
decline—have made it the home base for crea-
tive and design-based industries in Canada.
Given its eclectic architecture and broad avail-
ability of film services and crew members (it is
home to the National Film Board of Canada),
Montreal is now a popular filming location for
U.S. studios. The city is also home to festivals
such as Just for Laughs and the Montreal Jazz
Festival, as well as global cultural enterprises
like Cirque du Soleil. In recognition of these
arts-based industries and a budding fashion
district in the Plateau neighborhood, Mon-
treal was named a UNESCO City of Design in
2006. The growth of the arts, however, is also
having spillovers into hi-tech industries. With
the help of government subsidies supporting
video game designers, the city has attracted
world-leading game developers and publisher
studios such as Ubisoft, Eidos Interactive,
Artificial Mind and Movement, Bioware, and
Strategy First. The case of Montreal shows that
cultural differentiation has evolved from a pit-
fall to a strength in the new global economy.
Ottawa: A Capital of Compromise
More a tool of political compromise than an
economic boomtown, Canada’s federal capi-
tal, Ottawa, has long acted as a nexus of com-
promise between the many facets of Canadian
identity: French and English, urban and rural,
Upper Canada (Ontario) and Lower Canada
(Quebec and the Atlantic provinces), and the
interests of federal bureaucrats and a burgeon-
ing technology sector. Ottawa and its Quebec
neighbor, Gatineau, comprise the fourth-larg-
est census metropolitan area (CMA) in Can-
ada with1.24 million residents.
Distinctive Cities 71
Ottawa was designated the capital of Can-
ada by Britain’s Queen Victoria in 1857, even
before confederation and independence in
1867. Already an important lumber town at
the northern terminus of the Rideau Canal
linking the Ottawa River and Lake Ontario,
Ottawa was chosen for its defendable strategic
position (i.e., away from the U.S. border) and
its location on the Ontario-Quebec border,
midway between Toronto and Quebec City.
The location of compromise is evident in the
linguistic diversity of Ottawa-Gatineau today.
About 40 percent of the population declares
itself French-English bilingual, while another
45 percent claim to speak English only and 15
percent claim to speak French only. But, living
in an urban area straddling two provinces also
creates challenges. Many residents live in one
province and work in another, and frequently
negotiate the traffic laws, rental practices, and
tax structures of two different jurisdictions.
In addition to legislative and linguistic differ-
ences in the area, there are political differences
between downtown Ottawa residents and the
rural and suburban residents that joined the
city following amalgamation in 2001. Ottawa
politicians frequently avoid projects that may
irritate more politically conservative residents
in West Carleton, Osgoode, Greely, and other
towns that pay Ottawa taxes but do not always
receive Ottawa municipal services.
An additional challenge is the dominance of
the federal government in the development of
the area. The Ottawa-Gatineau metropolitan
area is also part of the National Capital Region,
a federal jurisdiction managed by a corpora-
tion called the National Capital Commission
(NCC). Some see the NCC, which manages
the federal government’s vast properties in the
area, as a hindrance to developing Ottawa into
a world-class city. Buildings cannot exceed the
elevation of the National Parliament and most
development has been geared toward creating
a “green capital” dotted with parks and fringed
with a belt of woodlands and farmlands.
Ottawa, however, has refashioned its historic
and national emblems as focal points of devel-
opment. In 2006, Confederation Boulevard
was built to help pedestrians access attractions
on both sides of the Ottawa River, including
the Parliament, the Rideau Canal locks, and
the Museum of Civilization in Gatineau. The
historic Byward market in the center of down-
town Ottawa—originally a supply stop for the
lumber camps around Ottawa—is now the
center of a revitalized downtown nightlife and
shopping district.
In Ottawa, the cooperation of government
and industry has led to the city-region becom-
ing a tech-pole now known as “Silicon Valley
North.” The Ottawa-Gatineau hi-tech sector,
which is focusing on information technol-
ogy, telecommunications, and nanotechnol-
ogy, has employed anywhere between 50,000
and 85,000 workers per year during the past
decade and includes well-known firms such as
Corel, Nortel, and Adobe. Although the “gov-
ernment town” is usually seen as the antith-
esis of an open-market environment fostering
technology and innovation, the Canadian
federal government has actually been central
in the development of the region’s tech-pole.
The government is not only the largest user of
information technology in the area, it has also
funded hi-tech research and innovation in the
laboratories of the National Research Coun-
cil. Other public-private bodies, such as the
Ottawa-Carleton Research Institute and the
Ottawa Capital Network, provide the funding
and programming to ensure that local inno-
vations can be leveraged into the creation of
local startup firms. By capitalizing on these
networks and Ottawa’s highly educated tal-
ent pool (30 percent have university degrees),
72 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
Ottawa has developed its own version of Sili-
con Valley—one committed to local research,
development, and reinvestment.
Washington, DC: A New Immigrant Gateway
No longer are the world’s migrants moving to
the older, established destinations of the nine-
teenth and early twentieth centuries. In the
twenty-first century, many choose to settle in
cities where new economic growth is providing
opportunities for both high-skilled and low-
skilled workers. Washington (coextensive with
the federal District of Columbia) and its sub-
urbs in Maryland and Virginia have become
home to hundreds of thousands of new immi-
grants in the past 15 years. Despite the eco-
nomic recession of 2008, Washington, DC,
saw modest economic growth in federal gov-
ernment jobs, contract work, and information
technology. Military-funded aerospace firms
such as Northrop-Grumman and Lockheed
Martin have established East Coast headquar-
ters in DC to be close to the Department of
Defense. More recently, the Dulles “High Tech
Corridor,” which stretches westward from
Arlington, Virginia, toward Dulles Interna-
tional Airport, has attracted high-skilled soft-
ware engineers and other high-technology
workers. The firm AOL employs 5,000 in its
headquarters there. To address a shortage of
high-skilled workers in the 1990s, the U.S.
Department of Homeland Security created an
H1 Visa specifically to target foreigners with
college degrees in computer-related fields. As
a result, many skilled immigrants from India,
South Korea, Hong Kong, and mainland
China moved to the Washington, DC, region
during this time. The continued growth of a
prosperous, global “creative class” has led to a
simultaneous demand for domestic and man-
ual labor. Many immigrants from El Salvador,
Bolivia, Peru, Brazil, Mexico, and Guatemala
have also come to DC to work as nannies,
Figure 2.12 Migrants make their presence felt in numerous ways. in this case, there are sufficient brazilian immigrants for a brazilian service at this baptist Church outside Washington, dC. Source: Photo by Lisa benton-Short.
Distinctive Cities 73
landscapers, construction workers, and hotel
and restaurant staff (Figure 2.12).
Washington has become a magnet for immi-
grants from diverse countries. In 1970, only
4.5 percent of the population of Washington,
DC, was foreign born. By 2009, Washington
was home to 1 million foreign-born residents,
which accounted for 20 percent of the urban
population. Cities such as Las Vegas, Orlando,
Atlanta, and Charlotte, along with DC, have
experienced the bulk of their immigration in
the past two decades, making them new immi-
grant gateways.
Immigrants arriving in these new gate-
ways, however, do not follow the same set-
tlement patterns and processes seen in more
established gateway cities such as New York
and Chicago. The conventional model of
spatial assimilation assumes that immigrants
first cluster with their own ethnic groups in
center-city enclaves such as Chinatowns and
Little Italys and—as they gain higher levels of
education and income—leave these enclaves
to reside in suburban areas with higher social
status and larger homes. In the Washington
area, many immigrants move directly to the
suburbs rather than the central city. In addi-
tion, many immigrants live in moderate- to
high-income neighborhoods, not in the poor-
est ones. In fact, many are settling in places
that only 30 years ago were mostly white and
had very few foreign-born residents. Now, the
historic image of a city polarized into “Black
and White” no longer holds true, and city
leaders and residents are grappling with how
to include and support increasingly diverse
communities.
New Orleans: Vulnerable City
Disasters remind us of just how vulnerable
cities are to environmental forces. To New
Orleans, hurricanes and floods are not new.
The city was originally located close to where
the Mississippi River flows into the Gulf of
Mexico, along a river bend south of Lake Pon-
tchartrain. It was sited on a relatively high
piece of land where French traders had already
been encamped. This area became known as
the French Quarter. The high water table cre-
ated construction difficulties and the volatile
river regularly flooded. In the early twentieth
century, improvements in pumping technol-
ogy encouraged more development in the
lower lying areas, which tended to be settled
by working-class, poor, and minority popula-
tions. Still, the river that acts as the city’s eco-
nomic lifeblood also threatens to destroy it.
In 2005, the city of New Orleans was dev-
astated by Hurricane Katrina. Hurricanes pro-
duce more than an inch of rain per hour, high
winds that can tear buildings and other struc-
tures away from their moorings, and damage
to infrastructure ranging from washed out
or flooded roads to power lines that are torn
apart by wind and waves. Storm surges asso-
ciated with the high winds can reach over 20
feet (6 m) above ordinary sea level. For most
coastal cities, flooding is a serious problem.
For a city below sea level, like much of New
Orleans, it is potentially catastrophic. It was
not the ferocious winds of Katrina that dam-
aged New Orleans, but the storm surge that
breached the levees. The city center flooded
when portions of the levees at 17th Street and
Industrial Canal collapsed. Almost 80 percent
of the city was under water, sometimes over 20
feet (6 m) in depth. An estimated 1,000 people
were killed, most of them drowned by rapidly
rising floodwaters.
At first glance, Hurricane Katrina seemed
like a natural disaster since a hurricane is a
force of nature. But Katrina’s impacts and
effects were intensified by socioeconomic
74 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
conditions. The flooding of the city was caused
by poorly designed levees that could not with-
stand a predictable storm surge. Levee pilings
that should have been 15 feet (4.5 m) high had
settled in the unstable soil to only 12–13 feet
(3.7–4 m) above sea level. It was not Katrina
alone that caused the disaster but the shoddy
engineering and poor design of inadequately
funded public works.
As Katrina approached New Orleans, evac-
uation orders were finally given. But there was
little provision made for those without cars
or for the city’s most vulnerable residents.
Many disabled, poor, black, and elderly resi-
dents were trapped. Thousands made their
way to the Superdome and the Convention
Center, where they remained for days, a stun-
ning indictment of social and racial inequality
in New Orleans. The same inequalities were
reflected in the damage caused by Hurricane
Katrina. Flooding disproportionately affected
poor neighborhoods such as the Lower Ninth
Ward. The more affluent, predominantly
white sections, such as the French Quarter,
Audubon Park, and the Garden District had
been built at higher elevations and escaped
flood damage. Most of the high-poverty tracts
were flooded. In closer detail, the “natural”
disaster appears to have been a social disas-
ter as well. Environmental disasters become
social in the way they are handled and how
the distribution of their effects reflects social
differences.
While most of the rest of the country has
long moved on to other headlines, the rebuild-
ing of New Orleans is not over (Figure 2.13).
Five years after Katrina, the damage of the hur-
ricane lived on in abandoned houses, in empty
storefronts, and in the ongoing debates about
how to rebuild the city. It is estimated that
Figure 2.13 in areas that were flooded during Katrina, houses have been raised above flood level in anticipation of future threats. Source: Photo by Lisa benton-Short.
Urban Problems and Prospects 75
about 236,000 people left New Orleans due
to Hurricane Katrina; many did not return.
The lack of jobs continues to be one reason
why the city has not fully recovered its pre-
Katrina population, and block after block in
the Lower Ninth Ward remains empty. While
government-sponsored rebuilding efforts
have been slow, nonprofit organizations initi-
ated many grassroots programs. The Make It
Right NOLA Foundation, established by actor
Brad Pitt, has had tremendous success build-
ing affordable homes for working families. By
2015, the Foundation had rebuilt more than
100 eco-friendly homes, allowing more than
350 people to return to the Lower Ninth Ward.
URbAN PRObLEMS AND PROSPECTS
Globalization and the Urban Hierarchy
A major driver of urban change today is the
growing linkages between cities and global
trends. During the past two decades, many
cities have become more competitive at the
global scale and processes of economic globali-
zation have restructured those cities spatially.
New financial districts, luxurious residential
areas, and unprecedented property booms
indicate success in the global marketplace and
a competitive position in the urban hierarchy.
Almost all cities are affected by globalization
and try to secure international investment,
but not all cities become world cities. Interna-
tional banks, global department store chains,
and other high-end retail establishments pro-
vide visual reminders of globalization’s effects
on the North American city.
Consider the changing locations of Fortune
500 company headquarters. In the 1950s and
1960s, large Northeastern and Midwestern
cities such as Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia,
Pittsburgh, and Montreal, were home to the
world’s largest industrial companies. In 1960,
New York had six of the top ten Fortune 500
headquarters, including Standard Oil, Gen-
eral Electric, U.S. Steel, Mobil Oil, Texaco,
and Western Electric. Today, the number of
Fortune 500 corporate headquarters in New
York has fallen by half. Firms such as General
Electric and Xerox have moved to the suburbs
or the Sunbelt. Recently, Hertz car rentals
moved its headquarters from New Jersey to
Fort Myers, Florida, following a merger with
Thrifty, while Volkswagen moved its North
American headquarters from Detroit to sub-
urban Washington, DC. The biggest growth
in corporate headquarters is occurring in
Orlando and West Palm Beach (Florida),
Greensboro (North Carolina), Atlanta, Dallas,
and Houston. This changing geographic dis-
tribution is the result of many factors: com-
pany relocations, rises and falls of local firms,
and the merging of companies. The lower costs
for office space and housing in medium-sized
cities such as West Palm Beach and Greens-
boro provide another reason for a company
to relocate. Most firms, however, have chosen
metropolitan areas of at least 1 million.
Because key drivers of globalization such
as finance and hi-tech have been concentrated
in Europe, North America, and East Asia,
cities in these regions tend to dominate the
global urban hierarchy. Some cities have ben-
efited from globalization and have eclipsed
their rivals. For example, many corporate
headquarters have moved from Montreal to
Toronto following the rise of Quebec’s sepa-
ratist movement. While Toronto has become
the major conduit between Canada and the
international capital markets, Calgary and
Edmonton serve as crucial links to the more
specialized international petroleum industry.
Quebec City has also transitioned from spe-
cializing in agricultural processing and basic
76 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
manufacturing to a more diverse, postin-
dustrial economy. The North American Free
Trade Agreement of 1992 has resulted in an
increase of exports from Quebec City to the
United States. In addition to a fairly robust
aerospace industry, tourism, information
technology, and biotechnology comprise
some of the growth sectors for Quebec City.
Other cities have fallen down the hierarchy.
Detroit, Cleveland, Buffalo, and Pittsburgh
have experienced a decline, as automobile fac-
tories and steel mills have closed. These cities
struggle to compete for coveted global link-
ages and networks that promise to reinvigor-
ate their economies. In Canada, Thunder Bay,
St. John’s, and Halifax contend with the chal-
lenges of urban economies based on natural
resources.
There are many different articulations of
the urban hierarchy (Table 2.2). Some cities
compete for financial command functions—
stock markets, banks, multinational corpo-
rate headquarters, and other forms of capital
exchange. New York is the most important
city in this regard, followed by Chicago and
Toronto. Other articulations include multi-
cultural command centers such as Vancouver,
Toronto, Miami, and Los Angeles, which forge
important linkages to other regions through
their immigrant populations. Some cities have
found a niche in the hierarchy by establishing
transportation connections through global
airline networks. These cities include Toronto,
Los Angeles, Seattle, Memphis (home to Fed-
eral Express), Atlanta (home to UPS), and
Anchorage, a stop along military and cross-
Arctic air routes. Some cities are resurrecting
their position in the urban hierarchy. Follow-
ing massive factory closures and job losses
associated with deindustrialization, cities such
as Pittsburgh and Cleveland have success-
fully realigned their economies with global
markets. While some of the old industrial
companies remain, these cities now capital-
ize on health-care facilities that have gained
national reputations. In contrast to Detroit’s
continued decline since the collapse of the
U.S. auto industry, Cleveland and Pittsburgh
have moved back up the hierarchy—albeit in
more specialized roles.
Globalization and Localization
As North American cities become part of
global circuits of people and capital, they also
seek out ways to maintain control over their
local character and identity. To attract ever
more global investment, they market local
attributes and amenities. Globalization and
localization therefore act as competing forces
in most North American cities. The increas-
ing density of connections between migrants,
their countries of origin, and North Ameri-
can gateway cities has led to the emergence of
cross-border practices and identities typically
referred to as “transnational.” Cities, eager to
capitalize on the cachet and dynamism of an
international population have also branded
themselves as transnational or “global.” Trans-
nationalism is celebrated in places like the San
Jose-Santa Clara metropolitan area of Califor-
nia, commonly known as Silicon Valley. Here,
Indian, Chinese, and Israeli professionals who
were educated in the engineering and com-
puter science programs of local institutions
like Stanford University and UC Berkeley—
and who stayed in the area to work—were
central in establishing Silicon Valley as the
chief U.S. hi-tech cluster and forming local
auxiliary organizations such as the Silicon Val-
ley Indian Professionals Association.
Many cities have tried to parlay the
diversity of their populations into identi-
ties as global or cosmopolitan cities.” In
Urban Problems and Prospects 77
Table 2.2 The World’s Most Globally Engaged, Competitive, and Connected Cities
A. K. Kearney’s Global Engagement
The Economist’s Global City Competitiveness
P. Taylor’s Global Network Connectivity
New york New york London
London London New york Paris Singapore Hong Kong
Tokyo Paris Paris
Hong Kong Hong Kong Tokyo
Los Angeles Tokyo Singapore Chicago Zurich Chicago Seoul Washington, DC Milan Brussels Chicago Los Angeles Washington DC boston Toronto Singapore Frankfurt Madrid
Sydney Toronto Amsterdam Vienna San Francisco Sydney Beijing Geneva Frankfurt
boston Sydney Brussels Toronto Amsterdam Sao Paulo San Francisco Vancouver San Francisco Madrid Los Angeles Mexico City Moscow Stockholm Zurich
Berlin Seoul Taipei
Shanghai Montreal Mumbai Buenos Aires Houston Jakarta Frankfurt Copenhagen Buenos Aires
Barcelona Vienna Melbourne
Zurich Dallas Miami Amsterdam Dublin Kuala Lumpur
Stockholm Madrid Stockholm
Rome Seattle Bangkok Dubai Philadelphia Prague Montreal Berlin Dublin
Atlanta
North American cities in bold.
1998, Toronto—known for its “hyperdiverse”
population adopted the motto “Our Diversity,
Our Strength.” The mere presence of transna-
tional immigrants, however, does not imply
that their skills or cultural contributions are
valued equally to those of the native-born
Canadians. Yet, not every city responds to
transnationalism. In Vancouver, the upsurge
of immigrants from Hong Kong in the 1980s
and 1990s created a “moral panic” over both
the city’s identity and Canadian identity at
large. Ironically, some claimed that the once-
colonized citizens of Hong Kong were becom-
ing the colonizers of British Columbia. The
1990s became a flashpoint for anti-Asian dis-
course in Vancouver: Media claimed that the
Asian domination of suburbs like Richmond
was creating “white flight” and that Hong
78 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
Kong immigrants were building contem-
porary-style “monster homes” in neighbor-
hoods that had previously been dominated by
“Anglo” Tudor-style homes. Asian immigrants
were even blamed for driving up the cost of
rent and the competitiveness of schools.
Many local jurisdictions have tried to take
control of the immigrant streams that bring
Box 2.3 Suburbs Still in Crisis
While it is true that the U.S. and Canadian society is highly suburban, most people do not appreciate the diversity of the suburban experience. For many years, scholarly and popular discussions of poverty focused on the inner-city. Suburbs were idealized as sites of success, opportunity, and prosperity. in recent decades, suburbs of north America have become sites of immense change. Some have flourished, but some have declined. one element of change that has received a lot of media and scholarly attention is the rise in suburban poverty. brookings institution scholars Alan berube and Elizabeth Kneebone reported that by 2005 the suburban poor outnumbered the city poor by about one million. With the advent of the 2008 recession, suburban poverty has risen dramatically. by 2010, there were an estimated 15 million Americans living under the poverty line in the suburbs. in her book Once the American Dream, urban scholar bernadette hanlon examines the downward trajectory for many suburbs, especially in the inner ring, and offers reasons for their decline: an aging housing stock, foreclosures, severe fiscal problems, slowed population growth, and increas- ing poverty.
An example of a declining suburb is Essex outside baltimore, Maryland. Located along the waterfront, this suburb has a long history of aerospace and aircraft production. the air- craft and aerospace manufacturer Glenn L. Martin Company located there in 1929, drawing thousands of workers from around Maryland and other parts of the United States. Gaining government contracts to build airplanes, the company employed some 53,000 workers during its heyday right around World War ii. After the war, it had to downsize, but residents found other jobs with a nearby steel manufacturer. the suburb of Essex once had a strong industrial base that supported the local economy.
beginning about the 1970s, decline in Essex began as industry slowly began to disappear. About 30 percent of the workforce of Essex was employed in manufacturing in 1980; this declined to 14 percent by 2000 and to about 8 percent by 2009. the loss of manufacturing jobs; the construction of shopping malls in suburbs a little further out; and contamination from local sewage plants each negatively impacted the economy, society, and image of Essex. income decline and increased poverty occurred. in 1970, the median household income of Essex was about $54,000, but dropped to an estimated $49,700 by 2009. in addition, pov- erty rates increased dramatically from six percent in 1970 to almost 16 percent by 2009.
Source: bernadette hanlon. 2014. “Suburban Forms and their Challenges,” in L. benton-Short (ed.), Cities of North America: Contemporary Challenges in US and Canadian Cities. Rowman and Littlefield.
Urban Problems and Prospects 79
them newcomers. In Canada, new policies
have been set largely by the provinces (though
often led by city-based employers). Since the
early 2000s, federally sanctioned programs
have given the provinces control over immi-
grant attraction, selection, settlement, and
integration. Provincial laws often relaxed lan-
guage requirements for new immigrants and
allowed individual employers to make nomi-
nations intended to incentivize immigration
to economically and demographically declin-
ing cities (e.g., Winnipeg and Halifax) rather
than the “MTV” cities (Montreal, Toronto,
Vancouver) that account for 80 percent of
immigration to Canada. In the United States,
county-based and municipal ordinances
range from “sanctuary” policies (e.g., accept-
ing Mexican consular cards as ID) to those
aimed at apprehending undocumented immi-
grants (e.g., checking the immigration status
of anyone arrested). Pro-immigration ordi-
nances are clustered in the West and in central
cities (areas with traditionally high levels of
immigration), while anti-immigration meas-
ures are clustered in the South, rural areas, and
suburbs—areas generally experiencing accel-
erating immigration.
North American cities also employ local
urban development strategies to manage
global flows of capital. Two relatively new
strategies are urban villages and business
improvement districts. While these strategies
seek to differentiate certain neighborhoods
amid a blandly upscale, cosmopolitan land-
scape, they also brand these places as worth-
while places to visit, live in, and invest in. A
global trend in and of itself, the urban village
concept was popularized in the United King-
dom in the late 1990s and typically delineates
an area for medium-density development,
pedestrian-friendly measures, and mixed-use
zoning rather than the single-use zoning that
has given rise to industrial parks and suburbs.
Self-contained villages, or “urban campuses,”
are often criticized, however, because they dis-
place groups such as artists who may be unable
to afford redeveloped studio space and may
fail to align with new neighborhood visions.
The BID, developed in both Canada and the
United States in the early 1970s, is a quasi-
governmental association in which businesses
and property owners within a delineated area
pay a surtax for collective, privately provided
services such as street cleaning, trash pick-
up, beautification, business recruitment, and
security. In cities such as Washington, DC,
large, corporatized BIDs created during a
period of dysfunctional urban governance in
the early 2000s have taken it upon themselves
to fully redesign many postindustrial areas for
the upwardly mobile buyer. Some have even
taken over city-provided services, even hir-
ing off-duty police officers as private security
guards to patrol areas that are still “in transi-
tion.” On the positive side, BIDs are seen to
enhance neighborhood amenities and to pro-
vide services that city budgets cannot fund.
On the negative side, it is unclear whether
BIDs accelerate gentrification and how they
protect social equity while promoting eco-
nomic development.
Immigration and Increasing Diversity
The millions of economic migrants to North
American cities provide a window onto the
reconfiguration of urban networks. Because
most immigrants initially go to cities, many
of North America’s “immigrant gateways”
are hyperdiverse and globally linked through
transnational networks. Hyperdiverse immi-
grant cities are those places where the per-
centage of foreign-born residents exceeds the
national level and where there is no single
80 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
dominant country of origin among the immi-
grant population. Immigrant gateways are
growing in number because of globalization
and the acceleration of migration driven by
income differentials, social networks, and var-
ious state policies designed to recruit skilled
and unskilled laborers.
As large numbers of foreign-born resi-
dents mix with more established populations,
North American cities become the places
where global differences are both celebrated
and contested. Immigrants add to a city’s
global competitiveness by enhancing cross-
border business connections, linguistic capa-
bilities, and attractiveness to tourists. With
birth rates declining in both Canada and the
United States, migration is now an even more
important determinant of urban growth or
decline. Although immigration is a global
phenomenon, some regions of the world
receive significantly more immigrants than
others. In North America, long an established
region of immigrant settlement, the rates of
immigration are still among the highest in the
world. Although the three largest immigrant
destinations are New York City, Toronto, and
Los Angeles, there are 60 other metropolitan
regions with more than 100,000 foreign-born
residents. In Canada, immigrants go primar-
ily to Vancouver, Montreal, and Toronto. But
even in smaller Canadian cities such as Ottawa
and Calgary, over 20 percent of the popula-
tion is foreign born. In the United States,
immigrants are targeting newer gateways such
as Washington, DC, Phoenix, Charlotte, and
Atlanta.
At the dawn of the twentieth century, New
York City was the premier immigrant gateway
in the United States, and nearly all immigrants
were European. The city was linguistically and
ethnically diverse, but not racially diverse. In
the first years of the twenty-first century, New
York has become one of the most racially and
ethnically diverse places on the planet. Of the
top ten sending countries, which represent
half of New York City’s foreign-born popula-
tion, only one—Italy—is European. The other
countries, which are mostly Latin American,
include the Dominican Republic, Jamaica,
Mexico, Guyana, Ecuador, Haiti, Colombia,
and China (Figure 2.14).
A similar pattern holds true for Toronto. In
2011, 49 percent of the city’s population was
foreign born, one of the highest percentages
for any major metropolitan area. Nine coun-
tries account for half of the foreign-born pop-
ulation, led by China, then India, the United
Kingdom, Italy, the Philippines, Jamaica, Por-
tugal, Poland, and Sri Lanka. In New York,
Toronto, and many other metropolitan areas,
there is a growing tendency for immigrants to
come from a broader range of sending coun-
tries and for North American cities to become
ever more diverse.
Not all immigrant gateways are hyperdi-
verse, however. Mexican immigrants account
for about half the foreign-born population in
Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, and Dallas.
In the Los Angeles market, four of the top ten
television shows are in the Spanish language.
Similarly, foreign-born Cubans dominate in
Miami. Immigrants from mainland China
and Hong Kong account for over a quarter
of the foreign-born population in Vancou-
ver. It is fair to say that North American cit-
ies will continue to be home to many of the
world’s immigrants well into the twenty-first
century.
Women in the City
North American cities are being reconfigured
to ensure safe harbor for the world’s elite
workers and their wealth. Many cities aspire to
Urban Problems and Prospects 81
a cosmopolitan landscape, marked by loft liv-
ing, ever more arts and entertainment venues,
and the expansion of downtown residential
zones (Figure 2.15). At the same time, many
cities have placed more emphasis on groups
such as women that have not always felt safe
in the city. Increasingly, women are both the
buyers of in-town housing and the targets of
real estate marketing campaigns. In Toronto,
female one-person households are the larg-
est group of condominium owners, and
women are featured in the vast majority of
advertisements in publications such as Condo
Weekly. The trend toward women purchasing
condos in Toronto has been celebrated as a
new phase of liberation, in which women have
joined the institution of home ownership.
Typically incentivized through lending prac-
tices that favor young buyers, home ownership
has long been cast as a step toward becoming
a responsible Canadian citizen. Many women,
especially in single-income households, see
the purchase of property as a means to finan-
cial security or capital accumulation in a
Figure 2.14 new york’s Foreign-born Population. Source: M. Price and Lisa benton-Short. 2007. Globalization, Urbanization and Migration dataset (http://gstudynet.org/gum/).
82 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
volatile economy. A condominium may also
be more affordable than a house for a single
woman, eschewing some of the pressure to be
in a dual-income partnership before purchas-
ing property. The ads that market condos to
women echo these ideas, employing images
of the liberated, creative, independent woman
enjoying nightlife with her female friends,
working on an artistic endeavor, or holding a
meeting at a coffee house.
Efforts to include women may have a finan-
cial imperative as well as a humanistic one.
First, real estate agents often market certain
buildings to women on the basis of security:
24-hour concierge, key-card entry, security
cameras, and gated underground parking.
In this way, developers exploit preexisting,
gendered expectations about fear in the city.
Second, the extent to which condo ownership
actually facilitates women’s inclusion in pub-
lic life may be quite narrow. The securitized,
multiple-amenity condo may facilitate com-
munity within the building rather than
interaction with the surrounding city. Gyms,
patios, on-site coffee shops, and other quasi-
public areas of a condo building may become
women’s central social spaces while they care-
fully pick and choose where and when to
engage with the city around them. Moreover,
these types of buildings are geared toward a
female consumer who can both afford to pur-
chase the condo and use the revitalized down-
town core as she sees fit, while less privileged
women (e.g., poor, single mothers) may be
displaced into the decaying inner suburbs.
Third and finally, women are less frequently
involved in the organization of development
processes. Real estate companies, property
owners, and the executive boards of the busi-
ness improvement areas managing the neigh-
borhoods where these condos are located tend
to be mostly male. These men are therefore
Figure 2.15 in 2014, dC hosted its first international pop-up picnic, called diner en blanc, for 1500 people. the concept, which originated in Paris, requires that guests wear all-white clothing and bring their own food and chairs. Source: Photo by Lisa benton-Short.
Urban Problems and Prospects 83
articulating the supposed needs and demands
of the female market.
Urban LGBTQ Communities
A similar tension exists for lesbian, gay, bisex-
ual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) people.
The centrality of the city in queer cultures
is historically rooted in the rural-to-urban
migrations of the industrial era, during which
single men and women were freed from
nuclear family structures. Given that homo-
sexuality was illegal in Canada and the United
States for most of the twentieth century,
early gay and lesbian life in cities centered on
unmarked bars and lounges, private parties,
and informal public meeting places. More
recently, however, the expression of nonnor-
mative sexual identities in cities has come to
be associated with “the gay village.” Early gay
villages reflected a territorialization strategy
in which LGBT people—usually gay men—
bought up businesses and residential prop-
erty in peripheral neighborhoods in an effort
to demonstrate the visibility and upward
mobility that they felt were integral to mak-
ing claims for equal rights. Some claim that
this territorialization stage, which occurred
in many landmark villages (e.g., the Castro in
San Francisco, Church Street in Toronto) dur-
ing the 1970s and 1980s, was just a preliminary
phase in the “evolution” of gay villages. The
evolutionary model suggested that gay villages
would become more “mainstream” as their
commercial districts became attractive to het-
erosexual residents and the growing accept-
ance of queer people rendered the village less
necessary. Since the 1969 Stonewall Rebellion
in New York City (Figure 2.16), where LGBT
people protested a police raid on a local gay
bar, gay and lesbian rights have advanced sig-
nificantly in North America. In 2005, Canada
legalized gay marriage at the federal level. In
2015, the United States followed suit when the
Supreme Court upheld the rights of same-sex
couples to legally marry nationwide.
Yet, the implications of these changes for
LGBTQ identities, and for gay villages spe-
cifically, seem far from uniform. In cities
like Montreal and Chicago, gay villages have
been heavily branded and marketed by busi-
ness associations and municipal governments.
They have not only evolved into established
commercial districts, they have also been criti-
cized as “boys towns” that exclude lesbians and
the broader array of queer identities. Chicago’s
village is actually named Boystown. Another
criticism is that they crassly commodify sexual
identity for the consumption of cosmopolitan
heterosexual consumers while offering few
venues or outlets for queer people who lack
high incomes or whose cultural identities fall
outside of the Euro-American mainstream.
In a few cases, gay villages may be stripped of
their “gay” identity by municipal governments
trying to re-market the area to the upwardly
mobile heterosexual mainstream. Urban plan-
ner Petra Doan finds that Atlanta has pur-
posefully “de-gayed” the neighborhood of
Midtown through rent increases, property
speculation, closures of bars, and denials of
applications for LGBTQ events.
In Canada, where gay rights are more
established (homosexuality decriminalized
in 1968, as opposed to 2003 in the United
States), “the village” has become a hot topic
in the gay media of many cities. In Toronto,
many suggest that because safe space is no
longer needed in a new era of full gay rights,
the idea of a gay village has become irrelevant
altogether. Two hundred miles away, in the
Canadian capital of Ottawa, a very different
story emerged. In a city more known for its
Cold-War era expulsions of gay men from the
84 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
Civil Service than for a highly visible queer
community, the mayor and the municipal
government designated a six-block section of
Bank Street as the official gay village in 2011.
Given its location in a medium-density com-
mercial zone with only a few gay establish-
ments—and its designation at a time when
most gay and lesbian rights had been attained
in Canada—it is doubtful that territorial vis-
ibility or commercialization are the aims of
this village. In contrast, the city, prompted by
a long campaign by local activists, has finally
decided to create a symbolic home for the
queer community in a city that has not always
been welcoming to it.
Security and Urban Fortification
Threats of terrorism, whether domestic or
international, have had a profound impact
Figure 2.16 the Stonewall riots took place on June 28, 1969, outside the Stonewall inn in new york’s Greenwich Village. they are now regarded as the beginning of the gay and lesbian rights movement in the United States. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Urban Problems and Prospects 85
on many North American cities. Intense sur-
veillance and security measures have chal-
lenged the perceived freedom of city life and
altered its physical landscape. Especially since
September 11, 2001, security measures have
become much more visible components of
urban landscapes. Given that many barri-
caded urban spaces are also valued public
places with connections to local, regional, and
national identity, this trend is of significant
concern to many citizens.
The rise of security policing and new forms
of surveillance are not new. Mike Davis’s book,
City of Quartz, diagnosed what he calls fortress
cities as a response to perceived urban disorder
and decay, primarily from domestic sources.
He predicted that urban authorities might
create fortress-style rings of steel around
potential targets, creating a landscape demar-
cated by physical barriers such as gates, walls,
and carefully hidden surveillance devices such
as closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras.
This is a vision of a city that can be controlled.
For some residents, security and surveillance
offer reassurance in an uncertain age; for oth-
ers, these measures are the architecture of
paranoia.
Although cities have long had police forces
and emergency plans, many did not have
comprehensive security and defense strate-
gies until the early 1990s as terrorists chose
to target high-profile cities to attract global
publicity. Since 9/11, it is clear that symbolic
targets—such as monuments, landmark
buildings, and other important urban public
spaces—are increasingly at risk. Cities have
responded by installing highly visible counter-
terrorist measures. In New York, Toronto, Los
Angeles, and Philadelphia, for example, bol-
lards, bunkers, and other barriers have been
placed around selected “high-risk” targets.
Since these structures often restrict access to
museums, monuments, memorials, and parks,
many see heightened fortification as a threat
to public space.
Washington, DC, for instance, is one of the
most visibly fortified cities in North America.
Miles of fences, jersey barriers, and bollards
surround federal buildings, monuments, and
memorials throughout the city. In addition,
CCTV cameras are mounted on libraries,
shopping malls, banks, and even the monu-
ments on the National Mall (Figure 2.17). Res-
idents of all North American cities, in fact, are
now more photographed and videoed than
ever before. Yet, it is still unclear whether ter-
rorism concerns merit fortification, the loss of
civil liberties, inhibited public access to public
space, and a new urban culture dominated by
a sense of hypersecurity.
Cities have also experienced an increase in
the militarization of police forces. In the 1990s,
Congress authorized the Defense Department
to transfer surplus military gear free of charge
to federal, state, and local police departments
to aid in the war on drugs. In the years after
9/11, this program (DOD 1033) accelerated.
In 1990, the Pentagon gave $1 million worth
of equipment to local law enforcement. In
2013, it increased to $450 million. Today,
SWAT teams and police wear camouflage and
military-grade body armor, carry night-vision
rifle scopes, stun grenades, military assault
rifles, and ride around in Humvees. There
has been a proliferation of military train-
ing among municipal police departments:
In some cities, local police have been trans-
formed into small armies. Increasingly, SWAT
teams are deployed to serve warrants for drug
searches (as opposed to hostage situations).
Critics are alarmed by this trend because it
seems to stress violence rather than working
with the community to make neighborhoods
safer. In fact, it runs counter to the concept of
86 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
intense debate about law enforcement’s rela-
tionship with urban African American com-
munities. For several weeks, there were both
peaceful and violent protests. There were
confrontations between predominately black
community protesters and the nearly all-
white police force. The U.S. Justice Depart-
ment launched a federal investigation of the
Ferguson police to determine whether offic-
ers had engaged in racial profiling or had a
history of excessive force. The legacy of Fer-
guson started a national debate about police
tactics. Less than a year later, in Baltimore,
where almost a quarter of the population lives
in poverty, a similar scenario played out with
similar results. A young African American
man was arrested on the flimsiest of charges,
thrown into a van, and transported to the
police department. When he exited the van, he
could neither talk nor breathe; a week later he
was dead. The city of Baltimore erupted, again
reminding us that racial segregation, poverty,
“community policing.” A 2014 American Civil
Liberties Union report titled “War Comes
Home: the Excessive Militarization of Ameri-
can Policing” noted that “our neighborhoods
are not warzones, and police officers should
not be treating us like wartime enemies.” The
report concluded that police militarization is
a pervasive problem, noting that an estimated
500 enforcement agencies have received com-
bat vehicles built to withstand armor-piercing
bombs. The same report also noted that the
use of paramilitary tactics primarily affected
people of color; 42 percent of those impacted
by a SWAT deployment were black and 12
percent Latino. And, with other hypersecurity
measures, this trend has been allowed to hap-
pen in the absence of any meaningful public
discussion.
Tensions rose in Ferguson, Missouri, in
2014 after a white police officer, shot an
unarmed 18-year-old black man. The disputed
circumstances of the shooting prompted
Figure 2.17 here, circled in blue, a security camera has been positioned atop the Jefferson Memorial in Washington, dC. What messages do surveillance cameras convey in a public space which memorializes freedom, liberty and independence? Source: Photo by Lisa benton-Short.
Urban Problems and Prospects 87
the meaning attached to them. In the days
after the collapse of the Twin Towers in New
York, families and friends of missing people
papered sections of New York with posters
and pictures of their loved ones. In a New York
Times Magazine article, Marshall Sella traced
the evolution of these posters. Initially, they
constituted a frantic effort to gain any pos-
sible information; then, the posters began to
and unemployment in many cities remain an
issue. For many who live in minority commu-
nities, the police are not typically seen as allies
(Figure 2.18).
Rebuilding and Memorialization
Sudden events, such as those of Septem-
ber 11, 2001, can transform city spaces and
Figure 2.18 Chicago and many other cities remain racially segregated, and minorities are concerned about police profiling and violence. Source: US Census bureau.
88 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
expansion of history and identity by includ-
ing the previously marginalized or ignored. In
the United States, for example, the demand for
new memorials is part of a larger politics of
identity that seeks to make memorial spaces
more reflective of a multicultural America.
Some commentators have noted, however,
that contemporary society now rushes to com-
memorate. Historically, it was not uncommon
for decades, or longer, to pass before a memo-
rial was erected. The Washington Monument
in DC, for example, was completed just prior to
the 100th anniversary of Washington’s death.
Today, weeks after a tragic event, communi-
ties may be discussing how best to memorial-
ize loss. The rush to commemorate, however,
may prove to be more about healing and less
about honoring. It often occurs when family
and friends who remain try to make meaning-
less death meaningful by transforming victims
into heroes. Some argue that allowing time to
elapse is important because it allows historical
perspective as well as a sense of whether the
event or individual made a lasting contribu-
tion. The seemingly urgent need to plan and
construct memorials also raises the more dif-
ficult question of whether it is appropriate for
survivors of victims to be intimately involved
in the commemoration process, or whether
this is best left for another generation.
URbAN ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
U.S. and Canadian cities face numerous envi-
ronmental problems, particularly water chal-
lenges, air quality, and climate change.
Water
A dependable supply of water is critical
to sustaining life and supporting healthy
include increasingly detailed physical descrip-
tions, apparently to make identification of the
bodies possible. Most of these were hung in
areas around Ground Zero. In a final evolu-
tion, posters began to address the missing peo-
ple directly through “good-bye letters.” The
site of the World Trade Center had become
sacred space not only because of tragedy, but
also because it became a place of spontaneous
commemoration.
In the years that followed, New York City
debated what to do with the World Trade
Center site. Proposals for its rebuilding were
immediate, but there were also calls for
memorialization. Eventually it became clear
that some of the buildings would be rebuilt,
but there would also be space for a memorial.
Disagreements and public protests over how
to design the memorial followed. Today, One
World Trade Center (nicknamed Freedom
Tower) soars above New York City at a sym-
bolic 1776 feet. It is currently America’s tallest
building and features some 3 million square
feet of office space, an observation deck, and
restaurants. The building opened in 2014.
Another component of the World Trade
Center site is the 9/11 Memorial and Museum.
It features two reflecting pools, nearly an acre
each in size, which sit within the footprints of
the Twin Towers (Figure 2.19). More than 400
trees surround the reflecting pools. The names
of every person who died in the attack of 2001
are inscribed into bronze panels edging the
memorial’s pools. The design is intended to
convey a spirit of hope and renewal, while also
providing a contemplative space in what many
consider sacred space.
We have seen the emergence of a memo-
rial culture. The impulse to commemorate
is part of a broader social reconstruction of
national or cultural identity. Seen in a positive
light, proposals for memorials represent an
Urban Environmental Issues 89
variety of treatment processes including coag-
ulation, filtration, disinfection, ion exchange,
and absorption. Both the federal government
and states have responsibilities for providing
safe water. The Safe Drinking Water Act was
passed by the U.S. Congress in 1974 to regu-
late the nation’s public water supply. Canada
passed a similar law. While most North Ameri-
can cities take safe water for granted, some
threats remain: contaminants such as lead,
arsenic, and chromium; improperly disposed-
of chemicals; animal and human wastes; wastes
injected underground; and naturally occurring
substances. Drinking water that is not properly
treated, or that travels through an improperly
maintained distribution system, may also pose
a health risk. In the post-9/11 world, drinking
water utilities also face new responsibilities
due to concerns over water system security and
threats of infrastructure terrorism.
A recent challenge facing many cities is
that the existing drinking water infrastructure
communities. In every U.S. and Canadian city,
there are two broad water issues: water supply
and water quality, both of which rely on water
infrastructure. Water supply infrastructure
includes the systems of delivery (aqueducts,
pipes). Water quality infrastructure includes
treatment facilities and sewage systems.
Water Supply: Drinking water comes from
surface sources or ground water. It goes into
a water treatment facility and is purified to
certain standards. In cities, an underground
network of pipes delivers water to all buildings
served by a public water system. The United
States and Canada rank first and second with
regard to water consumption per capita, com-
pared to other highly developed countries.
In part, this is due to the lack of widespread
water conservation practices and water pric-
ing that does not promote efficiency.
Each day water utilities in the United States
supply nearly 34 billion gallons of water. To
remove contaminants, water suppliers use a
Figure 2.19 this view of the 9/11 Memorial shows one of the two reflecting pools that sit within the footprints where the twin towers once stood. Source: Photo by John Rennie Short.
90 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
mitigate CSOs since the 1990s. For example,
Ottawa has been working for many years to
separate sewers from the remaining combined
sewers. In southeast Michigan, prior to 1990,
the quantity of untreated combined sewage
discharged annually into lakes, rivers, and
streams was estimated at more than 30 billion
gallons per year. In 2005, it had been reduced
by more than 20 billion gallons per year. Many
other cities are undertaking similar projects
to address CSOs. But, these are billion-dollar
projects, and cities look to states and the fed-
eral government for supplemental funding.
Air Pollution
Residents in many North American cities
confront the reality of air pollution. Since the
1970s, the U.S. and Canadian governments
have taken steps to control emissions from
automobiles and factory smokestacks. Cata-
lytic converters capture much of the chemical
pollution emitted in automobile exhaust, and
vapor traps on gas pumps help prevent the
escape of carbon dioxide into the air. Recent
efforts to develop zero-emission vehicles
(such as electric cars) are another way of using
technology to alleviate air pollution. How-
ever, new sources of pollution, combined with
increased use of fossil fuels, has meant that air
pollution for many U.S. and Canadian cities
has continued to increase despite regulatory
efforts.
Smog represents the single most challenging
air pollution problem in most North America
cities. It is often worse in the summer months
when heat and sunshine are more plentiful.
Short-term exposure can cause eye irritation,
wheezing, coughing, headaches, chest pain,
and shortness of breath. Long-term exposure
scars the lungs and worsens asthma and res-
piratory tract infections. Plus, it particularly
affects weak and elderly residents, and those
(treatment plants and the underground net-
works of pipes) was largely built during the
late nineteenth century. This infrastructure is
now more than 100 years old and deteriorating.
In many cases, it cannot handle the volume of
demand due to population growth. Recently, the
EPA estimated that U.S. cities will need to invest
$160 billion over a 20-year period to ensure the
continued development, storage, treatment, and
distribution of safe drinking water.
Water Quality: Most cities in Canada and
the United States built sewage systems and
wastewater treatment facilities in the nine-
teenth and early twentieth century. However,
population growth has meant that the volume
of sewage and storm water now often exceeds
the processing ability of most treatment
plants. This is particularly noticeable during
heavy rains.
Combined Sewage Overflow (CSO) refers
to the temporary direct discharge of untreated
water. CSOs occur most frequently when a
city has a combined sewage system that col-
lects wastewater, sanitary wastewater, and
storm-water runoff in underground pipes,
which then flow into a single treatment facil-
ity (Figure 2.20). During dry weather, com-
bined sewage systems transport wastewater
directly to treatment plants. However, urban
storm runoff is comingled with household
and industrial wastes. When it rains, few
facilities can handle the sudden increase in
water volume, and the excess volume of sew-
age, clean water, and storm water may be dis-
charged untreated into nearby water bodies.
Forty types of disease-causing pathogens have
been found in raw sewage that discharges into
CSOs. CSOs are among the major sources
responsible for beach closings and shellfish
restrictions and the contamination of drink-
ing water.
Municipalities in Canada and the United
States have been undertaking projects to
Urban Environmental Issues 91
Box 2.4 returning to the tap
there was a time when brands like Evian and Perrier conjured up images of purity and luxury. in 2010, Coke sold about 293 million cases of its top brand, dasani, while rival Pepsi sold 291 million of Aquafina. the biggest player is nestle, which sells such brands as Poland Spring, Zephyrhills, and Pure Life. but there is now a backlash. Critics of bottled water point to negative economic, regulatory, and environmental consequences of its use. For example, it costs only $10 for 1,000 gallons of tap water, while consumers spend $1,000 for 1,000 gallons of bottled water. A recent natural Resources defense Council study found that an estimated 25 percent or more of bottled water was really just tap water in a bottle.
the U.S. EPA requires cities to disclose drinking water conditions; no such requirement is imposed on bottled water. the reality is that tap water is actually held to more stringent quality standards than bottled water, and some brands of bottled water are just tap water in disguise. While most consumers assume that bottled water is at least as safe as tap water, there are still potential risks. Although required to meet the same safety standards as public water supplies, bottled water does not undergo the same testing and reporting as water from a treatment facility. Water that is bottled and sold in the same state may not be subject to any federal standards at all, but bottled water manufacturers encourage the perception that their products are purer and safer than tap water.
Furthermore, bottled water is wasteful, contributes to ballooning landfills, and is being marketed as a necessity by an industry making billions on what consumers used to happily get for free. Americans buy an estimated 30 billion plastic water bottles every year, nearly 90 percent of which wind up in landfills. Approximately 1.5 million barrels of oil are used to make plastic water bottles, while transporting these bottles burns even more oil. Further- more, the growth in bottled water production has increased water extraction in areas near bottling plants, leading to water shortages that affect nearby consumers and farmers. in addition to the millions of gallons of water used in the plastic-making process, two gallons of water are wasted in the purification process for every gallon that goes into the bottles.
A growing coalition of cities and health organizations now advocates for “a return to the tap.” new york-based tapit, a nonprofit group launched in 2008, works to promote the use of tap water. they encourage restaurants to provide free refills of tap water to patrons who have their own reusable bottles. they have also worked with hundreds of colleges to install water fountains known as hydration stations so that students can refill water bottles rather than buy new ones. these fountains have taller faucets to allow tall bottles to be refilled. hydration stations are also popping up in airports, parks, office buildings, and restaurants. tapit is an example of a grassroots organization that leverages the power of the Web, social media, and mobile telephones to drive social change. it offers an iPhone app, mobile web- site, and tapit stickers on the windows of participating restaurants.
Sources: “tapped” http://www.tappedthemovie.com/; for more information on tapit, go to http:// www.tapitwater.com/; EPA office of Water. 2009. “Water on tap: What you need to know,” http://water. epa.gov/drink/guide/upload/book_waterontap_full.pdf
92 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
is trapped under cold air and cannot rise to
disperse the pollutants across a wider area. As
a result, smog may hover in place for days at
a time, generating a “smog soup” that envel-
ops the city. Montreal and Toronto experience
another realm of “smog geography.” These cit-
ies are downwind of major industrial cities in
the American Midwest, meaning that many of
their air pollutants originate across the border
in the United States. Many of the improve-
ments in air quality in North America’s cit-
ies have been offset by population increases
that drive up demand for energy and gasoline.
Despite decades of regulation and good inten-
tion, cities in North America remain far from
eliminating the threat of air pollution to both
public health and environmental quality. Air
pollution is also connected to climate change.
Climate Change
Around the world, cities today consume
75 percent of the world’s energy and emit
who engage in strenuous activity. While air
pollution has decreased in many urban areas
due to declines in heavy manufacturing and
the growing “green” movement, air quality in
many cities remains poor. In 2014, the cities
with the highest rates of smog were all in Cali-
fornia (e.g., Los Angeles), followed by Houston,
Dallas-Fort Worth, Atlanta, and Washington,
DC. In Canada, the cities with the highest lev-
els of ozone and particulate matter were in the
Golden Horseshoe region (e.g., Toronto, Ham-
ilton), southwestern Ontario (Windsor, Sar-
nia), greater Montreal (Montreal, Laval), and
Atlantic Canada (Fredericton, Halifax).
Smog is one pollutant whose effects are
often exacerbated by geography. Cities located
in basins and valleys, such as Los Angeles,
are particularly susceptible to the produc-
tion of smog. Denver, the Mile High City,
suffers from smog and other air pollutants
that are made worse by its elevation. Because
of the high altitude, Denver experiences fre-
quent temperature inversions when warm air
Figure 2.20 on the Cincinnati waterfront, residents are reminded that the ohio River is subject to combined sewer overflows that create a danger to public health. Source: Photo by Lisa benton-Short.
Conclusions 93
in uneven development. Cities unable to tap
into global circuits of capital struggle to rejig
their economies in the wake of deindustri-
alization. Furthermore, cities are in greater
competition with each other to retain center-
city populations, attract domestic and inter-
national investment, and develop diverse
economies with multiple types of businesses
and sectors. Yet, economic diversification is no
guarantee of success. Future booms and busts
in North America’s regional economies will
undoubtedly produce new urban develop-
ment imperatives.
The demographics of North American cit-
ies are also changing, and suburban sprawl is
taking on new forms. Today, not all suburbs
are wealthy; some are in decline and experi-
encing increased poverty. Issues of immigra-
tion (both legal and undocumented) have
become part of a wider public debate around
citizenship, race, ethnicity, and gender. Tra-
ditional immigrant cities, such as New York
and Toronto, continue to see an influx of
immigrants; but cities without long histories
of immigration have also begun to attract
large numbers of foreign-born residents.
New immigrant gateway cities are challenged
to provide a range of social services (such
as English as a second language in schools
and translation services in hospitals). Diver-
sity is also an issue as lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgendered, and queer communities look
beyond the acquisition of same-sex marriage
rights to ensure their safety and express their
identities in urban space. Finally, the con-
tinuing war on terror has resulted in physi-
cal changes to the urban landscape as cities
attempt to deal with safety, security, and the
vulnerability of urban populations. New
debates about the role of police and munici-
pal security forces reflect concerns about
racial profiling.
80 percent of the world’s greenhouse gases,
which are the drivers of climate change. Until
recently, much of the debate about climate
change has been at the global or national
scale. Until recently, the urban scale was often
ignored. Two major effects of climate change
are rising sea levels and rising global average
temperatures. The major danger to human
populations in cities will probably occur from
extreme events such as increased storm surges
(related to increasing mean sea levels) and
temperature extremes (related to increasing
average temperatures).
The vast and varied geographies of North
America mean that cities will face different
vulnerabilities with climate change. Inland
cities such as Las Vegas, Denver, and Calgary
may see an increase in soil erosion and a loss
of water availability. Summer heat waves and
droughts may affect crops; underground
water sources may become stressed and over-
used; and competition for water may intensify.
Cities in the Midwest and Northeast may also
experience wetter winters with heavier snow-
fall. Cities located on lakes and rivers, such as
Kansas City, Cincinnati, Sacramento, Winni-
peg, and Quebec may see their rivers experi-
ence more flooding in the spring but reduced
flows late in the summer. Finally, coastal cities
everywhere may see increased flooding during
storms due to sea-level rise.
CONCLUSIONS
Cities in the United States and Canada
entered the twenty-first century facing com-
plex challenges, including increasingly rapid
economic, social, and environmental change.
Global economic restructuring, which mani-
fested in deindustrialization and the rise of a
diverse service-sector economy, has resulted
94 CITIES OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
Box 2.5 Staying Cool in toronto
Urban dwellers consume less electricity than their suburban counterparts—this much we know. however, the actual amount per capita in any given city can vary tremendously. the most important factor that helps to explain the difference is summer heat. Whether it is houston, texas or Miami, Florida, when temperatures spike in July and August, people reach for the thermostat. Even in more northern locations, such as boston, Massachusetts and Minneapolis, Minnesota, high summer temperatures and humidity can make our lives miser- able. they can also wreak havoc with monthly utility bills. Among north American cities, Vancouver, british Columbia, is often lauded for its sustainable and eco-friendly lifestyle. the reputation is well deserved. in this case, however, it is toronto that has taken a creative and bold step in the direction of sustainability.
While many cities rely on fossil fuels to generate the electricity that cools our homes in summer, the City of toronto has taken a different approach. in 1990, the Canadian Urban institute, along with numerous other interested parties, began to investigate the possibility of drawing cold water from the bottom of Lake ontario to modify air temperatures in gov- ernment buildings, office high-rises, hotels, and other structures in toronto’s downtown. A unique collaboration between the Enwave Energy Corporation and the City of toronto soon turned the dream into a reality. After an environmental assessment, the deep lake water cooling (dLWC) project was approved in 1998 and construction began. the system was offi- cially commissioned in 2004. today, toronto’s dLWC is the world’s largest lake-source cooling system. it has been deemed a stunning success, distributing chilled water to slightly more than half the potential market in toronto, while at the same time, lowering utility bills, attracting environmentally conscious businesses to the urban core, and significantly reduc- ing emissions of carbon dioxide and other air pollutants associated with the burning of coal.
how does the system work? Essentially, torontonians take advantage of a permanent res- ervoir of cold water that collects at the bottom of Lake ontario. during the winter months, the lake’s surface temperature cools to about 4° C. As the surface water’s density increases, it begins to sink to the bottom. in summer, the situation is reversed. Water at the surface of the lake warms up, but because its density does not increase it does not sink. the result is that cold water remains trapped at the bottom year round. to take advantage of this phenomenon, Enwave sank three intake pipes along the slope to a distance of about 5 km offshore. Water is pumped to a filtration plant where it is processed and then redirected to Enwave’s Energy transfer Station. here, an energy transfer takes place between the cold water drawn from the lake and the company’s closed chilled water supply loop. once this process is complete, the water flows to the city’s potable water system. how cool is that?
Source: Geoff buckley. 2014. “Urban Sustainability,” in L. benton-Short (ed.), Cities of North America: Contemporary Challenges in US and Canadian Cities. Rowman and Littlefield.
Suggested Readings 95
Benton-Short, L., and J. R. Short. 2013. Cities and
Nature. 2nd ed. New York: Routledge. Connects
environmental processes with social and politi-
cal actions, including discussion of urbaniza-
tion trends and sustainability.
Bulkeley, H. 2012. Climate Change and the City.
London and New York: Routledge. Examines
how cities are responding to climate change in
terms of both mitigation and adaptation.
Doan, P. 2011. Queerying Planning: Challenging
Heteronormative Assumptions and Reframing
Planning Practice. Surrey, UK, and Burlington,
VT: Ashgate. Assesses how urban design strate-
gies work to include or exclude individuals who
are gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender.
Florida, R. 2010. The Great Reset: How New Ways of
Living and Working Drive Post-Crash Prosperity.
Toronto: Random House. Gives an overview of
changes to urban economies in the wake of the
global financial crisis and offers guidelines for
regeneration.
Jacobs, J. 1969. The Economy of Cities. New York:
Random House. A classic urban text that cri-
tiques 1950s and 1960s urban planning.
Melosi, M. V. 2011. Precious Commodity: Provid-
ing Water for America’s Cities. Pittsburgh: Uni-
versity of Pittsburgh Press. Examines water
resources in the United States and provides
background on both water supply and waste-
water systems.
Teixera, C., W. Li, and A. Kobayashi, eds. 2012.
Immigrant Geographies of North American Cit-
ies. Don Mills, ON: Oxford University Press
Canada. Examines the history of immigra-
tion in major gateways, challenges faced by
immigrants, and specific patterns of ethnic
immigration.
Zukin, S. 2011. Naked City: The Death and Life of
Authentic Urban Places. Oxford: Oxford Uni-
versity Press. Explores the spaces of “authen-
tic” urban life (art galleries, family-owned
shops, etc) and how their popularity drives
out residents who give neighborhoods their
“authenticness.”
Last, environmental factors are transform-
ing the urban landscape in many ways. The
impact of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans
and the widespread economic and ecologi-
cal impacts from the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil
spill are forceful reminders that many cities
are vulnerable to environmental events. Cities
are constantly preparing for hurricanes, earth-
quakes, floods, and droughts—or recovering
from them. Despite the long-term effects of
urban development within environmentally
vulnerable areas, we continue to build homes,
businesses, and roads along coasts, river valleys,
deltas, and earthquake fault lines. In rapidly
growing southwestern cities such as Phoenix,
fresh water sources are already disappearing.
Moreover, water pollution and air pollution
continue to have significant health impacts on
city dwellers. Climate change has emerged as a
major urban issue—and cities are responding
with both mitigation and adaptation efforts.
In recognizing the reciprocal relationships
between humans and their environments,
many cities are developing sustainability plans
that include new approaches to water manage-
ment, air pollution, climate change, and crea-
tive reuse of previously abandoned spaces.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Anisef, Paul, and Michael Lanphier, eds. 2003. The
World in a City. Toronto: University of Toronto
Press. Analyzes the challenges of immigrants in
Toronto and the municipal policies that aid in
settlement and integration.
Benton-Short, L. 2014. Cities of North America:
Contemporary Challenges in U.S. and Canadian
Cities. Denver: Rowman and Littlefield. Exam-
ines critical issues including globalization, new
social identities, the income gap, and environ-
mental challenges.
Fi gu
re 3
.1
M aj
or U
rb an
A gg
lo m
er at
io ns
o f
M id
dl e
Am er
ic a
an d
th e
Ca ri
bb ea
n. S
ou rc
e: U
ni te
d na
ti on
s, d
ep ar
tm en
t of
E co
no m
ic a
nd S
oc ia
l Af
fa ir
s, P
op ul
at io
n di
vi si
on (
20 14
), W
or ld
U rb
an iz
at io
n Pr
os pe
ct s:
2 01
4 Re
vi si
on , ht
tp :/
/e sa
.u n.
or g/
un pd
/w up
/.
3
Cities of Middle America and the Caribbean ROBERTO ALBANDOZ, TIM BROTHERS, SETH DIXON, IRMA
ESCAMILLA, JOSEPH L. SCARPACI, AND THOMAS SIGLER
KEy URbAN FACTS
Total Population 213 million
Percent Urban Population 73%
Total Urban Population 155 million
Most Urbanized Countries The Bahamas (83%)
Mexico (79%)
Dominican Republic (78%)
Least Urbanized Countries Trinidad and Tobago (9%)
St. Lucia (19%)
Antigua and Barbuda (24%)
Number of Megacities 1
Number of Cities of More Than 1 Million 22 cities
Three Largest Cities (Metacity) Mexico City (21 m), Guadalajara (5 m),
Monterrey (5 m)
Number of World Cities (Highest Ranking) 1 (Mexico City)
Emerging World Cities Monterrey, Panama City, San José
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. The Mexican urban system was established in large measure by the Aztec pattern of urbani-
zation; it was militarily subjugated by the Spanish to facilitate the colonizers’ dual mission
of proselytizing and mining.
2. Today, urban growth in Mexico is occurring in intermediate cities located close to large cities,
in cities along the U.S.-Mexican border, and in cities far from large urban agglomerations.
3. The urban systems of Central America and the Caribbean developed under various Euro-
pean powers and followed an agricultural-driven model of colonial and postcolonial
growth.
98 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
4. Today, Central America is over 70 percent urban, and national poverty rates are inversely
proportional to urbanization rates in that the poorest countries are the least urbanized
countries.
5. Social and geographic segregation has deepened in Central America’s cities; crime and vio-
lence are serious problems there and in Mexico.
6. Four patterns highlight contemporary urbanization in the Caribbean: urban primacy char-
acterizes every island; cities with 1–5 million residents have more than doubled; mid-size
cities have held the same relative proportion of urban residents while smaller cities have
declined; and insularity has been a key constraint on urban growth.
7. Since the mid-twentieth century, Cuba has taken the most divergent path to urban and
national development with its variant form of socialist cities; improved relations with the
United States may bring significant change to Cuban cities.
8. Natural disasters in the Caribbean, Central America, and Mexico compound the challenges
of urban poverty.
9. Water concerns plague the region; they range from supplying potable water for expanding
urban populations to droughts that threaten the agricultural base of island economies to
sea-level rise that threatens low-elevation coastal cities.
10. Cross-border urbanization unfolds unevenly across the region, as, for example, the San
Diego-Tijuana example contrasts with the Dominican Republic-Haiti example; how-
ever, both processes driving urbanization result from unevenly sized economies, from the
demand for unskilled low-cost labor, and different commodity and retail pricing.
The cities of Middle America and the Carib-
bean reflect many of the historical processes
that have affected the region broadly. As home
to significant indigenous empires that were
decimated prior to and upon the arrival of
European colonists, the region’s cities reflect
a unique blend of cultures and political func-
tions tied to its primary sector economies. The
European conquest of the Americas and sub-
sequent nation-state formation imposed one
of the most dramatic landscape modifications
in the history of the human race. The changes
in the physical environment were mirrored by
profound shifts in human networks and insti-
tutions as the European conquest unleashed
a tragic chapter of intercontinental slavery
and the annihilation of millions of Native
Americans. The human drama that unfolded
over the ensuing five centuries built upon and
significantly transformed preexisting patterns
and processes of urbanization throughout the
region (Figure 3.1). This chapter shows how
the Caribbean’s urbanization has been shaped
by the plantation system and slave trade,
whereas the urban development of mainland
Mexico and Central America unfolded differ-
ently. Some Spanish settlements in Central
America, Mexico, and the Caribbean replaced
indigenous ones (Mexico City), while oth-
ers served as strategic transshipment points
(Havana, Cuba, and Colón, Panama) or mili-
tary outposts as part of a network of defen-
sive safeguards (Cuba’s original seven villas).
Urban design came from Spanish “military
engineers” who aimed to follow guidelines on
street width and length, block size, and land
use, all of which derived from versions of the
colonial Laws of the Indies. Some even trace
Historical Geography of Middle American and Caribbean Urbanization 99
the superblocks used to build Mexico’s new-
est city, Cancún, to the planning principles of
the Spanish Indies (Box 3.1). But influences
other than the uniform grid were also at work
in Middle America. Some cities evolved more
organically by succumbing to the demands
of topography, the whims of the region’s
elites, or security concerns (Figure 3.3). In
all instances, however, a spatially and socially
segregated settlement emerged, whose irasci-
ble imprint persists more than half a millen-
nium later.
The Mexican urban system was forged in
large measure by the Aztec pattern of urbani-
zation, which was subjugated militarily by
the Spanish so that the colonizers’ dual mis-
sions of proselytizing and mining could pro-
ceed. Mexico’s pre-Columbian mining and
agricultural system allowed the colonial and
independent nation of Mexico to enter the
Industrial Revolution before the rest of the
region. The urban geographies of Mexico
City and Monterrey highlight the relation-
ship between these resource endowments and
industrial-led urbanization.
Meanwhile, in Central America and the
Caribbean, colonial and postcolonial urbani-
zation followed an agricultural model of
urban growth. Primate city functions in two
capital cities—San José (Costa Rica) and
Panama City (Panama)—were deepened once
rail lines opened these cities and their hinter-
lands to world markets. Caribbean urbaniza-
tion developed slowly and was restrained in
large measure by limited flat terrain and tied
to the fortunes of monocultural exports such
as sugar, bananas, and spices. The urban geog-
raphies of Havana and San Juan highlight this
region’s urban development as one influenced
by external dependency on trade, sugar, slav-
ery and, in the case of San Juan, the United
States.
HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHy OF MIDDLE AMERICAN AND CARIbbEAN URbANIzATION
Mexico
The modern Mexican urban system has many
deep roots in the precolonial era, when the
cities were originally founded. To this day, in
many pre-Columbian cities, elements of the
indigenous city still play a vital role in medi-
ating social and spatial relations. Tenochtitlán
(now Mexico City) is the most famous of these
and its tianguis (street markets) are a testa-
ment to the enduring legacy of precolonial
urbanism. At the time of the Spanish conquest
in the sixteenth century, Tenochtitlán was the
center of the Aztec Empire and, with a popula-
tion of approximately 300,000, it was the larg-
est settlement in the Western Hemisphere. The
Aztec Empire stretched across a large swath of
Meso-America that united some vital urban
settlements of various ethnic groups, includ-
ing the Mayan population in the Yucatán Pen-
insula; the Tarascos in the present-day states
of Michoacán, Jalisco, Colima, and Guana-
juato; and the Zapotecas and Mixtecs in the
state of Oaxaca.
Two aspects of pre-Columbian settlement
geography stand out. First, these large popu-
lation agglomerations adopted a “city-state”
model of organization, whereby a large com-
mercial and religious settlement dominated
rural communities and other smaller polit-
ical-religious localities within their hinter- lands. Second, the major urban centers were
particularly prominent in the central region
of Mexico. At the time of European contact
in 1521, it is estimated that the population
of this central region was 2.5 million peo-
ple. This region played a historically signifi-
cant role in the formation of the subsequent
urban agglomerations of the Spanish and is
100 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
Box 3.1 From Cancún to Belize City
donald J. Zeigler, old dominion University
Cancún was nothing in 1970. no one lived there. the eastern side of the yucatán Peninsula, in fact, was so lightly populated it was a territory rather than a state of Mexico. today, Cancún is one of the most well-known tourist destinations in the Americas (Figure 3.2). the history of the island, with its zona hotelera, and the mainland city of Cancún stand as an example of how forward-looking public sector investment can stimulate the development of thoroughly isolated locales. the first six hotels on the island had to be underwritten by the government. today, there are well over 100 hotels on the island and twice that many on the mainland. by the mid-1990s, the city had grown to 200,000; two decades later it stands at 700,000. Cancún has become the Caribbean equivalent of Mexico’s Pacific-coast tourist meccas: Acapulco, Puerto Vallarta, Mazatlán and, most recently, Cabo San Lucas. Geographer Louis Casagrande called this collection of resort enclaves one of the “five nations” of Mexico. he dubbed them “Club Mex,” and called attention to the fact that they are in Mexico but are not Mexican. Rather they exist in tourist space; take their orders from the global economy; conform to international norms of orderliness, punctuality, and cleanliness; and offer more U.S.-style amenities than the Mexican cities that are actually on the U.S. border.
Figure 3.2 over 100 hotels in the Cancun’s zona hotelera offer thousands of jobs to Mexico’s youth, preparing them to make a living in the service economy. here they confront a native inhabitant of the island. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Historical Geography of Middle American and Caribbean Urbanization 101
today the core demographic region of Mexico.
Tenochtitlán, renamed Mexico City, became
the capital of the Spanish Empire.
Mining and agricultural centers consti-
tuted the first phase in the colonization of
the northern region of Mexico. Spanish min-
ing towns were founded close to important
silver mines, whose indigenous settlements
included Taxco, Pachuca, Zacatecas, and Gua-
najuato. These centers and company towns
functioned as enclave economies. Bajío, in
west-central Mexico, was (re-)constructed
during the colonial period as a key base of
the agricultural and livestock sector. Abun-
dant natural resources in this region—its fer-
tile plains supported food and fiber for the
colonial government—were key factors in its
colonization and in the establishment of con-
ditions favorable to future urban growth.
It was not until the second half of the nine-
teenth century, following Mexico’s independ-
ence in 1821, that new important regional
centers emerged. During this period, moder-
ate regional growth was stimulated through
foreign investment and the creation of high-
way and railroad networks. Until the 1910
Mexican Revolution, foreign investment
concentrated in railways and mining. Port
development linked the railway network to
maritime trade. Together, these technological
and commercial links led to a proliferation of
mining centers in northern Mexico, which, in
the tourist trade in Cancún soon outgrew its habitation. the result was the development of Playa del Carmen (initially a fishing village) about an hour’s drive south of Cancún, along with its offshore island, Cozumel. As this “tourism urbanization” spread even further south, a new name appeared to sell it as a destination of its own: the Riviera Maya. it incorpo- rated the Mayan city, now in ruins, of tulum, making cultural tourism an attraction, too. the Riviera Maya has not tried to mimic the glitzy intensity of Cancún island. Rather, it has gained fame for its self-contained resort enclaves and its eco-friendly parks, cenotes (sink- holes that invite diving), and natural landscapes. though vulnerable to hurricanes, neither hurricane Wilma in 2005 nor hurricane dean in 2007 damped the urban expansion of either Cancún or the Riviera Maya. in fact, growth tentacles have been clawing their way south right across the international border and into belize.
tourism is a fickle business, and it appears that belize’s barrier reef (second only to Australia’s) has been the most recent off-the-beaten path discovery. belize City, the coun- try’s former capital, has seized the opportunity to become a gateway to the offshore islands, which are only a quick water-taxi ride away. its airport (now linked directly to the United States by Southwest Airlines) and its cruiseport (large ships still anchor offshore) bring in tourists and the local economy makes it possible for them to enjoy island towns such as San Pedro and Caye Caulker, whose landscapes and economies have more in common with the Riviera Maya than they do with the rest of belize. the seed planted at Cancún in 1970 has generated an elongated and now transnational arcade that may not appear very urban. but, when considered as a single coastal region, it has well over a million people, more than enough to classify it as a metropolis of its own.
102 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
turn, triggered regional markets and urban
growth.
Railroad expansion played a crucial role
in stimulating urban growth in various cit-
ies in the central and northern regions of the
country. Mérida (the hub of commercial sisal
plantations on the Yucatán Peninsula) and
Guadalajara, Veracruz, Monterrey, and San
Luís Potosí (all with direct transport links to
Tampico on the Gulf of Mexico) grew rapidly.
Old mining towns in the north gave way to
new cities. Monterrey, at one time known as
the “Pittsburgh of Mexico,” became a major
center of heavy industry. Veracruz, a principal
transport node, handled nearly all import and
export cargo.
The economic, geographic, and political
changes that took place in the latter half of
the nineteenth century had long-term impli-
cations for Mexico’s urban system. Although
Mexico City remained the country’s primate
city, other regional centers provided a more
diverse economic base and stimulated for-
eign investment. A communication network
facilitated interaction between the central and
northern regions of the country. High depend-
ency on exports to the United States largely
inhibited the formation of a balanced urban
system; and those cities that were the largest
agglomerations at the start of the twentieth
century retained their economic and political
dominance in the subsequent years.
Particular national and international events
slowed urban growth in the first decades of
the twentieth century. The revolutionary
movement within Mexico of 1910–1921 and
the global economic depression of the 1930s
curtailed exports and funds for urban infra-
structure. Nevertheless, between 1900 and
1940, the urban population grew at a rate far
greater than the total population, increasing
from 1.4 to 3.9 million inhabitants, with the
Figure 3.3 A panoramic view of Monterrey illustrates how a distinctive topographic feature, the Cerro de la Silla, can influence the shape of a metropolitan area. Source: Google Earth.
Historical Geography of Middle American and Caribbean Urbanization 103
majority of the urban growth concentrated
in the largest cities of Mexico. In 1900, there
were only two cities with populations greater
than 100,000. Yet, these made up one-third of
urban Mexico and represented 10.5 percent
of the national population. By 1940, there
were six cities of this size, accounting for 12
percent of the urban population and 20 per-
cent of the total population. The population
of Mexico City had reached 1.5 million, and
its primacy ratio had increased; it was nearly seven times larger than the second-largest city,
Guadalajara.
At the beginning of the 1970s, a shift
toward metropolitan expansion emerged as a
new form of urban growth in Mexico City and
in some secondary cities. There was a massive
rural-to-urban migration flow, with approxi-
mately 3 million migrants moving to Mexico
City in the 1960s. This gave the capital an
annual growth rate of 5.7 percent, which was
a historic high. Eleven secondary cities experi-
enced notable metropolitan expansion; three
of these—Monterrey, Guadalajara, Puebla—
had populations of over half a million. Three
border cities—Tijuana and Mexicali in Baja
California, and Ciudad Juárez in Chihua-
hua—expanded significantly and strength-
ened their relationships with twin cities across
the border.
Mexico’s border cities grew in importance
when the demand for contractual migrant
labor during World War II cast these cities as
“staging areas” for border crossings of labor-
ers into the United States. Between the 1940s
and the early 1960s, the bracero workers’ pro-
gram (named for the day-laborers who were
contracted) brought specified numbers of
Mexican laborers into U.S. corporate farm
operations. When the program was discontin-
ued in the 1960s, concern grew for the service
industries that had developed on the Mexican
side of the “twin cities” and for potential
unemployment problems. In response, maq-
uiladora factories were established as part of
the Border Industrialization Program. This
arrangement allowed American companies to
import manufacturing parts to Mexican cit-
ies, have them assembled in maquiladora (i.e.,
piecemeal assembly) plants, and reimport the
finished products into the United States while
paying only value-added tax. However, with
the creation of the North American Free Trade
Act in 1992, the relative locational advantage
of being close to the United States dissipated,
as trade barriers excluding the rest of Mex-
ico fell for trade with the United States and
Canada. Today, Mexican/U.S. border cities
retain high levels of manufacturing and ser-
vice workers and, except for the Mexican twin
city of Reynosa-Tamaulipas, have even larger
labor markets than their U.S. counterparts
(Table 3.1). Accordingly, it is more appro-
priate to think of these twin cities as a single
conurbation, working in similar manufactur-
ing and service sectors, rather than as discrete
cities divided by an international boundary
(Box 3.2).
Between 1950 and 1970, Mexico’s urban
population grew at an annual rate of almost 5
percent, while the rural population (in settle-
ments of fewer than 2,500 inhabitants) grew
only 1.5 percent. From 1950 to 1970, most
demographic factors signaled improvements
in the quality of life. Despite this progress,
there were significant gaps between urban
and rural areas. Millions left the country-
side in search of work in cities. Almost half
of the rural migrants ended up in Mexico
City, and one-fifth went to Guadalajara and
Monterrey.
By the 1980s, a process of urban growth
decentralization was underway, as inter-
mediate cities in various regions began to
104 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
Table 3.1 The U.S.-Mexican border Twin Cities Phenomenon: Population and Employment, 2009*, 2010**
City Population Formal Employment
El Paso, Texas* 751,296 313,882
Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua** 1,062,913 396,911
Laredo, Texas* 241,438 79,008
Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas** 373,725 75,210
McAllen, Texas* 741,152 213,458
Reynosa, Tamaulipas** 589,466 191,158
Brownsville, Texas* 396,371 115,855
Matamoros, Tamaulipas** 449,815 126,458
Source: *Table 5. Estimates of Population Change for Metropolitan Statistical Areas and Rankings: July 1, 2008 to July 1, 2009
(CBSA-EST2009-05).
Source: *U.S. Census Bureau, Population Division.
Release Date: March 2010.
Source: **INEGI, XIII Censo General de Población y Vivienda, 2010 y Censo Económico 2009.
experience greater growth rates than larger
cities. This process took advantage of the
opportunities offered by medium-sized cit-
ies located close to large cities. Such ameni-
ties included lower costs of land and housing,
newer infrastructure, more parks and open
space, and less congestion.
Today, about 80 percent of Mexico’s popu-
lation lives in cities, but it is important to note
that growth rates have dropped for cities of all
sizes. And, for the past several decades, growth
rates of cities in excess of 1 million residents
have been consistent with overall national
population growth. Today, 56 metropolitan
areas located in 29 of the 32 states in Mexico,
account for over half (56 percent) of the coun-
try’s population and over three-quarters (79
percent) of the urban population.
Central America
Contemporary Central America consists of
seven republics—Belize, Guatemala, Hondu-
ras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and
Panama. Current national populations range
from 340,000 in Belize to nearly 16 million in
Guatemala, rendering the region’s countries,
and the cities within them, relatively small by
global standards. Nevertheless, Central Amer-
ica’s cities incorporate considerable ethnic
diversity, including Amerindian, African,
European and, to a lesser degree, East Asian
and eastern Mediterranean influences. City
location and population distribution con-
form in part to the constraints of Central
America’s physical geography, which is criss-
crossed with extensive mountain ranges, fault
lines, and volcanoes, as well as innumerable
rivers, waterfalls, and lakes. Together with
its weather, these environmental conditions
combine to make most of the human set-
tlements of the region vulnerable to natu-
ral disasters including earthquakes, volcanic
eruptions, landslides, floods, and hurricanes.
Unfortunately, most Central American coun-
tries lack the resources to prevent, prepare for,
and/or manage these hazards. Yet, it was the
availability of water and land resources that
stimulated the growth of settlements on vol-
canic soil and floodplains, and which in turn
Historical Geography of Middle American and Caribbean Urbanization 105
Box 3.2 industrial Free Zones and transnational urbanization
in the era of globalization, even small cities become international. Goods are imported and exported across international boundaries not just in finished form but often as components of products that are truly international, whatever their apparent country of origin. Perhaps the most obvious example in the Central American and Caribbean context, as in much of the developing world, are the industrial free zones that assemble clothing, electronics, medical supplies, and other goods for shipment to the United States. Although local arrangements vary, the components for assembly are commonly imported from the United States partly processed and duty free, assembled by wage laborers in industrial enclaves subsidized by the Central American and Caribbean host countries, then re-exported—again, duty free—for sale in the United States. these industrial free zones, called zonas francas, maquiladoras, or zones franches in the non-English-speaking countries of the region, are often set apart from the rest of the urban landscape by walls or fences and by acres of single-storied white buildings.
Figure 3.4 Satellite image of the “sister” cities Quanaminthe (left) and dajabón (right). the border between haiti and the dominican Republic follows the Massacre River in the bottom half of the image but leaves it in the top half to run more directly north. the industrial free zone, visible as the row of large white buildings near the river at the top of the image, lies in a political no man’s land between the border and the river. Source: Google Earth.
industrial free zones have attracted special attention along the United States-Mexico border, but they can also be found along the border between the dominican Republic (dR)
106 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
allowed the development of agriculture as the
basic economic activity leading to consequent
urbanization.
Human habitation of Central America may
date back as far as 10,000 bce, and large-scale
civilization flourished between 3,000 and
2,000 years ago. However, given the diffuse
and decentralized nature of civilizations in
pre-Columbian Central America, the growth
of significant cities in Central America dates
to the colonial era when Spain set up admin-
istrative divisions to govern the region. The
Captaincy General of Guatemala—part of the
larger Viceroyalty of New Spain—first used
the city of Antigua, Guatemala, as its base.
But, after a series of earthquakes devastated
Antigua, the capital was moved to present-day
Guatemala City. Many of the region’s cities,
in fact, began as provincial capitals under the
Spanish: San Salvador in El Salvador, Comaya-
gua in Honduras, Granada in Nicaragua, and
Cártago in Costa Rica. Shortly after 1821, the
year in which independence from Spain was
achieved, most of these provincial capitals
became national capitals.
Climatic conditions in Central America
in the early colonial period proved unfavora-
ble to agricultural development. Land on the
and haiti. An industrial free zone has been established on the poorer haitian side of the border near the sister cities of dajabón (dominican Republic) and Quanaminthe (haiti) (Figure 3.4). to the casual observer, the zone seems to be on the dominican side of the border, on the outskirts of dajabón. in fact, the international border, which has followed the Massacre River down out of the Central Cordillera to the south, here diverges from the river to enclose a small slice of the “dominican” side of the river in haiti. the free zone sits on this narrow island between the river and the border, so that the haitians who work there cross a special bridge each day to arrive at work. Visitors who enter through the main gate on the dominican side are crossing the international border, though they might not know it. Like Mexican maquiladoras, this free zone takes advantage of the large pool of cheap labor on the haitian side of the border, though here the assembly plants are partly owned by dominican entrepreneurs, not just American companies.
dajabón and Quanaminthe are opposite sides of a deep political divide. their border is officially open at only a few points, all of which are well staffed by dominican soldiers. the Massacre River was the site of the brutal 1937 massacre of thousands of haitians at the order of the dR’s dictator-president, an event still in the living memory of many haitians in Quanaminthe. And yet the two cities are ever more closely tied by commerce. the border is opened twice a week for market days, when hundreds of haitians cross over to buy goods for later resale in haiti. hundreds more haitians cross every day to work in the free zone. hai- tians have flocked to Quanaminthe from the mountains and coastal plain to seek work; and its population grew from about 7,200 persons in 1982 to about 40,000 in 2003, without any urban planning and with few city services. Lena Poschet, of the École Polytechnique Fédé- rale of Lausanne, found that by 2004 Quanaminthe had five times the population density of dajabón, with one-twelfth the urban budget.
Historical Geography of Middle American and Caribbean Urbanization 107
windward Caribbean side receives more pre-
cipitation than the leeward Pacific side. At the
same time, the Caribbean coast is more prone
to hurricanes and is covered by jungle and
swampland. Frequent attacks by pirates who
roamed the Caribbean were also an impor-
tant factor in locating settlements at higher
elevations where the bulk of the indigenous
population resided. In the highlands, Central
American cities were dependent on agricul-
tural production in their hinterlands; many
settlements were created to group together
dispersed agricultural producers in order to
consolidate population, impose taxes, and
proselytize.
The urbanization process in Central Amer-
ica can largely be divided into three main
phases. The first period, from 1821 to 1930,
includes the first century of independence
from Spain and a subsequent peak of agricul-
tural exports. The second period dates from
the 1930s to the 1990s and marks a transition
in both the economic model in the region and
a new phase of accelerated urbanization. This
era was characterized by ideologically moti-
vated political movements which, in most
cases, resulted in civil wars. The final period
dates from the 1990s and is marked by the end
of the Cold War, which led to the easing of
tensions between “rebel” groups and national
governments, both of which had for decades
been co-opted by the United States and other
large geopolitical players. This period is also
marked by a greater incorporation of the
region into the new international division of
labor through trade agreements.
The era of independence after 1821 shifted
hegemonic control of Central America from Spain to Great Britain and opened new
external markets for the region’s agricultural
produce, which significantly influenced the
nature of urbanization in the region. The
early decades of independence marked a
transition for some countries from the small-
scale export of products such as indigo and
cochineal (used to make blue and red dyes,
respectively) to a more organized trade in
cash crops. In the early nineteenth century,
sugar cane, tobacco, and coffee were the three
main agricultural export products, and by the
end of the nineteenth century practically all of
the region’s countries had focused on coffee
exports to satisfy growing global demand. The
coffee boom consolidated the Central Ameri-
can capitals. This was especially apparent in
Guatemala City, San Salvador in El Salvador,
and San José in Costa Rica, where national
governments expanded to fill this new politi-
cal and economic role and city populations
and physical expanse grew accordingly. This
also laid the foundations for the expansion
of a regional landed oligarchy, whose power
would be fundamental in the urbanization
process for decades to follow.
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries, much of the region’s export focus
shifted to bananas. Enhancements in storage
and sea transport, coupled with relative prox-
imity to the United States made the sparsely
populated tropical lowlands of Central Amer-
ica ideal for banana plantations. The industry
was dominated by two large U.S. corporations,
whose investments in banana production led
to the development of key regional infra-
structures. Extensive railway networks were
developed using national funds in Guatemala
and by multinationals in Honduras, which
also controlled the docks and port installa-
tions of Puerto Barrios in Guatemala and Tela
and La Ceiba in Honduras. Together with the
coffee economy, banana production actively
produced social differentiation through the
need for agricultural, transport, and dock
laborers in cities, ports, and hinterlands,
108 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
and for salaried employees in the emerging
urban centers. However, the social structures
that crystallized from the agricultural export
economies of Central America kept the region
mainly rural until the twentieth century.
The consolidation of economic activity in
agricultural export industries laid the basis for
subsequent urban growth, and a series of land
transformations catalyzed large-scale urbani-
zation beginning in the 1930s and intensifying
in the 1960s. As agriculture expanded in the
late nineteenth century, much of the region’s
common lands (baldíos) were privatized,
and various pieces of legislation led to forced
labor, which particularly affected indigenous
communities. Multinational companies and
banks, in particular from the United States,
held an increasing influence in local affairs,
and large landowning families consolidated
both power and land. The result of this was
that many peasants were left landless and at
the mercy not only of the family and corpo-
rate interests that subjugated them, but to
global export markets that determined the
price of commodities such as coffee.
By the mid-twentieth century, the region’s
demographic explosion led to a large-scale
cityward migration. Since 1966, the popula-
tion of Central America has tripled from 14
million to more than 45 million, which has
been one of the dominant drivers of rapid
urbanization. Rural inhabitants, particularly
the poor and landless, moved to the region’s
cities as Central America entered the second
stage of the demographic transition (steady
fertility rates combined with falling mortal-
ity rates). Cities grew in size during this time,
and urbanization was further accelerated by
the region’s civil wars, which had displacing
effects on populations. In-migrants sought
not only refuge from dire rural conditions,
but also access to health care, education, and
other social services that only cities provided
to any significant degree. Economic change
continued, as primary economies gave way to
the development of manufacturing in urban
centers. In some cases, the expectations of
new urban migrants were met; in other cases,
they encountered disappointment. Rapid
growth left urban governments without the
capacity to cope with the increase in popu-
lation, and the development of shantytowns
on the periphery of almost every Central
American city was an inevitable outcome.
Migrants not only sought better conditions
in the region’s cities, but a large number also
migrated to the United States and elsewhere.
Many families faced the difficult decision
of pushing one or more family members to
migrate, and it is common among Central
American women, particularly from El Salva-
dor, to make the long trip to Europe where
they characteristically labor in domestic or
care-giving work in an effort to support their
families economically.
Since the 1990s, urbanization has contin-
ued, but with a number of significant changes.
Several regional free-trade agreements (nota-
bly DR-CAFTA) spurred the expansion of
export-processing zones, which feature scores
of maquilas. This further developed industry
in cities such as San Pedro Sula, Honduras,
and San Salvador, El Salvador, but has only led
to modest increases in wages. Though cities
continue to grow in population, urbanization
shows signs of slowing as demographic expan-
sion is curbed by falling fertility and contin-
ued out-migration, particularly by younger
cohorts.
By 2014, Central America was almost 60
percent urban (Table 3.2), ranging from 44
percent in Belize to 76 percent in Costa Rica.
National poverty rates seem to mirror urbani-
zation rates. Poverty is highest in Honduras
Historical Geography of Middle American and Caribbean Urbanization 109
(60 percent) and Guatemala (54 percent),
and it is lowest in Panama (28 percent) and
Costa Rica (21 percent). The largest and most
important urban centers in Central America
largely correspond to the seven countries’ cap-
ital cities and their suburbs. National urban
systems are supplemented by a few medium-
sized cities such as San Pedro Sula (Hondu-
ras), León (Nicaragua), and Davíd (Panama),
which often play a commercial function com-
plementing the capital city’s administrative
role. The distribution of city sizes to some
degree reflects the central-place hierarchy
of agriculturally based societies, especially
within countries with large amounts of pas-
toral land. Cities such as Santiago (Panama),
Liberia (Costa Rica), and Quetzaltenango
(Guatemala) play secondary roles tied to com-
merce and service provision. A number of
port cities such as Colón (Panama), Limón
and Puntarenas (Costa Rica), and Puerto
Cortes (Honduras) serve as export hubs for
locally manufactured goods and agricultural
products and as importers of goods manufac-
tured overseas.
Despite the economic, cultural, and politi-
cal development that has occurred within
and around many cities, the urban panorama
in Central America is not promising. Private
developers, often members of the local elite
class, are increasingly responsible for subur-
ban housing development in which service
provision such as public transportation and
garbage collection are minimal. Child and
adolescent labor is rampant as impoverished
families press their children into petty com-
merce, service provision, and begging. And
aside from persistent poverty in the region’s
cities, public safety has become one of the
most important concerns. On the one hand,
this might be seen as a governance failure in
which local governments are unable to provide
Table 3.2 Levels of Urbanization in Central America
1970–2015
Country
*Level of urbanization (%)
1970 1980 2000 **2010 **2015
Panama 47.6 50.4 65.8 74.8 77.9
Costa Rica 38.8 43.1 59.0 64.3 66.9
Belize 51.0 49.4 47.7 52.7 55.3
El Salvador 39.4 44.1 58.4 61.3 63.1
Nicaragua 47.0 50.3 57.2 57.3 59.0
Guatemala 35.5 37.4 45.1 49.5 52.0
Honduras 28.9 34.9 44.4 48.8 51.4
*Total: Latin America & Caribbean 57.2 65.1 75.4 79.4 80.9
Central America 53.8 60.2 68.8 71.7 73.2
Caribbean 45.4 52.3 62.1 66.9 69.3
Countries are ordered by level of urbanization in 2000
*Urban population as a percentage of total population
**Based on 2009 projections, Source: http://esa.un.org/unup/p2k0data.asp, accessed February 11, 2011
Source: Data from United Nations, World Urbanization Prospects, 2009 Revision (New York: UN Population Division, 2009, http://esa.
un.org/unpd/wup/index.htm).
110 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
Box 3.3 Gangs: a Violent urban Social Development
throughout the cities of Central America, the materialization of street gangs is a conse- quence of many factors. Some observers hold that gangs reflect the struggle of some young people in search of an identity. others argue that gangs are the outcome of widespread and persistent poverty and political disenfranchisement. Most observers concur that, in seeking to improve the quality of their lives and acquire what is otherwise unattainable, some youths resort to gang violence. Gangs are associated with such violent/criminal activities as organ- ized crime, arms trafficking, forgery, gangsterism, rape, kidnapping, extortion, and the sale and consumption of drugs. Some gangs demand “taxes” from bus drivers in order to pass through their territory, while others extort protection money from small business owners who operate on their turf.
in Central America, the most notorious and violent type of gangs are known as maras, the most infamous of which is the Mara Salvatrucha or MS 13. it is made up primarily of young men between the ages of 12 and 25. Although the Mara Salvatrucha is dominant in El Salvador, where it represents approximately 70 percent of all youth gangs, it has spread throughout the Americas from Canada to Colombia. it has taken particular hold in the impov- erished border regions of Mexico and cities of Central America where alternative sources of fulfillment are conspicuously absent. these gangs are particularly distinctive in their highly visible use of tattoos, with many gang members having identifying gang tattoos on their faces, necks, chests, and hands.
the word mara has become the generic term for youth gangs in Central America. Mara Salvatrucha was founded on the streets of Los Angeles by immigrant Salvadoran youths flee- ing the Salvadoran civil war. it is alleged that Mara Salvatrucha was formed in response to the discrimination and victimization that Salvadoran youths experienced at the hands of ethnic gangs proliferating in Los Angeles in the 1970s. Later, other Central American immi- grants were integrated into the gang. the word Salvatrucha refers to one who is a “shrewd Salvadoran.” it is widely thought that the current proliferation of violent gangs in Central and parts of South America is related to large-scale repatriations from the United States, including many gang members who find fertile conditions in the poverty that is so prevalent in the region’s cities. Gangs have come to represent (at least in the popular and political imagination) one of the most serious threats to security and democracy in the region. the formal political power vacuum created by many Central American governments enhances the power of gangs. in many cities, virulent attacks have become an issue of national security. the spread of the maras has undermined the authority of the police and weakened the ability of governments to protect communities.
for their citizens. Local police have resorted
to military-style tactics and equipment, and
armed private security guards are commonly
employed to protect businesses and commu-
nities. On the other hand, however, it reflects
the region’s economic woes and the respective
Historical Geography of Middle American and Caribbean Urbanization 111
social problems that they create. Much of the
crime is linked to gangs and their members,
who are typically young (12–24) and tend to
live in peripheral zones of large cities such as
Guatemala City, Tegucigalpa, and San Salva-
dor. Gangs’ range of crimes is vast, but their
source of income is almost always tied to
extortion and drugs, and many have links to
international crime syndicates (Box 3.3).
Ironically, Central America’s major gangs
were in fact developed in Los Angeles, Cali-
fornia, by Latino youth, many of whom were
displaced to the United States in the wake
of civil wars in Central America. The U.S.
State Department estimates that there are as
many as 85,000 members of MS-13 and 18th
Street—the region’s primary gangs—in the
“Northern Triangle” countries of Honduras,
El Salvador, and Guatemala. The influence of
the maras (gangs) has spread beyond Central
America into Mexican, Spanish, and North
American cities. The social and economic
instability in Central America, evidenced
in scarce educational and job opportunities
and family disintegration, leaves many urban
youths to believe that they have only two via-
ble options: attempt to migrate to the United
States or join a gang. Furthermore, many gang
members are deportees from the United States
with established criminal histories.
Central American countries have some of
the highest rates of homicide in the world, and
urban homicide rates are even higher in cities
such as San Pedro Sula (Honduras), which is
reputed to have the highest murder rate for any
city in the world (~170 per 100,000). Accord-
ing to a recent article in The Guardian, five of
the ten most violent cities on Earth are located
within Central America. While violence in the
region’s cities remains high, a truce between
El Salvador’s two main gangs brokered in 2012
has had a profound effect in reducing violent
crime and extortion. But, so far, most Central
American countries have not developed ade-
quate social infrastructure to curb the cycle of
poverty and violence.
Caribbean
There was little urban culture in the Carib-
bean prior to the arrival of, and subsequent
colonization by, the Spanish. The urban tradi-
tion of the region can be traced to two major
influences: the Iberian Peninsula and the Car-
ibbean island of La Española (present-day
Hispaniola), more specifically the settlement
of Santo Domingo. The Spanish urban tradi-
tion of the grid, utilized in the Caribbean at
the time of conquest and colonization, was
inherited from the Romans who, in turn,
inherited it from a more basic Greek grid sys-
tem. The Muslims followed the Greeks and
Romans to the Iberian Peninsula and became
the third group to contribute to the Spanish
urban tradition.
Both Romans and Muslims gave impor-
tance to the areas where the main axes inter-
sected, as places of religious, commercial, and
social importance—something that was per-
petuated in the grid system that the Spanish
Crown translocated to the New World. It is
worth noting that México’s main square, or
plaza, is commonly known as Zócalo, a word
that seems very similar to zoco, an Arabic word
referring to the main central market of Islamic-
influenced cities. Besides the urban tradition
accumulated in the Iberian Peninsula, the
planning experiences acquired between 1492
and 1508 by the first colonizers in the island of
La Española (later divided between the coun-
tries of Dominican Republic and Haiti) would
constitute the most important and direct
model of the urban forms implemented by the
Spanish in the rest of the Caribbean.
112 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
At the initial stages of the colonization
of La Española, Santo Domingo was not
only the capital of the Indies, but also the
urban planning model for other urban set-
tlements established in the Caribbean. Many
of the conquistadores were familiar with
Santo Domingo’s grid layout. Some plans
of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
for Santo Domingo show an almost perfect
urban grid.
It was not long before the Spanish realized
that the prospects of finding mineral riches
(gold, silver) in the Caribbean were dissipating
rapidly. This prompted a massive emigration
toward Central and South America, leaving
most of the Spanish Caribbean colonies in
a state of semi-abandonment. Only Havana
(Cuba) and San Juan (Puerto Rico), both pro-
tected by massive fortresses, remained impor-
tant due to their location on Spanish treasure
fleets’ routes. However, the lack of attention
from the Crown served to boost pirate activ-
ity in the Caribbean and to attract the atten-
tion of other European countries, particularly
England, France, and the Netherlands. By the
1600s, these less powerful nations began to
establish claims in the region, including west-
ern Hispaniola (now Haiti), Jamaica, and the
Lesser Antilles. They were not looking for gold
or silver, but for farmlands, salt, and forests
(for timber).
The development of the sugar plantation
system in Barbados in the 1640s accelerated,
once again, the pace of colonization and set-
tlement and caused the import of millions of
slaves into the region. The Spanish colonies,
where slaves and sugar had been introduced
from the Old World, came late to this revo-
lution, but by the late nineteenth century,
Cuba, the Dominican Republic, and Puerto
Rico had also become centers of the sugar
industry.
Together, the plantation system and the
slave trade established the basis for a distinc-
tive Caribbean geography and set the funda-
mental settlement pattern of Antillean cities,
which were first established on protected lee-
ward harbors as trading centers. Raw sugar,
molasses, and rum left these ports for Europe;
European foods, machinery, and capital
passed through them to the interior planta-
tions. The early sugar ports—Bridgetown,
Fort-de-France, Kingston, Port-of-Spain, and
Charlotte Amalie—have remained important,
even as tourism and industrial free zones sup-
planted sugar.
Four striking patterns highlight the con-
temporary urbanization and settlement pat-
terns of the Caribbean. First, no Caribbean
island is without its primate city. With the
exceptions of Havana and San Juan, most pri-
mate cities are located on the leeward coast,
immune from the steady trade winds and
often nestled along a protected bay. These his-
toric ports were well suited for loading sugar
and unloading slaves, machinery, and provi-
sions. Colonists built gun sites and forts on
commanding hilltops and ridges to protect
the locals from marauding pirates or rival
European powers.
Second, Caribbean urbanization in the
past half-century shows that mid-size cities
(500,000–1,000,000 residents) have held the
same relative proportion of urban residents,
while those cities with fewer than half a mil-
lion residents have declined (Figure 3.5).
Third, places with 1–5 million residents
have more than doubled. These trends are
particularly striking given the limited amount
of low-lying land along bay fronts, coastal
plains, and river valleys that can accommo-
date city growth. Sea-level rise, a consequence
of global climate change, is a looming threat to
these low-elevation cities.
Historical Geography of Middle American and Caribbean Urbanization 113
Fourth, beyond the Greater Antilles (Cuba,
Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, Jamaica), insular-
ity is a key constraint. With the exception of
Barbados and Trinidad, most of the islands
are small, and many of them are restricted by
mountainous topography, particularly in the
volcanic Lesser Antilles. The scale of Carib-
bean cities therefore pales in comparison to
that of other Latin American cities.
Differing Spanish and English settlement
patterns provide historical backdrops to con-
temporary urbanization. Spanish settlements
needed to defend the windward approaches
into the Caribbean and major ports on the
route of the treasure fleets. These locations
marked early landfalls for those ships riding
the trade winds, and they relied on nearby for-
ests for shipbuilding and repair. Spanish towns
in the Caribbean followed the grid-style set-
tlement plan inherited from the Iberian Pen-
insula and subsequently dictated throughout
the Spanish colonial empire by the Law of the
Indies. Towns were centered on the main plaza,
usually anchored by a government building
(cabildo) and church at either end. Block size
and street width were predetermined; locally
unwanted land uses such as garbage dumps,
slaughterhouses, and cemeteries were sited at
the periphery of the new towns. Early Span-
ish Caribbean ports facilitated the extraction
of mineral wealth from Mexico and other
parts of the mainland, and little urban growth
took place in Caribbean ports of the sixteenth
century.
Non-Spanish settlements were less ortho-
dox and more haphazard in form. In British
settlements, for instance, royal favor was doled
out to loyalists by the Proprietary System.
Caribbean settlers from England had learned
from Atlantic seaboard settlements in North
America. Accordingly, their priorities entailed
clearing land for timber and agriculture, con-
structing fortresses, and coming to terms with
indigenous peoples. Although the British
originally planted tobacco and cotton, they
would gradually turn to sugar monoculture.
In both British and Spanish settlements, little
colonial architecture has survived other than
a few military structures, a few churches, and
some fortified (brick and stone) sugar plan-
tations because of fire, tropical storms, and
rebuilding.
Figure 3.5 Caribbean Urbanization by City Size, 1960 and 2010. Source: United nations, World Population Prospects: The 2004 Revision and World Urbanization Prospects, 2005 Revision (new york: United nations Population division, 2006, http://esa.un.org/unup).
114 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
Figure 3.6 the Revised Griffin-Ford Model of Latin American City Structure. Source: Larry Ford, “A new improved Model of Latin American City Structure,” Geographical Review 86 (1996): 438. Reprinted with permission.
Models of Urban Structure 115
MODELS OF URbAN STRUCTURE
Throughout Latin America, many cities have
significant similarities in city structure and
urban form. Despite the diversity of histories
and the local influences of economics, politics,
and topography, cities across the region share
such attributes as a clearly defined central
business district (CBD) and, more recently,
peri-urban highways connecting newer indus-
trial estates and suburbs (Figure 3.6).
Initially proposed in 1980, Ernst Griffin
and Larry Ford’s model of the Latin American
city serves as a valuable starting point for ana-
lyzing urban land use throughout the region.
Although each city is unique, there are many
commonalities—a history of colonial settle-
ment, co-location of commercial and admin-
istrative functions at the city center, industrial
development along a particular corridor, and
significant areas of blight, both in the inner
city and on the urban periphery. According to
Griffin and Ford’s model, the following char-
acteristics are visible in many Latin American
cities:
1. A geometric street pattern at the city
center surrounding one major plaza, laid
out in conformity with the Spanish “Laws
of the Indies” during the colonial period.
The elite resided as close to the plaza
mayor as possible.
2. An adjacent CBD, featuring retail estab-
lishments, restaurants, hotels, and office
buildings. These CBDs expanded from
the 1930s onward, but their growth has
been especially rapid in countries that
promoted market reforms starting in the
1990s.
3. A commercial “spine” (such as Mexico
City’s Paseo de la Reforma) along which
an expanding population of élites resides.
This serves as an extension of the CBD.
When it originally materialized, it con-
trasted with other residential zones in
being well provisioned with services such
as water, electricity, and trash pick-up.
4. A “zone of maturity” in which older,
“filtered-down” residential areas house
the working class and middle class as the
urban élite move to newer communi-
ties. This zone is characterized by much
mixed-use development with shops,
cocinas (kitchens), and small industrial
establishments.
5. A “zone of in situ accretion,” referring to
newer residential areas where a variety
of housing types are in various stages of
completion. These areas may still lack all
or some public services such as water and
electricity, and some streets may not yet
be paved.
6. “Disamenities,” such as rail or highway
infrastructures that interrupt the urban
pattern and cause noise and air pollution.
7. A “peripheral” zone of squatter settle-
ments on the city fringe, largely housing
new in-migrants from rural areas. These
zones are least well connected with urban
services and resemble urban “villages” in
their structure, with houses that are self-
built out of any available materials.
In 1996, Larry Ford published the “new and
improved” model of the Latin American city
to account for the fact that the region’s cities
had changed. Notable additions to the original
model were:
1. CBD split into a more modern business
precinct and a more traditional market
area.
2. An “edge city” on the urban periph-
ery, complete with shopping malls and
116 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
newer élite neighborhoods. This is often
connected by a periférico, or ring-road
highway.
3. New middle-class residential zones near
the city center, often in gentrified neigh-
borhoods that started as homes for the
urban elite, filtered down to zones of
maturity, and then became gentrified by
an expanding middle class.
Since Ford’s model was published two dec-
ades ago, suburbanization has become a more
important process. Gated communities have
sprung up around cities in the region, particu-
larly as violence and domestic security become
major issues for residents. Multinational com-
panies often prefer the security of suburban
office parks, which have direct highway access
and often offer better access to airports and
newer amenity areas such as shopping malls.
San José’s (Costa Rica) Escazu and Panama
City’s Costa Del Este are prominent examples
of this newer enclave urbanism.
DISTINCTIVE CITIES
Mexico City: Ancient Aztec Capital,
Contemporary Megacity
Mexico City was founded in the fourteenth
century by the Aztecs and called Tenochtitlán.
It was sited on a lake in the centrally located
Valley of Mexico and soon became the anchor
city of the largest empire in pre-Columbian
Middle America. As the current capital of
Mexico, it is also the country’s largest urban
center and serves as the nation’s economic,
social, educational, and political hub. With 21
million residents, Mexico City is the second-
largest urban agglomeration in the Western
Hemisphere, after São Paulo but larger than
the New York-Newark metropolitan area.
Its population in the twentieth century bur-
geoned from 3.4 million in 1950 to about 9
million in 1970, and was just shy of 15 million
by 1990.
In local parlance, “Mexico City” (known as
“day efay” for D.F., Distrito Federal, in Span-
ish) refers to the entire metropolitan area,
which covers not only the Federal District but
also parts of the states of Mexico and Hidalgo.
It stretches over an area of more than 3,000
square miles (7,850 sq km), almost three times
the size of the state of Rhode Island. Mexico
City is located in a high-altitude, closed-
drainage basin, which accounts for many of
its ecological difficulties. At an altitude of
approximately 7283 ft. (2,250 m) above sea
level and hemmed in by mountains, both air-
borne and waterborne pollutants are concen-
trated and difficult to disperse.
The Zócalo or Main Square—now officially
called the Plaza de la Constitución—is the tra-
ditional center of the city. On the northern
side of the square, close to the ancient site of
the main Aztec temple is the Metropolitan
Cathedral. Spanish conquistadores frequently
subjugated the Native American population
by having them rebuild churches atop the
ruins of indigenous temples (Figure 3.7). In
fact, the square was referred to throughout
the colonial era as “the pyramid” by Indians
who did not want to legitimize Spanish politi-
cal rule. To the east is the Palacio de Gobierno
(main government building). Built on the
ruins of the ancient Aztec emperor’s palace,
it is another symbolic replacement of politi-
cal power. The colonial city extended in an
orderly fashion for several blocks around this
square, as prescribed by guidelines specified
in the Law of the Indies. These orders, first
issued in Spain in 1494, became the military
engineer’s template and mandated the loca-
tion of many colonial and independence-era
Distinctive Cities 117
buildings in this zone. Many of the original
structures and buildings of the traditional
urban core—known as the Centro Histórico,
or Historical Center—remain intact.
In general, Mexico City typifies the urbani-
zation patterns and processes of Middle
America and the Caribbean, where the his-
toric quarters of most cities still remain some-
what intact. As a result, Mexico has dozens
of World Heritage Sites that celebrate these
colonial quarters. The more “modern” aspects
of twentieth-century urbanization developed
just beyond the Centro Histórico. Unlike the
Anglo-American and European models of
urbanization, the national elite in Spanish
America placed more social value on centrality
until the twentieth century when congestion
and the automobile fueled the need for new
suburban construction to serve middle-and
upper-income residents. The poor in most
Middle American and Caribbean cities tend to
concentrate at the city’s edge where land val-
ues are cheaper, and self-help housing devel-
ops. In the case of present-day Mexico City, the
wealthy districts are concentrated in the west
and various zones in the south, and in colonias
such as Lomas de Chapultepec, Polanco, and
Pedregal de San Ángel (Figure 3.8). These dis-
tricts contrast sharply with the poverty in the
northern zones and the illegal settlements in
the eastern edges, beyond Benito Juárez Inter-
national Airport, where many communities
lack basic services.
Suburban retailing now challenges the
traditional role of the city center as the main
shopping district. Examples include the Plaza
Figure 3.7 the Zócalo (main square) in Mexico City is surrounded by colonial buildings, most notably the Metropolitan Cathedral and the headquarters of the Federal and Capital Governments. Source: Photo by Seth dixon.
118 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
Satélite in the north of the city, Perisur in the
South, and Sante Fé in the west. La Merced,
which had been the main food market for the
city since colonial times was replaced in the
1980s with a modern market in the east of
the city. Nevertheless, La Merced remains the
largest traditional food market in the entire
city.
The import-substitution industrialization
strategy implemented in the 1940s created
conditions of stability and prosperity that
made Mexico City the most important indus-
trial center in the country. Today, it is respon-
sible for 30 percent of national industrial
production. In the second half of the twenti-
eth century, encouraged by the Border Indus-
trialization Program of 1964, heavy industry
began moving from the capital to border cities
of the north. Just as many U.S. manufacturing
towns lost jobs to lower-wage labor in maq-
uiladoras, so too did Mexico City. As a result,
the under- and unemployed work in informal
commerce. The growth of the border cities has
somewhat stalled the growth of Mexico City.
Mexico City is also the hub of the national
transportation system, a relative location that
strengthens its hold on the national economy.
Five main highways link the capital to the dif-
ferent regions of the country, as well as with
Guatemala and the United States through the
75-year-old Pan American Highway. There is
an extensive intra-city transport network, as
well, including the Metro system that is used
by over 2 million people daily (Figure 3.9),
and a range of different types of buses.
As one of the most important cultural cent-
ers in the entirety of Latin America, Mexico
City boasts major cultural sites, and its cin-
ema, film, theatrical, and television industries
rival those of Buenos Aires, Argentina. The
Palacio de Bellas Artes in the center of the city
is an important opera and concert venue, and
Figure 3.8 the elite western corridor connecting Chapultepec Park and the Zócalo is the preeminent place to memorialize Mexican heritage and identity. here in the Alameda is a monument honoring benito Juárez, a Zapotec indian, in neoclassical style. Source: Photo by Seth dixon.
Distinctive Cities 119
the Cultural Center of the National Autono-
mous University of Mexico (UNAM) in the
south hosts the National Library, a large con-
cert hall, and various theaters. The National
Museum of Anthropology is considered one
of the most important of its kind, and some
monuments, such as the Chapultepec Castle
and the Independence Monument, are sym-
bols of Mexican nationhood. Mexico City is
a megacity of significant history, impressive
scale, and striking contrasts.
San José: Cultural Capital and
Ecotourism Gateway
San José is the political and economic capital
of Costa Rica. Like most Latin American cit-
ies, it is laid out in a grid pattern anchored by
a series of town squares fronted by churches.
San José has been declared the cultural capital
of Spanish America by the Union of Spanish-
American City Capitals. Costa Rica’s relative
economic prosperity and political stability
have made its capital the safest city in the
región, even if property crime (like theft)
remains a problem.
San José is the primate city of Costa Rica.
It is more than twice the size of Limón, Costa
Rica’s second-largest city located on the Car-
ibbean coast. The semi-humid and temperate
climate and fertile soils of the Central Valley
favor intensive agriculture, and high-quality
export products such as specialty leaf tobacco
do well here. Since the colonial era, settlement
and development have been concentrated in
this part of Costa Rica. With time, settlement
gradually spread outward toward the coastal
plains, a pattern that runs counter to that
experienced in most Latin American coun-
tries where settlements first took hold at navi-
gable ports on the coasts and gradually moved
inland.
The hills within the Central Valley have not
curtailed San José’s expansion. The metro-
politan area today encompasses the adjacent
communities of Alajuela, Cártago, and Here-
dia. This conurbation constitutes the “Cen-
tral Region” and spills into adjoining valleys
Figure 3.9 Mexico City’s federally subsidized subway system is incredibly congested at key transfer stations like the hidalgo interchange downtown. Source: Photo by Seth dixon.
120 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
and mountain regions. Although the Central
Region includes just 15 percent of the coun-
try’s land area, it accounts for more than half
of the nation’s population. Wealth generated
from Costa Rica’s mining and agricultural
sectors has historically supported business
investment in San José and the subsequent
expansion of its metropolitan region. Urban
sprawl has overtaken small towns and outlying
villages to such an extent that some peripheral
zones lack basic services such as housing and
schools.
Metropolitan San José, like most primate
cities, contains the most important and larg-
est industries, businesses, and residential areas
of the country. This concentration implies
changes in land use, private-sector invest-
ment, and the distribution of wealth. San José
consists of 14 cantones (administrative units
similar to counties in the United States). Most
cantones are residential areas that function as
bedroom communities and are distant from
most places of work, retail commerce, and
medical and educational facilities. There is
a growing demand in the more distant can-
tones for jobs, housing, and infrastructure to
accommodate the city’s growth.
Continued growth reinforces San José’s
primacy and disadvantages other regions
of Costa Rica that are less populated. Urban
sprawl imposes high economic costs, neces-
sitates the consumption of fossil fuels, and
exacts human costs in the form of long and
stressful commutes. A road network unable to
accommodate present usage exacerbates these
problems. Moreover, San José’s sprawl threat-
ens rich agricultural and protected lands in
the Central Valley. In general, rapid growth
and congestion threaten the sustainability of
this capital city.
Taking advantage of both its physical geog-
raphy and its reputation for safety and low
crime rates, Costa Rica has seen the rise of
a successful tourism industry over the past
several decades. The country has a number
of natural advantages: a variety of natural
ecosystems, vertically zoned climates, clas-
sic rainforests, scenic mountains, spectacu-
lar physical features such as active volcanoes,
and surfable beaches. Costa Rica has reaped
the benefits of these natural advantages by
promoting itself as a world-class ecotourism
destination. Together, ecotourism and cultural
tourism have energized the national economy
as they have attracted hard currency expended
by visitors from North America, Europe, and
Asia. Most tourist ventures start in San José,
the country’s transport hub, and fan out to
the interior of the country, to Arenal Volcano,
and to the Pacific Coast. Although this cre-
ates economic multipliers for San José and
its hinterland, it also creates economic and
environmental stress. The tourism infra-
structure (e.g., expansive networks of hotels,
restaurants, and land and air transportation)
must be maintained and upgraded continu-
ally to meet international expectations. San
José experiences the financial, infrastructural,
and environmental pressures that accompany
Costa Rica’s international notoriety as a safe,
secure, and high-quality tourist destination.
Havana: The Once and Future
Hub of the Caribbean?
Diego de Velázquez de Cuéllar founded San
Cristóbal de Habana in 1519 as one of seven
military outposts (villas) around the island of
Cuba. Havana was originally located in 1514
on the Broa Inlet, at the Gulf of Batabanó, on
the island’s southern (Caribbean) side. The
shallow port and the generally swampy (and
unhealthy) site forced colonists to relocate to
the northern side of the narrow island, where
Distinctive Cities 121
they found a deepwater harbor. The relative
location of this new site was enhanced by the
discovery of the Bahamian Channel, which
served as a key transshipment route for goods
exchanged between the Americas and Europe.
Military engineers enhanced the colonial
port by building a network of fortresses over
the next two and a half centuries (Figure 3.10).
Flotillas carrying wealth out of the ports
of Cartagena and Santa Marta in Colom-
bia, Nombre de Dios in Panama, and Verac-
ruz in Mexico would dock in the safe waters
of Havana before crossing the Atlantic for
Seville, Spain. Ranching, timber, shipping,
and allied services would define the colonial
city’s economy. It lacked the wealth of Lima
and Mexico City, but Havana served as a vital
link in the Spanish colonial empire; its loca-
tion on a pocket-shaped bay made it an ideal
warehouse and transshipment point. In fact,
the entrance to the harbor from the Florida
Straits is so narrow that military officers often
drew chains across it at night to entrap intrud-
ers. Located on a plain with mild marine-ter-
race escarpments, the city is unconstrained by
topographic barriers except for the bay, which
curtailed growth to the east until a tunnel was
completed in 1957.
A sugar boom in the late eighteenth century
brought commerce and residents to Havana,
and crowding exacerbated problems within
the walled city. New neighborhoods sprung
up outside the walls, and the elite gradually
left the walled quarters. In the early 1860s,
Havana’s walls were torn down, opening up a
huge expanse of city blocks that were ideal for
urban development.
When the United States occupied Cuba after
the 1898 Spanish-American War, they found
Havana to be a lackluster place, but one that
Figure 3.10 A lighthouse at Moro Castle stands at the entrance to havana harbor, while young Cubans use the deteriorating sea wall as a recreational resource. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
122 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
was ripe for investment. Road building, rail-
road expansion, banks, customs houses, sugar
and cigar-factory construction, telephone
services, and the newly arrived automobile
industry offered opportunities for American
capitalists. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
lent a hand, particularly in expanding, rais-
ing, and extending the seaside promenade El
Malecón—a striking seaside boulevard that
graces much of Havana’s northern edge.
Over the course of the twentieth century,
Havana became a horizontal city in the mode
of Los Angeles. It developed a series of sub-
urban enclaves west and south of the bay.
Automobile commuting for a middle class of
white-collar workers drove this suburbaniza-
tion model and led to a scattered and deeply
segregated pattern of urban growth. While
a streetcar network operated until the early
1950s, automobiles and buses linked Havana’s
new suburban and exurban developments.
When the Cuban Revolution of 1959 suc-
ceeded, about one in 20 residents were living
in shantytowns of some sort (Figure 3.11).
The socialist government imported models
of high-rise prefabricated buildings like those
used in the former Soviet Union. While only
1 million residents claimed Havana as their
home in 1959, the population had barely sur-
passed the 2 million mark fifty years later. Over
the same period, Mexico City and Lima, Peru,
had increased six- and threefold, respectively.
Warfare and revolutions have given
twenty-first-century Havana a unique urban
morphology. It is a polycentric city that has
preserved distinctive architectural designs
and land uses. Colonial, Republican, new gov-
ernment centers, and social/cultural districts
characterize this panoply of urban nodes
(Figure 3.12). Havana is one of the few Latin
American cities where rather benign light
industry (i.e., cigar making) surrounds a
city center that has served both colonial and
Republican governments.
During the first three decades of Com-
munist rule, Havana was largely a “closed”
Figure 3.11 here are two images of a Cuba frozen in time: Che Guevara, one of the leaders of the Cuban Revolution of 1959, and a classic American sedan (one of many still on the road) that arrived prior to the Revolution. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Distinctive Cities 123
destination; few tourists came, and those who
did hailed primarily from Soviet bloc states.
Immigration to Havana from elsewhere was
strictly controlled by a food-ration book (la
libreta) and other governmental controls.
However, the demise of the Soviet Union in
1991 led to a major crisis called the “Special
Period in a Time of Peace.” The government
tightened gasoline rations as Cuba’s ability
to exchange sugar for Soviet oil disappeared.
Thousands of un- and underemployed
Cubans have migrated illegally to Havana,
mainly from the eastern provinces where the
dwindling sugar economy has been devas-
tated. In typical Cuban humor, these immi-
grants are called palestinos because they hail
from the east.
Other post-Soviet changes are also visible
in Havana. As fuel subsidies from the USSR
ended, and the relative cost of gasoline soared,
bus routes were scaled back to half their num-
ber and bicycling as a means of transportation
boomed. Tourism was seen as a “necessary
evil” to sustain the island’s economy, and the
city’s Old Havana district (Habana Vieja),
a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1982,
became a prime destination for newfound
cultural tourism. In 1993, the City Historian
of Havana created a money-making corpora-
tion to address housing, hotel construction,
road paving, plaza reconstruction, and urban
revitalization. This firm, Habaguanex, has
become one of the most powerful state enter-
prises in post-Soviet Havana. It has embarked
on an ambitious project to rehabilitate build-
ings and spaces in Habana Vieja. Interna-
tional tourism has grown significantly from
about 25,000 annual visitors to Cuba in the
Figure 3.12 the polycentric city of havana. Source: based on J. Scarpaci, R. Segre, and M. Coyula, Havana: Two Faces of the Antillean Metropolis (Chapel hill, nC: University of north Carolina Press, 2002), 87.
124 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
late 1970s to approximately 2.5 million visi-
tors today, comparable to the growth in tour-
ism experienced in nearby Cancún, Mexico. In
2011, the Communist Party approved radical
free-market changes such as the sale of private
homes (with minimum state intervention)
and an increase in the number of private-
sector jobs. In 2014, reversing sixty years of
nonengagement, the United States and Cuba
announced the reinstatement of diplomatic
relations; and in 2015, the countries opened
embassies in one another’s capital cities. Time
will tell whether these tentative steps toward
entrepreneurship and U.S. rapprochement
will change the face of a city that has been cen-
trally planned for half a century.
Unlike many other Caribbean cities, Havana
is home to a world-class biotechnology indus-
try and boasts the third busiest airport in the
region. It possesses the open space for more
growth, either in the form of vacation homes
for North Americans and returning Cuban-
American expatriates or to accommodate an
unfettered U.S. tourist market. In contrast to
many Caribbean port capitals, Havana attracts
only a few thousand cruise-ship passengers
annually largely because shipping companies
faced legal problems from the United States
if they conducted business in Cuba. Never-
theless, the Caribbean manages some of the
busiest maritime traffic in the world; approxi-
mately 50,000 ships carry 14.5 million tour-
ists annually. Havana will be on the radar of
urbanists who are interested in issues of smart
growth, sustainable development, and sus-
tainable tourism as the twenty-first century
progresses.
Panama City: Child of Globalization
Of all of the cities in Central America and
the Caribbean, no city has been linked to
globalization and international commerce as
much as Panama City, the capital of Panama.
Lying on the Pacific Ocean adjacent to the
southern entrance to the country’s famous
canal, Panama City has been a center of trade
for five centuries. It is the oldest continuously
inhabited city on the Pacific coast of the Amer-
icas, and is now one of the region’s most prom-
inent commercial centers, having been referred
to as a “Tropical Manhattan” and a “Singapore
for Central America” in the popular media.
Panama City’s long history of international
trade began in 1519 with the establishment of
a Spanish colonial outpost from which mis-
sions to what are today Peru and Ecuador
could be launched. From the outset, the city’s
role was trade-based, initially mediating flows
of gold and silver from the New World. The
city’s contemporary history began with the
completion of the Panama Canal in 1914,
which established a U.S. presence in Panama
to administer the canal and a strip of land on
either side known as the Canal Zone. Panama
City was located on the edge of the zone, and
much of the city’s infrastructure was built
by the U.S. government. In 1979, the Canal
Zone was abolished, and in 1999 the canal was
finally turned over to Panama.
While the onset of free-market econom-
ics and globalization was actively resisted
elsewhere in the region (notably Cuba and
Nicaragua), Panama embraced free trade
through the establishment of two large free-
trade zones, the adoption of the U.S. dollar as
its official currency, and the extension of tax
concessions to firms relocating to the coun-
try. These days, Panama City is a prosperous
national capital and one of the region’s most
economically bouyant cities. It is home to
over 90 internationally oriented banks, serves
as regional headquarters for several large mul-
tinational corporations and nongovernmental
Distinctive Cities 125
organizations (notably the UN), and is rapidly
emerging into the status of a true World City
(Figure 3.13). By virtue of its relative loca-
tion, the city is a major shipping and logistics
center, with 4 percent of global trade pass-
ing through the canal, and nearly a quarter
of the world’s ships registered in Panama in
terms of deadweight tonnage. Panama City is
also a regional shopping hub, attracting many
people from surrounding countries (notably
Colombia and Venezuela) to its mega malls.
Albrook Mall—which was built on a former
U.S. Air Force Base—is the largest mall in the
Americas, and the Multiplaza Mall is stuffed
with luxury boutiques. Despite the sharp
social divides between the city’s rich and
poor, high-end development continues with
the recent completion of the 70-story Trump
Ocean Club and Central America’s first
Waldorf Astoria hotel, and the gentrification of
the city’s historic Casco Antiguo quarter (Fig-
ure 3.14). Materializing now are vast improve-
ments to the Panama Canal that could pump
even more investment capital into Panama
City as longer and wider container ships are
able to navigate easily through the isthmus.
Two threats, however, are also materializing
to challenge Panama’s virtual monopoly on
interoceanic commerce. First, a Hong Kong
firm has been given a contract by Nicaragua
to begin building a canal that would pass
through that country, taking advantage of two
natural lakes. Second, as global warming con-
tinues and the Arctic Ocean becomes more
ice-free, the largest ships may find it profitable
to avoid the canal in favor of what has been
known historically as the Northwest Passage
through Canadian waters.
Figure 3.13 the fishing docks and the skyscrapers of Panama City reveal traditional and emerging economic geographies. Source: Photo by thomas Sigler.
126 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
San Juan: American City Under Stress
San Juan, Puerto Rico, serves as capital of
the world’s most populous dependency. The
island is not an independent state, but a U.S.
territory. While most other dependencies
in the Caribbean are but small islands with
small populations (e.g., Montserrat), Puerto
Rico has 3.5 million people, all of whom are
citizens of the United States. They travel back
and forth between the island and the main-
land (particularly New York City and Phila-
delphia) at will. One would think, therefore,
that the island’s primate city, San Juan, would
set the pace for urban well-being in the region.
Instead, the island’s governor in 2015 declared
Puerto Rico to be essentially bankrupt, unable
to pay its bills. Despite serving as the original
offshore location for U.S. firms (led by Maid-
enform) seeking cheap labor, the island has
lost its comparative advantage in the labor
market to other less developed parts of the
world. So far, nothing has emerged to sustain
the island’s economic growth, even though its
pharmaceutical industry is one of the world’s
largest and most sophisticated. Even tourism
lags behind many other Caribbean destina-
tions and must now face new competition
from Cuba.
San Juan is the hub of Puerto Rico. The city
is situated astride a large bay on the north-
ern (Atlantic) coast of the island. An elevated
promontory of fresh breezes offers an ample
view of sea and land. San Juan played a prime
role in the geopolitical scheme of the Spanish
conquest. More than a port, it was the key to
the Americas’ front door. The early settlement
consisted of agglomerations gathered around
churches and government buildings that
functioned as emblematic landmarks, consist-
ent with the Law of the Indies (Figure 3.15).
Sketches from 1625 show a somewhat devel-
oped, but still incomplete, rectilinear urban
outline with a rectilinear grid and central
plaza. Change came during the following
Figure 3.14 the Casco Antiguo quarter in Panama City is currently undergoing the process of gentrification. Source: Photo by thomas Sigler.
Distinctive Cities 127
century, when San Juan turned into a care-
lessly urbanized village. The poor barrios
became more concentrated, first on San Juan’s
periphery. Eventually, as the terrain occupied
by self-built housing became saturated, many
poor built their humble bohíos (straw huts)
and houses in the urban center itself.
The nineteenth century was definitive for
the construction of San Juan and the island.
It saw the formation of a unique Puerto Rican
identity and national consciousness. San
Juan reached its highest level of urbaniza-
tion, becoming a neoclassic urban settlement
and a center of distribution and marketing as
agriculture, commerce, and industry expe-
rienced vigorous growth. San Juan benefited
greatly from these economic developments;
the wealthy were able to replace their wooden
houses with stone ones, many of them mul-
tistoried, promoting urban densification. The
improved economy attracted more people to
the city, and, by the early nineteenth century,
the poor barrios were disappearing to make
space for new public works, for speculative
residences, and for wealthier families. By the
end of the century, the poor barrios inside the
walls had been eliminated, private construc-
tion had become more common, and San
Juan, limited by its walls, was overcrowded.
The interior patios that served as orchards
and gardens were occupied, and people began
building on the roofs of existing buildings,
beginning a process of vertical growth. Rooms
on the first floors of residences were subdi-
vided; the few remaining internal open spaces
and the streets became places of domestic
chores, artisanal jobs, and socialization. The
city became dense, messy, unruly, and unhy-
gienic. Poor living conditions included pests,
illnesses, high rents, hunger, work insecurity,
Figure 3.15 the Plaza de Armas in San Juan, Puerto Rico, is now used not for drilling troops but for enhancing urban life. Fountains are common components of plazas in Spanish cities. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
128 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
political tensions, and crime. Several wealthy
families decided to move their residences
outside the walls, a trend that would even-
tually transform San Juan. Nearby hills that
had previously been considered impregnable
due to their topography were occupied by
new settlements. The urban profile, previ-
ously dominated by church domes and bell
towers, and military structures, showed the
presence of new private capital with the addi-
tion of the Territorial and Agricultural Bank.
Despite other towns existing in the interior of
the island, San Juan maintained its supremacy,
even though it had left behind its role as Gate-
way to the Americas.
With the U.S. takeover of Puerto Rico in
1898, San Juan gained even more importance
as a commercial, political, and economic
center. New tourism developed, boosting the
proliferation of small hotels. Industrial com-
plexes took form outside the walls of the old
city, opening the way for urbanization along
the Central Road, which connected San Juan
to the interior and also leading to the growth
of poor barrios. Between 1899 and 1910, San-
turce, the capital city’s barrio with the most
area, tripled its population.
Urban developments of the early twenti-
eth century were pivotal in the history of San
Juan and the island. Schools began to operate
in English, medical centers were built on the
urban fringe, and new water, sewage, and elec-
tric power systems were installed. A boom in
private development accompanied the public
works. The construction of modern residences
for the wealthy outside the old city utilized the
services of local, and recently arrived, archi-
tects. Still, despite the economic bonanza,
overcrowding continued.
With the Americans also came the suburb.
The first suburb in San Juan was made pos-
sible by a streetcar network and was aimed at
the wealthier classes. Plots of land were sold
to private individuals, and houses of several
styles brought from the U.S. mainland—cha-
lets, bungalows, and cottages—were offered
as possible options. Situated on ample plots
surrounded by gardens, wealthy families of
Puerto Rico soon preferred this type of sub-
urban residence. Several plots were reserved
for civic, institutional, and touristic uses. This
was the beginning of San Juan’s, and eventu-
ally Puerto Rico’s, suburban landscape.
URbAN CHALLENGES
Shifting Patterns of City Growth
Some of Middle America’s and the Caribbe-
an’s largest metropolises, particularly those in
Mexico, reveal slowing rates of urban growth
that can be attributed to both the demographic
transition and a decline in rural-to-urban
migration. Nevertheless, these metropolitan
expanses increasingly spread out well beyond
their original limits. As a result, the urban set-
tlement has become more dispersed and cities
increasingly encroach on the adjacent coun-
tryside. Urbanization has spatially, economi-
cally, and socially incorporated many smaller
towns and cities in this process. Guadalajara,
Puebla, and Mexico City in Mexico, San José
in Costa Rica, and Guatemala City reflect this
process. Tools of urban and regional planning
are needed to manage this level of urbaniza-
tion. Despite a population loss or “hollowing
out” of the city center in these metropolises,
the capital city continues to dominate in most
countries.
Mid-size cities, on the other hand, have
maintained an impressive rate of population
growth. They offer new promise for job crea-
tion and enhanced quality of life as opposed
to the very large cities. Nevertheless, urban
Urban Challenges 129
planners and administrators in these cities
will be challenged to avoid replicating the
problems that have plagued larger metropoli-
tan areas. The viability of intermediate-sized
cities will depend mainly on their economies,
including the degree of integration at the
global scale, the type of articulation that they
maintain at the national and regional level,
and the extent to which they can tap into their
comparative advantages.
Social and Spatial Segregation
Social and geographic segregation in the
region’s cities has deepened and is a serious
problem. Demand for exclusive high-income
communities often leads to displacement of
poor groups from targeted urban neighbor-
hoods. Public-housing projects concentrate at
the city’s edge because of lower land values. In
turn, this exacerbates social and spatial segre-
gation. High-income groups increasingly iso-
late themselves defensively in limited-access
or gated communities that feature costly
houses; attractive retail, entertainment, and
recreational facilities; and proximity to work,
school, and other amenities. Houses of the
poor households continue to occupy precari-
ous locations on remote and marginal lands
near landfills, utility plants, factories, water-
treatment plants, flood plains, and on steep
terrain (Figure 3.16).
Natural Disasters and Vulnerable Cities
Natural disasters compound regional poverty.
Active earthquake faults run through Mexico,
Central America, and the Caribbean, and
active volcanoes line these fault zones, except
in the Greater Antilles. Most of the region
experiences periodic intense rainfall, tropical
cyclones, and sometimes severe hurricanes.
The steep, unstable slopes of the area’s moun-
tains encourage floods and mass landslides,
especially when stripped of their natural vege-
tation under pressure of urbanization. Natural
disasters such as hurricanes merely exacerbate
these conditions.
Port-au-Prince, the capital city of Haiti,
serves as an illustration. The city is clearly in
harm’s way. It lies in the middle of the Car-
ibbean hurricane belt, on the edge of the
Enriquillo-Plantain Garden Fault zone, and
at the base of the steep Massif de la Selle. As
Port-au-Prince’s population exploded after
World War II, shacks and poorly built cin-
der-block houses spread beyond the city’s
traditional boundaries onto rapidly growing
coastal mudflats, urban washes, and the slopes
of Morne l’Hôpital, the mountain that looms
directly behind the city. Until 2010, flooding
and landslides were the most common risks;
even normal storms sometimes caused deadly
floods along the city’s crowded ravines.
These disasters were forgotten, however,
in the massive earthquake of January 12,
2010, which killed more than 200,000 people
and left hundreds of thousands homeless.
Satellite images of Port-au-Prince in 2010
illustrate some of the extensive destruction
and displacement caused by the 7.0 magni-
tude quake, which was made much worse by
the instability of the urban infrastructure.
The ornate presidential palace, reminis-
cent of French colonial times, collapsed; as
did many other buildings, displacing thou-
sands of people to tent camps like the one
that took shape in the former military air-
port just north of the city center (Figures
3.17 and 3.18). Such camps, conspicuous for
their blue tarps, popped up anywhere space
was available: vacant lots, parks, roadsides,
and even a golf course. One of the most con-
spicuous camps, perhaps symbolic of the
130 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
continuing plight of the refugees, is right
across the street from the destroyed presi-
dential palace.
Port-au-Prince is not unique, but rather an
extreme example of how natural and human
disaster work together in Latin American and
Caribbean cities. Nature presents risks, but
cities amplify them by destabilizing slopes,
by exacerbating flood peaks, by shunting the
poor onto flood plains, and by encouraging
construction of high-density homes willy-
nilly on every available hillside. In Middle
America and the Caribbean, poverty and
vulnerability are intimately intertwined with
natural hazard.
Early warning systems, capable manage-
ment, and institutional and political develop-
ment are fundamental steps in dealing with
emergency preparedness and rebuilding in
cities throughout Middle America and the
Caribbean. Strong political will is needed to
tackle the problems affecting the daily lives of
people living in cities throughout the region,
in keeping with twenty-first century goals of
economic development through environmen-
tal sustainability.
Figure 3.16 two aerial views of shantytowns (bidonvilles) in low-lying areas just north of the Port-au-Prince, haiti city center. Flooding occurred in these areas after hurricane noel struck the island of hispaniola on october 29–31, 2007. the storm claimed at least 30 lives in the dominican Republic and 20 in haiti. Source: Photo by Joseph L. Scarpaci.
Urban Challenges 131
Figure 3.17 Former military airport north of Port-au-Prince city center, July 2009, six months before January 2010 earthquake. Source: Google Earth.
Figure 3.18 tent camp at former military airport north of Port-au-Prince city center, november 2010, ten months after January 2010 earthquake. Source: Google Earth.
132 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
Managing Flows: Tourism
and Drug Trafficking
Globalization tends to reduce barriers for
cross-border trade and cash flow, uphold pri-
vate property and bank secrecy, and facilitate
drug trade in popular tourist destinations.
The Caribbean, a region close to the Andean
region of South America, where 90 percent
of the world’s cocaine is produced, and the
United States, a major market in the region,
fits the profile of a locale where tourism and
drugs intersect. The geography of the region
is conducive to large-scale drug trafficking.
The larger islands and mainland countries of
Belize, Jamaica, Guyana, Dominican Republic,
and Haiti provide remote hinterlands neces-
sary to shelter trafficking activities, whereas
smaller, archipelagic states like Puerto Rico,
Grenada, the U.S. Virgin Islands, St. Vin-
cent, and the Grenadines provide numerous
unguarded entry and exit points for narcot-
ics transport. According to Interpol statistics,
drug offenses are positively related not only to
population density but also to visitor density.
As cities develop their tourist industries, they
must also guard against allowing conditions to
emerge that are conducive to drug activity.
The geopolitical situation of Puerto Rico
and the U.S. Virgin Islands make them ideal
transshipment points for drugs to the U.S.
mainland because, once inside the territories,
packages do not need to clear customs. The
Dominican Republic presents a complemen-
tary situation. Situated close to Puerto Rico,
its coasts are poorly monitored; its interior is
mountainous and underpopulated; it has sig-
nificant poverty levels and poorly paid, under-
equipped security forces. These factors make
it an attractive route to surreptitiously move
narcotics from northern South America to
Puerto Rico, the closest U.S. territory.
Gated Communities
Though many of the region’s cities were
founded within walled fortresses, modern
gated communities in Middle America had
their origins in the 1990s. The emergence of
gated communities was motivated by a set of
common reasons: fear of crime, desire to con-
trol environment, interest in private govern-
ance by the higher-income classes, and greater
control over the urban development process
by private developers. Increasingly, large tracts
of peri-urban, family-owned land are being
developed as master-planned estates, targeting
a range of social classes. This pattern of urban
development in the region could be character-
ized as “enclave urbanism”—a term indicating
an urban structure in which social life is geo-
graphically fragmented. Armed conflict and
everyday violence in the region have led to a
proliferation of live-in gated communities,
increasing the “new middle class” whose con-
sumption preferences are modeled on those of
the educated and landed elite.
Gated communities are often fenced- or
walled-off with only one or two main points
of entry. More affluent gated communities
have armed security. In addition to houses,
they usually contain community amenities
such as swimming pools and playgrounds. In
many cities, high-rise buildings have turned
into “vertical” gated communities, with con-
trolled access entry and parking. The same
phenomenon has penetrated commercial
nodes, which have over time migrated from
pedestrian-access streets in city centers to pri-
vately run shopping malls. Gated communi-
ties have been widely criticized for privatizing
social life, interrupting traffic flow, and divid-
ing previously interconnected neighborhoods,
but also of being instruments of socioeco-
nomic, and even racial, segregation.
Prospects for the Future 133
Although in most instances, this modern
“enclosure movement” has been self-imposed
by its inhabitants, there are cases in which the
government has gated a particular community
in its public-housing projects, as in the city
of Ponce in south-central Puerto Rico. Four
neighboring communities exist in Ponce; two
are poor and two are wealthy. Of the two poor
communities (Dr. Pila and Gándara), only
Dr. Pila is gated. Of the two wealthier commu-
nities (Alhambra and Extensión Alhambra),
only Extensión Alhambra is gated. Dr. Pila is a
government-housing project whose residents
did not ask to be gated but were gated by the
government. They compare their community
to a prison, or worse a zoo. Residents feel iso-
lated, not only from the outside world, but
also from each other because several inner sec-
tions of the project are also walled-off, which
hinders community-building behavior. After
further examination, the Dr. Pila project did
not improve the community. It was perceived
as an eyesore that would drive away tourism
(an important source of revenue in the area).
In contrast, the wealthier (and private)
Extensión Alhambra’s gates are self-imposed;
its residents agreed to it and feel it has
improved their safety. The Alhambra suburb
(nongated, wealthy) is one of the first subur-
ban neighborhoods in Ponce and has been
unable to cordon itself off. Its residents per-
ceive that this has changed the character of
the community since they have had to secure
their individual homes. Interestingly, criminal
acts against household gardens—symbols, it
seems, of wealth, civilization, and class—upset
these residents more than actual damage or
theft.
Critics claim that the gating of public
housing has converted relatively harmless, but
already stigmatized, communities into ghet-
tos making them even more stigmatized and
dreaded. Gating has also disrupted the func-
tion of the city as a place where strangers can
meet freely and learn from each other. It would
seem that Puerto Rico’s social experiment,
meant to bring the poorer and the wealthier
together in communities, has instead solidi-
fied and normalized urban inequality. The
gate has become a symbol of social respect-
ability to some and a palpable reminder of
contempt that criminalizes others.
PROSPECTS FOR THE FUTURE
Economic Strengths and Vulnerability
Industrial development has spurred urbani-
zation in Middle America. Initiated by the
government-led industrialization policies
leveraging relatively low labor costs, industry
has been catalyzed most recently by free-trade
agreements such as the North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Domini-
can Republic-Central America Free Trade
Agreement (CAFTA-DR). Many of the poorer
cities of the region are able to attract light
manufacturing companies to produce textiles
since the cities can offer them a large supply of
low-skilled laborers, recent migrants from the
countryside. A few of the more affluent met-
ropolitan regions in politically stable coun-
tries are competing for more lucrative types of
manufacturing investment than textiles. Cities
in Mexico such as Monterrey, Mexico City, and
Guadalajara have been able to attract high-end
industrial corporations, and recently some cit-
ies in Central America and the Caribbean have
been able to leverage their geographic assets to
boost their economic global connections.
Costa Rica is an interesting case in point. It
is famously peaceful and politically stable with
the core of its labor force concentrated in the
greater San José region. In 1998, after studying
134 CITIES OF MIDDLE AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
sites in Indonesia, Thailand, Brazil, Argen-
tina, Chile, and Mexico, Intel chose to build a
microprocessor plant in Alajuela, Costa Rica
within the metropolitan area. Intel micro-
processing chips are found in over 80 percent
of the personal computers sold, and that vol-
ume of business became the leading driver in
transforming Costa Rica’s economic focus,
propelling it into the globalized economy on
more equal footing with the consumers of
its electronic goods. Intel’s investment in the
San José metropolitan area created a climate
that earned the trust of other investors and
strengthened the overall business community.
Intel’s addition to Costa Rica also has affected
education, business practices, and other for-
eign investments. Corporate call centers, U.S.
medical-supply centers, and major banks are
investing in Costa Rica as well.
Ironically, economic globalization creates
vulnerabilities for both host countries and
transnational corporations located there. In
2014, Intel announced that it would be leaving
its Costa Rican microprocessor plant for lower-
wage sites in Asia. With the rapid proliferation
of smartphones and tablets, the demand for
personal computers and the microprocessors
in them has declined. Although some fear the
loss of an important employer in San José, the
number of workers laid off is relatively small.
Costa Rica has moved on; it is investing in
renewable, green energy. No fossil fuels have
been used to generate electricity since 2014.
Now the entire country is running on renew-
able, green energy and Costa Rica is garner-
ing international attention. The infrastructure
that Costa Rican cities have in place, coupled
with the attention for being a leader in renew-
able energy, will likely attract new businesses
and the country will likely survive the loss of
one (albeit important) company.
While cities such as Monterrey and Guada-
lajara (Mexico) also attract comparable eco-
nomic investments, many cities do not have
the infrastructure and labor pool to attract
high-end industry. Many of these cities are
textile production centers such as Tegucigalpa
(Honduras) and San Salvador (El Salvador).
San Salvador’s economic growth has been
stymied by political upheaval and civil war,
which has led to the loss of many manufactur-
ing facilities, forestalling investment by many
capital-intensive industries with the exception
of textiles. Port-au-Prince, another city with a
history of political chaos and limited opportu-
nities for global linkages, is currently working
on redeveloping its apparel export industry
after the disastrous earthquake of 2010. In an
effort to promote investment, the government
has created a streamlined electronic process to
reduce the time needed to register a limited
company in Haiti to 10 days.
Cities in Middle America and the Carib-
bean are neither at the center of global trade
nor on the periphery. As the twenty-first
century unfolds, many of the region’s cities
will encounter possibilities that are currently
unimaginable. Because Middle American cit-
ies are critically important to the national
economies of the region, prospects for sus-
tainable development may well hinge on the
extent to which governments throughout the
region can insulate important centers from
economic vulnerability while concurrently
embracing global opportunities.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Brothers, T. S., J. Wilson, and O. Dwyer. 2008. Car-
ibbean Landscapes: An Interpretive Atlas. Coco-
nut Beach, FL: Caribbean Studies Press. Surveys
Suggested Readings 135
characteristic urban and rural landscapes of the
Caribbean, using satellite imagery, ground pho-
tos, and essays.
Cravey, A. 1998. Women and Work in Mexico’s Maq-
uiladoras. New York: Rowman & Littlefield.
Examines the relationship among economic
globalization, gender, and migration in Mexican
piecemeal assembly-line industries.
Hernandez, D. 2011. Down and Delirious in Mex-
ico City. New York: Scribner. An observer’s
account of Mexico’s capital from the Aztecs
to the twenty-first century and from slums to
subcultures.
Jaffe, R., ed. 2008. The Caribbean City. Leiden,
Netherlands: Brill. Presents a spatial, social, and
economic overview of the Caribbean’s urban
nodes with case studies of cities with Spanish,
Dutch, French, and English histories.
McGuirk, J. 2014. Radical Cities: Across Latin Amer-
ica in Search of a New Architecture. New York:
Verso. Features Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires,
Caracas, Bogotá, Medellín, Lima, Santiago
(Chile), and Tijuana, among other cities.
Scarpaci, J., and A. Portela. 2009. Cuban Land-
scapes: Heritage, Memory and Place. New York:
Guilford Press. Examines the construction of
sugar, slavery, heritage, and political landscapes
that shape the meaning of cubanidad as seen
from disciplines, including landscape architec-
ture, history, popular culture, and geography.
Scarpaci, J., R. Segre, and M. Coyula. 2002. Havana:
Two Faces of the Antillean Metropolis. Chapel
Hill and London: University of North Carolina
Press. Reviews five hundred years of urbaniza-
tion and Havana’s spatial configuration as a
mirror to periods of economic development,
political control, and architectural imprint.
U.N.-Habitat. 2012. State of Latin American and
Caribbean Cities 2012. New York: United
Nations-Habitat. “Presents the current situa-
tion of the region’s urban world, including the
demographic, economic, social, environmental,
urban and institutional conditions in which cit-
ies are developing.”
Ward, P. M., E. R. Jiménez Huerta, and M. M.
DiVirgilio. 2015. Housing Policy in Latin Ameri-
can Cities: A New Generation of Strategies and
Approaches for 2016 UN Habitat III. New York:
Routledge. Considers policy choices in dealing
with the “first suburbs,” or squatter settlements,
that came to surround Latin American cities.
West, R. C., and J. P. Augelli. 1989. Middle America:
Its Lands and Peoples. 3rd ed. Englewood Cliffs,
NJ: Prentice Hall. A highly regarded text by two
prominent American geographers who worked
in Middle America and the Caribbean.
Figure 4.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of South America. Source: United nations, department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population division (2014), World Urbanization Prospects: 2014 Revision, http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/.
4
Cities of South America BRIAN J. GODFREY AND MAUREEN HAYS-MITCHELL
KEy URbAN FACTS
Total Population 411 million
Percent Urban Population 83%
Total Urban Population 341 million
Most Urbanized Countries Uruguay (95%)
Argentina (92%)
Chile (89%)
Least Urbanized Countries Guyana (29%)
Paraguay (59%)
Ecuador (63%)
Number of Megacities 4
Number of Cities of More Than 1 Million 45 cities
Three Largest Cities (Metacity) São Paulo (21 m), Buenos Aires (15 m),
Rio de Janeiro (13 m)
Number of World Cities (Highest Ranking) 8 (São Paulo, Buenos Aires, Santiago, Lima,
Bogotá, Montevideo, Caracas, Rio de Janeiro)
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. South America is highly urbanized, but its rate of urban growth generally has slowed in
recent years.
2. The region contained four of the world’s largest megacities of over 10 million people, a total
of 45 cities of more than 1 million, and eight world cities in 2015.
3. Cities of Andean America reveal large indigenous and mestizo populations sharing urban
space with small elite groups often of European heritage.
4. Southern Cone cities are generally heavily European in ethnic composition as well as in
urban planning traditions, although recent migratory trends from Paraguay, Bolivia, and
Peru have created more racial diversity.
138 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
5. Brazil’s cities have a Portuguese colonial heritage and urban forms distinct from their His-
panic counterparts, including significant Afro-Brazilian cultures.
6. Most countries in South America are dominated by a primate city, often the national capi-
tal, although dynamic economic centers like Guayaquil, Medellín, and São Paulo also have
arisen.
7. The cities (and countries) of South America exhibit extreme disparities in wealth, which is
directly reflected in land-use patterns and the quality of life within cities.
8. Economic globalization has mainly benefited a small segment of the urban population,
despite intensifying social movements, urban protests, and governmental efforts to address
inequities.
9. In recent decades, a rise in urban insecurity and criminality has led to a withdrawal of elites
and middle classes from many city centers, often to gated communities, shopping malls,
and fortified office parks in suburban areas.
10. Rapid urbanization has caused serious environmental problems, especially air and water
pollution, in many South American cities. Innovative efforts to create more inclusive and
sustainable forms of urbanization have emerged in several cities, most notably such cities
as Bogotá and Curtiba.
South America’s cities evoke dramatic, if con-
flicting, mental images. The mere mention of
Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires, Bogotá, Caracas,
Lima, Quito, or Santiago conjures up images
of spectacular natural settings, breathtak-
ing vistas, cosmopolitan populations, pictur-
esque colonial architecture, charming market
streets, and impressive modern skylines. By
contrast, their names also evoke images of
squalid squatter settlements, intractable pov-
erty, random violence, hapless street children,
congested motorways, filthy air, and polluted
waterways. To be sure, both images accurately
portray urban life in South America. Just as
the continent is a land of great extremes, so
are its cities. Despite outward similarities,
regional cities are diverse in form, environ-
ment, culture, economic structure, political
governance, and quality of life (Figure 4.1).
The continent’s urban centers have long
participated in the world economy. Since
the colonial era, cities throughout the region
have served as important global producers
and consumers. Today, South American cities
vigorously compete for financial, manufac-
turing, and service-oriented multinational
enterprises. Cultural currents from around
the world—art, architecture, music, fashion,
cuisine, athletic events, and digital technolo-
gies—flow across the continent. Both advo-
cates and critics of globalization agree that
societies are being propelled in broadly similar
socioeconomic, political, and cultural direc-
tions. Is it inevitable, then, that places caught
up in this process come to look and feel alike?
South American cities suggest otherwise.
South American cities generally contrast
with those of other world regions, given a series
of shared continental characteristics: com-
mon colonial legacies of Iberian urbanism;
similar histories of economic development;
and recent globalization of cultural tastes,
production, and technology. Despite such
similar trends, the diversity of national and
local experiences also stands out. Some cities
originated with the Spanish conquest, while
others derived from Portuguese colonization.
Many are infused with indigenous ways of life,
Urban Patterns in South America 139
African cultures that date from the slave trade,
European immigrant influences from German
and Italian settlement, and relatively small but
often prominent groups descended from Asia
and the Middle East (Figure 4.2). These cities
exhibit dizzying social and cultural diversity,
disparate urban forms, contrasting economic
levels, and varying forms of governance, all
spread across some of the most diverse natural
environments on earth.
URbAN PATTERNS IN SOUTH AMERICA
South America’s cities may be grouped into
three major cultural-ecological regions: (1)
Andean America (Colombia, Venezuela,
Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia), (2) the Southern
Cone (Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, and Para-
guay), and (3) Portuguese America (Brazil).
On the continent’s northern rim, the three
Guianas—Guyana, Suriname, and French
Guiana—may appropriately be understood
in the Caribbean context (Box 4.1). Even
within Spanish and Portuguese South Amer-
ica, despite general adherence to broad conti-
nental trends, there are significant urban and
regional differences:
• Cities of the Andes reflect a strong indige-
nous and mixed (mestizo) presence, which
shares urban space with small elite groups
of European heritage. An “alternative
economy” of the informal sector and pop-
ular markets also dominates these rapidly
growing cities. As the continent’s fastest-
urbanizing region at present, Andean
Figure 4.2 the Pelourinho historic district, named for the “pillory” formerly used to punish slaves, indicates the strong Afro-brazilian influence in Salvador da bahia. Source: Photo by brian Godfrey.
140 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Box 4.1 ethnic Geography of the Guianas
Katie Macdonald, york University
Forming a physical barrier between the Caribbean and South America, the seawall that runs along the coast of the Guianas symbolizes the rich history and culture of these three anoma- lous countries. Guyana, Suriname, and French Guiana together occupy an ambiguous status: although present on the South American continent, many of their social, economic, and political institutions can be linked more closely to the Caribbean, a trend which is particu- larly pronounced in the region’s coastal cities where the vast majority of the population resides. Examining the history and culture of Georgetown’s seawall, provides a lens into the unique ethnic geography of this region (Figure 4.3).
Figure 4.3 Stabroek Market is the main market in Georgetown, Guyana and always bustling with activity. Source: Photo by Katie Macdonald.
designed by dutch colonists, the seawalls were built by African slaves, imported to work on sugar plantations. intricately connected to the drainage system of the city (built below sea level), the seawall is today seen as the first defense against flooding. Unfortunately, neither the canals nor the wall has been properly maintained, and Georgetown residents regularly suffer both dangerous canal overflow (including municipal waste and sewage) and serious seawall breaches.
Urban Patterns in South America 141
cities operate under fiscal constraint and
hence experience severe social, political,
environmental, and infrastructural crises.
On the other hand, such cities as Bogotá
have become world renowned for their
innovative programs of urban planning,
mass transit, and sustainability programs.
• In the Southern Cone, cities tend to be
heavily European in ethnic heritage as
well as cultural traditions—apart from
Paraguay, which resembles Andean coun-
tries in its significant indigenous presence
and socioeconomic indicators. Argentina,
Chile, and Uruguay urbanized rapidly
during the early twentieth century and
the largest cities—Buenos Aires, Santiago,
and Montevideo—now grow relatively
slowly. Human development indicators
tend to suggest prosperity, although these
cities have faced economic stagnation and
restive middle classes.
• Brazilian cities reflect a Portuguese herit-
age and language, a unique popular cul-
ture, and distinctive urban forms. The
Roman name for Portugal was Lusitania,
so we speak of Luso-Brazilian colonial
cities. Here, large Afro-Brazilian popula-
tions make black-white stratification a
nevertheless, as a place to escape the constant tropical humidity, at low-tide the seawall is a site for gatherings, and the city’s cultural diversity becomes apparent during the many ethnic festivals that occur along it. European colonists (british, dutch, and French) brought with them Christianity, and today Easter is commemorated by flying kites along the seawall. diwali sees a motorcade of floats celebrating light and the goddess Lakshmi, who arrived in the Guianas post-emancipation with the indentureship of Asians, primarily from india (although Suriname saw significant Javanese populations). And reminiscent of the trinidad- ian Carnival, Guyana’s “Mashramani” (derived from the Arawak language) is celebrated with a parade along the seawall, accompanied by the typical Caribbean sounds of steel-pan and soca. Similarly, the weekly pluralistic Sunday “lime” sees people of all ethnicities converge on the wall to talk, listen to Caribbean dancehall or chutney, and consume the wide variety of intercultural delicacies on offer, including metem (an indigenous root soup), Rastafarian “ital” (vegetarian), Creolese “cookup” (a rice-based dish), chowmein, and chicken curry, all washed down with local beer or rum.
the seawall has a darker side, however, reminiscent of the serious social problems that continue to plague the Guianas. often the site of poverty-driven violence, the seawall is considered a dangerous place, even during festivities. Similarly, the seawall witnesses seri- ous traffic accidents, due both to the mix of donkey/horse carts, pedestrians, and vehicular traffic that it sees, as well as to the lack of enforcement of traffic legislation, often caused by police corruption. this corruption is in part the result of the ongoing ethnic divisions of political institutions, themselves the outcome of divisive colonial practices, and continuous confirmation of these rifts manifests along the seawall during the ethnically divided political rallies that occur there. but the seawall is also the scene of activism on these social issues, and concerned citizens regularly organize to paint the wall with civic messages decrying health, social, and environmental issues.
142 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
key issue. With an estimated 85.7 percent
of the 203 million people living in cities
by 2015, Brazil has undergone a massive
urban transition—even vast Amazonia
is now three-quarters urbanized. Greater
São Paulo now ranks as the world’s third
largest megacity and rivals Mexico City
as the most populous megalopolis in the
Western Hemisphere.
Contemporary Urban Trends
A century ago, less than 10 percent of South
Americans resided in urban centers. Accord-
ing to 2015 estimates, 83.3 percent of South
Americans now reside in urban areas and
populations of all countries are highly urban-
ized, ranging from a low of 59.7 in Paraguay
to a high of 95.3 percent in Uruguay. Five
countries are now more than 80 percent
urbanized: Argentina and Uruguay surpass
90 percent, with Venezuela, Chile, and Brazil
not far behind. Although previously sky-high
rates of rural-urban migration and natural
population increase have declined somewhat
in recent years, South America continues to
face major problems stemming from extensive
urbanization (Table 4.1).
In addition to the high levels of contempo-
rary urbanization, the sheer size of many South
American cities is noteworthy. The continent
is home to massive metropolises, whose con-
tinuing expansion has transformed the human
geography of South America. Throughout the
continent one can travel through extensive
urban areas, which relentlessly envelop sur-
rounding rural landscapes. Forty-five urban
centers contained at least 1 million people in
2015, and seven of them exceeded populations
of 5 million. Four urban agglomerations are
now among the world’s 30 most populous
metropolises: São Paulo, Buenos Aires, Rio de
Janeiro, and Lima (Table 4.2).
In political-economic terms, much of the
continent has industrialized and now sits on
the global semi-periphery, combining char-
acteristics both of the more developed “core”
and the less developed “periphery.” Financial
Table 4.1 Urbanization in South American Countries, 1850–2015
Country
Percentage of National Population in Urban Areas
1850 1910 1950 1980 2015
Argentina 12.0 28.4 65.3 82.9 91.8
Bolivia 4.0 9.2 33.8 45.5 68.5
Brazil 7.0 9.8 36.2 65.5 85.7
Chile 5.9 24.2 58.4 81.2 89.5
Colombia 3.0 7.3 32.7 62.1 76.4
Ecuador 6.0 12.0 28.3 47.0 63.7
Paraguay 4.0 17.7 34.6 41.7 59.7
Peru 5.9 5.4 41.0 64.6 78.6
Uruguay 13.0 26.0 77.9 85.4 95.3
Venezuela 7.0 9.0 46.8 79.2 89.0
Sources: David L. Clawson, Latin America and the Caribbean: Lands and Peoples (McGraw-Hill, 2006), 350; Population Division of
the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations Secretariat, World Urbanization Prospects: The 2014 Revision,
http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/unup/index_panel2.html.
Urban Patterns in South America 143
circles now regard several countries as lead-
ing “emerging markets”—particularly Brazil,
Chile, Argentina, and Colombia—but gener-
ally South America remains less affluent and
more socially stratified than northern coun-
terparts. While the developing countries of
Africa and Asia now urbanize rapidly, South
America’s urban levels already approximate
those of North America and Europe. Sadly,
urbanization and economic growth have not
been synonymous: continental cities have
grown rapidly within a highly competitive
global system and a regional context of poorly
distributed wealth and endemic poverty. As a
result, South American cities confront press-
ing social, economic, political, and environ-
mental issues.
Critical Issues
Urban Primacy and Uneven
Regional Development
South America has long been characterized
by high rates of urban primacy, reflected in
a disproportionate demographic size, polit-
ical-economic power, and cultural influence
of the largest cities. For instance, metropoli-
tan São Paulo now accounts for 10 percent
of the Brazilian population and 25 percent
of the gross domestic product (GDP). This
top-heavy style of urbanization emerged his-
torically, as colonial centers became modern
gateway cities with appeal to foreign inves-
tors, industrialists, immigrants, and internal
in-migrants. The resulting demographic and
political-economic dominance of leading
metropolises has distorted national systems:
concentration of capital and high-level func-
tions has intensified uneven regional devel-
opment, marginalized the peripheral regions,
and motivated “growth-pole” campaigns of
regional decentralization. Still, nearly every
South American country remains dominated
by one or two primate cities. The demographic
concentration now often reaches astound-
ing proportions: half of Uruguay’s popula-
tion lives in metropolitan Montevideo; over
a third of all Argentines clusters in Greater
Table 4.2 Major Metropolitan Populations of South America, 1930–2015
Metropolitan Area, Ranked by 2015 Estimates
Population (In Thousands)
1930 1950 1970 1990 2015
1. São Paulo, Brazil 1,000 2,334 7,620 14,776 21,660
2. Buenos Aires, Argentina 2,000 5,098 8,105 10,513 15,180
3. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 1,500 3,026 6,791 9,697 12,902
4. Lima, Peru 250 1,066 2,980 5,830 9,897
5. Bogotá, Colombia 235 630 2,383 4,740 9,765
6. Santiago, Chile 600 1,322 2,647 4,616 6,507
7. Belo Horizonte, Brazil 350 412 1,485 3,548 5,716
8. Brasília – 36 525 1,863 4,155
9. Medellín, Colombia – 376 1,260 2,135 3,911
10. Fortaleza, Brazil – 264 867 2,226 3,880
Sources: Charles S. Sargent, “The Latin American city,” in Brian W. Blouet and Olwyn M. Blouet (eds), Latin America and the Carib-
bean: A Systematic and Regional Survey, 188; Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United
Nations Secretariat, World Urbanization Prospects: The 2014 Revision, http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/CD-ROM/Default.aspx
144 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Buenos Aires, while across the Andes more
than a third of Chileans reside in the vicinity
of Santiago; to the north, nearly one-third of
Peruvians can be found in greater Lima and
one-fifth of all Colombians are in or around
the capital of Bogotá. Several countries are
dominated by two primate cities, including
Bolivia (La Paz and Santa Cruz); Brazil (São
Paulo and Rio de Janeiro); Ecuador (Quito
and Guayaquil); and Venezuela (Caracas and
Maracaibo) (see Figure 4.1). By contrast, the
percentage of the U.S. population residing in
metropolitan New York City (5.7 percent in
2015) is much lower than the corresponding
figure for any South American country, as
seen in Table 4.3.
Economic Polarization and
Spatial Segregation
Although South America’s megacities are
centers of great wealth, this wealth is poorly
distributed, a lingering impact of the hier-
archical societies that were first implanted
during Spanish and Portuguese coloniza-
tion. Contemporary economic liberaliza-
tion at the global scale has led to increased
socioeconomic polarization nationally and
locally. While elites and middle classes have
benefited from globalization, and many poor
residents have been lifted out of poverty, reg-
ular employment remains elusive for a large
proportion of urban dwellers. While nearly all
South American countries have reduced pov-
erty rates over the last decade, international
development agencies estimate that between
one-quarter and one-third of the population
still lives on less than US$4 a day, depending
on the country and the city. This social divide
can be read clearly on the urban landscape.
On the one side, elite and professional dis-
tricts are luxurious and boast the latest fash-
ions, high-tech commodities, trendy shopping
centers, and upscale entertainment facilities.
Concerns with quality of life and security,
however, have increasingly led many affluent
households to live in gated communities with
limited-access residential units, often located
Table 4.3 Percentage of National Population in Largest Metropolis, 1950–2015
Country Urban Agglomeration 1950 1980 2010 2015
Uruguay Montevideo 54.1 49.9 49.2 49.8
Chile Santiago 21.7 33.2 36.6 36.3
Argentina Buenos Aires 29.7 33.5 35.3 36.0
Paraguay Asunción 17.5 24.1 31.6 33.5
Peru Lima 14.0 25.6 30.6 31.8
Colombia Bogotá 5.3 13.1 18.3 19.7
Bolivia Santa Cruz 1.6 6.0 16.6 19.1
Ecuador Quito 6.0 9.9 10.7 10.6
Brazil São Paulo 4.3 9.9 10.1 10.3
Venezuela Caracas 13.6 17.1 10.0 9.3
Brazil Rio de Janeiro 5.6 7.2 6.3 6.3
USA New York-Newark 7.8 6.8 5.9 5.7
Source: United Nations Population Division, World Urbanization Prospects: The 2014 Revision, File 16: Percentage of the Total Popu-
lation Residing in Each Urban Agglomeration with 300,000 Inhabitants or More in 2014, by Country, 1950–2030.
Urban Patterns in South America 145
far from the traditional elite areas. Conversely,
informal settlements of self-constructed
and often untitled housing cover vast areas,
known as favelas in Brazil, poblaciones callam-
pas in Chile, villas miserias in Argentina, asen-
timientos humanos in Perú, and so on. Here
live those forced to cobble together meager
livelihoods in the informal economy, laboring
in such low-paying and insecure occupations
as street trading, in-home manufacturing,
domestic service, spot construction, itinerant
transportation, and money changing. Much
of this population finds itself housed in dan-
gerous structures with poor sanitation and
uncertain rights to the land on which their
homes are built. As the socioeconomic divide
widens in South America, violent crime, per-
sonal security, and political unrest are grow-
ing concerns.
Economic Restructuring, Structural
Adjustment, and Social Movements
While some scholars trace contemporary
problems of South American cities back to
the socioeconomic divisions of Spanish and
Portuguese colonization, others regard them
as contemporary manifestations of an unfair
global economy. Given ongoing programs
of economic restructuring, municipal gov-
ernments have been forced to curtail expen-
ditures, payrolls, and services in neoliberal
South America. Critics argue that such aus-
terity programs of structural adjustment,
imposed by international financial organiza-
tions and national governments, disadvantage
the poor by cutting budgets for social services
on which many depend. Such fiscal con-
straints complicate urban planning and man-
agement, given regional contexts of massive
urbanization, widespread poverty and inad-
equate housing, and a host of environmental
problems. Meanwhile, many urban dwellers
are taking matters into their own hands by
participating in self-help social movements
for housing, health care, and service provi-
sion. Social movements have proliferated in
recent decades, serving to fill critical needs
cast off as municipal budgets have contracted.
As frustrations mount, so too do urban pro-
test, social tension, and political violence.
Increasing numbers of urban residents are
joining broad-based calls for economic relief,
human rights, and environmental justice. In a
world of instantaneous communication, their
causes are garnering attention far beyond the
region (Box 4.2).
Declining Infrastructures and
Environmental Degradation
Given governmental budgetary constraints
and privatization of many essential func-
tions, the deterioration of urban infrastruc-
tures and the reduction of basic services put
enormous stress on metropolitan systems.
Furthermore, unplanned and unregulated
growth exposes vulnerable populations to
environmental hazards and health risks,
often exacerbated by natural disasters in our
era of climate change. For example, earth-
quakes and volcano eruptions have long
been problems in Andean cities, and loss of
glaciers imperils the supply of water for those
cities. Meanwhile, irregular patterns of pre-
cipitation have increasingly struck Brazil and
other countries. With basic services inacces-
sible for many, the quality of urban life stead-
ily erodes. As household and industrial waste
and traffic congestion degrade the urban
environment, water and air pollution have
become pervasive in cities. Of particular sig-
nificance in recent years have been problems
of water provision, since growing climatic
146 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Box 4.2 Water Wars in Cochabamba, Bolivia
Andrea Marston, University of California at berkeley
When Cochabamba’s “Water War” erupted in January 2000, it caught the world’s attention. Just a few months before, the city’s water supply had been privatized, granting exclusive citywide water rights to the transnational consortium Aguas del Tunari, a subsidiary of U.S.- based bechtel. Local residents were outraged: the new company raised water fees by as much as 150 percent, which particularly alarmed nearby rural farmers and residents of the city’s impoverished Zona Sur (southern zone). According to contract terms, the company had exclusive rights to all regional water, which would in theory permit it to regulate individual and community-based wells and distribution networks. the company would even be able to regulate rainwater collection.
in response, residents formed the Coalition in defense of Water and Life to demand that the company’s contract be rescinded. their organizing resulted in three major uprisings, finally culminating in a multiday protest in early April 2000, when thousands of farmers, workers, students, and middle-class professionals filled the central plaza. in language that artfully wove together references to human rights, trade unionism, and customary uses—the foun- dation of common property management in the bolivian highlands—the coalition’s leader, Óscar olivera, transformed a local struggle around water supply into a broad-based political
Figure 4.4 irrigators march through Cochabamba in celebration of the national irrigators’ Congress, an important milestone in the process of establishing new forms of water governance in the wake of the water war. Source: Photo by tom Perreault.
Historical Perspectives on South American Cities 147
variability and more extreme weather events
wreak havoc on cities. The expansion of
roads, parking lots, and other impermeable
surfaces inhibits the absorption of rainfall,
worsens landslides from torrential rains in
hilly terrain stripped of natural vegetation,
and provokes flooding in low-lying urban
areas. Meanwhile, water shortages have
become major policy issues in many cities.
While poor sectors of society have long suf-
fered from inadequate water provision, cli-
mate variability, water pollution, and leaky
pipes have exacerbated general shortages of
potable water.
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON SOUTH AMERICAN CITIES
Pre-Columbian Urbanism
Urban settlements have long played an impor-
tant role in South American societies. The
spectacular settings and monumental beauty
of the Inca cities of Cuzco and Machu Picchu
spring readily to mind. The Inca, however,
were only the final stage in a 4,000-year his-
tory of urban development in pre-Columbian
Andean America, which stretched from pre-
sent-day Colombia to Chile and Argentina.
Even though the urban heritage of Andean
movement that resisted the government’s neoliberal economic program (Figure 4.4). Smaller protests ricocheted around the country, prompting then president hugo banzer Suárez to declare a state of siege. but protesters held strong. by the time the government had signed an agreement on April 10, 2000 to return water management to the municipal utility, at least one person had been killed by police fire.
the Water War became a potent symbol of resistance against the neoliberalization of collective resources. the addition of the phrase “y de la vida” (and of life) to the move- ment’s name was far from incidental; rather, this signaled a refusal to divide water uses into “domestic” and “productive” spheres, and brought into view the multiple meanings of water beyond its market value. the coalition united a variety of social groups that had previously worked independently from one another, thereby marking a transition in bolivian “politics as usual.” in fact, the Water War was the first in a series of protests that eventually toppled the government and paved the way for the election of Evo Morales, the nation’s first indigenous president.
For residents of Cochabamba’s Zona Sur, more work remains to be done. the city’s rap- idly growing periphery, home primarily to rural migrants, is still largely self-provisioning when it comes to water. Many neighborhoods have formed “water committees” to manage community-owned and -operated distribution networks, but other households rely entirely on water tankers that sell water of questionable quality at exorbitant prices. While many neighborhoods have no interest in relinquishing control over their water to the government, they nevertheless seek municipal support to ensure that supply is consistent and safe. in short, they are calling for “co-governance” (cogestión) of water between peri-urban commu- nities and the municipal state. but at this point, 15 years after the Water War, their demands remain unmet.
148 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
America has attracted most attention, set-
tlements also flourished across a range of
ecological settings in the Amazon and other
lowland regions. Two notable features unite
settlements in these distinctive regions: first,
their successful adaptation to the challenges
and opportunities of diverse habitats; and sec-
ond, their nearly total destruction by invading
Europeans through violence or disease and,
in some cases, their reconstruction to reflect a
new colonial system.
Colonial Cities: Spanish versus
Portuguese America
After the fleet of Christopher Columbus first
made landfall and claimed the newly discov-
ered lands for Spain in 1492, a dispute arose
with Portuguese King John II, who argued
that previous treaties had given all lands south
of the Canary Islands to Portugal. The Treaty
of Tordesillas, signed by the two Iberian pow-
ers in 1494, attempted to resolve this conflict
by dividing the new lands outside of Europe
between the Portuguese and Spanish Empires
along a meridian 370 leagues west of the Cape
Verde islands—thereby demarcating South
America along a north-south line at about the
mouth of the Amazon River (see Figure 4.1).
The lands to the east of this line would belong
to Portugal and the lands to the west to Spain.
In 1500, Pedro Cabral claimed the Atlantic
coast of what is now Brazil, while Francisco
Pizarro and other Spanish conquistadores con-
solidated Spanish power in the continent’s
Andean regions during the early sixteenth
century.
After these initial voyages of discovery and
conquest, both the Spanish and the Portuguese
established settlements to administer, organ-
ize, and exploit their new territories. In their
urban geographies, Spanish and Portuguese
colonization differed in terms of site selection,
general morphological characteristics, and
geopolitical strategies. In both cases, however,
persistent patterns of urban primacy often
reflect the enduring importance of the early
colonial cities. Cultural and religious land-
scapes of cities also echo Iberian legacies, such
as the dominant Roman Catholic cathedrals
and parish churches in central cities and resi-
dential neighborhoods.
The main centers of Spanish colonial power
in South America lay in the Viceroyalty of
Peru, centered on the former Inca Empire in
the Andean highlands. The dramatic fall of the
Inca Empire provided a rich source of labor,
silver, and gold. Spain proceeded to extend
this initial conquest with expeditions into
other areas of the continent. Spain founded
towns both on the coast and in highland
areas. Port cities such as Callao on the Pacific,
Buenos Aires on the Atlantic, and Cartagena
on the Caribbean linked the new colonies to
Spain. In highland areas, the Spanish con-
quered dense indigenous populations, along
with their minerals, complex agricultural sys-
tems, and other natural resources. The colo-
nial overlords rebuilt important indigenous
centers to serve as new imperial cities. They
forcibly concentrated the indigenous popula-
tions into arbitrarily created villages known as
reducciones, rebuilt the Inca capital of Cuzco
(Figure 4.5), and established such enduring
Andean centers as Bogotá, Medellín, Quito,
and Potosí. Town founding served as a cen-
tral instrument of colonization, dominating
the countryside and imposing a profoundly
urban civilization.
Spain did not centrally plan its earliest
colonial settlements, but new towns generally
adhered to standards established during the
late medieval Reconquista of southern Iberia
and codified in the Discovery and Settlement
Historical Perspectives on South American Cities 149
Ordinances of 1573. The so-called “Laws of
the Indies” decreed the physical form and
location of new Spanish settlements. The
Spanish-American city adopted a right-angled
gridiron of streets oriented around a central
plaza. The imposed urban form served essen-
tially as an effective instrument of social con-
trol: urban morphology and social geography
were intertwined. Important institutions such
as the Roman Catholic cathedral, the town
hall (cabildo), the governor’s palace, and the
commercial arcade bordered the central plaza.
Spanish residents clustered around the urban
core, often in houses built with the defen-
sive architecture of an external wall and an
enclosed inner courtyard. Indians and unde-
sirable land uses were banished to the urban
periphery, as in contemporary cities.
In Portuguese America, the Atlantic coast
initially proved less alluring than Spain’s
Andean empire, given its rich silver and gold
mines and large indigenous labor forces.
Consequently, the Luso-Brazilian settlements
initially tended to be smaller and less strictly
planned. Most early settlements in Brazil were
located at convenient coastal points of inter-
change between the rural areas of produc-
tion and Atlantic trade routes. Except for São
Paulo, all the towns established before 1600
were located directly on the coast and func-
tioned as administrative centers and military
strongholds, ports, and commercial entrepôts,
as well as residential and religious centers. To
strengthen these strategic footholds, the Por-
tuguese crown began to designate captaincies,
or land grants, in 1532.
The captaincy system divided Brazil’s
coastal strip into about a dozen fiefdoms,
where favored Portuguese nobles were enti-
tled to occupy the territory and exploit natu-
ral resources. This system combined elements
of feudalism and capitalism, so as to require
relatively little investment by the Portuguese
crown. Yet only a few captaincies were effec-
tively developed. As Brazil was constantly
under attack from other European powers,
Portugal soon created a more centralized
Spanish-style system in 1549, with Salvador da
Bahia as its capital. From about 1530 to 1650,
sugarcane cultivation on coastal plantations
became enormously profitable, powered by
imported African slaves in a triangular trade
with Europe, Africa, and the Americas. With a
population of 100,000 by 1700, Salvador grew
to become the most important early Portu-
guese settlement and the second largest city in
the entire Portuguese realm, after Lisbon itself.
Figure 4.5 Spanish conquistadores built Mediterranean-style structures atop inca stone walls in pre-Columbian cities such as Cuzco in present-day Peru. Source: Photo by Maureen hays-Mitchell.
150 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
The coastal location of most early settle-
ments underscored the importance of a good
port and a defensible site, so settlers often
favored hilly and topographically irregular
terrain in the extensive Serra do Mar, the rug-
ged mountains that stretch along much of
the central Brazilian seacoast. These towns
took on linear, multicentered forms. Irregular
mazes of streets focused on a series of squares
along the waterfront, as opposed to the more
regular grid plans of the Spanish cities. Despite
their apparently picturesque confusion of city
streets adapted to the topography, early Por-
tuguese settlements adhered to coherent but
flexible principles of spatial order. The early
colonial towns were set on defensible hill-
top sites, where they prominently featured
fortifications, important public buildings,
churches and convents, and residential areas,
all connected by a maze of winding streets
and punctuated by ornate public squares.
Class-segregated neighborhoods emerged, as
elite mansions for rural aristocracy and urban
merchant classes were set apart from slave dis-
tricts. The eighteenth-century gold and dia-
mond boom in Minas Gerais and other areas
of the interior provided new wealth and stimu-
lated urban growth, while increasing oversight
by Portuguese authorities and encouraging
more centrally planned and regulated cities.
Late colonial Brazilian cities also witnessed a
flowering of baroque art and architecture still
notable in the exquisite historic districts of
Ouro Preto, Salvador da Bahia, Rio de Janeiro,
and other favored cities.
Neocolonial Urbanization: Political
Independence, Economic Dependence
Between 1811 and 1830, independence came
to each of the countries of South America
(except for “the Guianas”). Colonial urban
forms persisted, however, long after political
independence was achieved. Until the mid-
nineteenth century, when elites embarked
on campaigns of economic expansion, cities
remained relatively small. Thereafter, South
America became increasingly integrated into
the global economy through the export of
primary commodities—beef, minerals, cof-
fee, rubber—and the import of manufac-
tured goods. Focused on trade with North
America and Europe, economic expansion
fostered population growth, social change,
and urban morphological adaptation. Urban
growth proceeded with the creation of new
transportation links, rural-urban migration,
urban infrastructures, and general commer-
cial development. Leading mercantile cities
diffused technological innovations and capi-
tal investments to inland centers of primary-
commodity production, that is, their interior
hinterlands. New urban services gave the
privileged cities images of modernity and
attracted migrants from the interior.
Mounting internal migration and foreign
immigration contributed to South America’s
increasing rates of urbanization (see Table
4.1). By 1905, Buenos Aires’ population sur-
passed 1 million and Rio de Janeiro’s exceeded
800,000. Eight other South American cit-
ies—São Paulo, Santiago, Montevideo, Salva-
dor, Lima, Recife, Bogotá, and Caracas—had
between 100,000 and half a million inhab-
itants. Correspondingly, the percentage of
the national population living in the larg-
est city steadily rose. Commercial expansion
and demographic growth led to widespread
deficiencies in urban housing, transporta-
tion, sanitation, and public health, often the
subjects of reform movements. The modern
city emerged as entrepreneurs invested in
new building projects and planners mounted
ambitious public works projects to rationalize
Historical Perspectives on South American Cities 151
urban form. Architects and planners looked to
European cities as the main sources of inspira-
tion. For example, as urban renewal programs
gentrified the center of Paris into elegant resi-
dences for elites, Latin American architects
and engineers similarly reformed their own
fin-de-siècle cities. Buenos Aires and Rio de
Janeiro underwent urban renewal programs
as they competed for continental leadership.
This Eurocentric focus to South American city
planning paralleled the continent’s political-
economic and cultural dependence on neoco-
lonial powers abroad.
Twentieth Century: The Urbanizing Century
As South America moved into the twenti-
eth century, the pace of urbanization accel-
erated (see Table 4.1). The metropolis, not
the countryside, came to define the regional
landscape. The continent’s neocolonial trade
status subsequently shaped the course of
early industrialization and urbanization well
into the twentieth century. The region’s cities
were promoted as poles of “modernization,”
defined in terms of urban-industrial infra-
structure and industrial labor. In reality, cit-
ies became modern enclaves whose existence
facilitated the extraction and basic processing
of primary agricultural and mineral products
for an export market. Their fate depended on
the transfer of technology and expertise from
more advanced trading partners, while the
benefits of trade largely remained in the met-
ropolitan regions and had little effect on the
wider regional economies.
With the worldwide depression of the
1930s, demand for the region’s primary prod-
ucts plummeted, unemployment soared, and
poverty spread. By the early 1950s, a spirit of
economic nationalism gripped most South
American governments, as they intervened
directly in the workings of their economies.
The goal was to alter the pattern of produc-
ing primary products for export in favor of
producing manufactured goods for domes-
tic, and ultimately foreign, consumption. The
development of domestic industry focused
on major urban centers because they offered
broad access to the national market, a concen-
trated pool of labor, political influence, and
the infrastructure of transport and commu-
nication facilities (see Table 4.2). Investment
in the urban-industrial sector predominated
over the rural sector and life became increas-
ingly untenable for small-scale agricultural
producers. Cities attracted rural migrants in
the hope of finding jobs, housing, education,
health care, educational opportunities, and
social mobility for themselves and their fami-
lies (Figure 4.6).
Initially, most cities were able to accommo-
date the expanding populations. Rapid indus-
trialization created manufacturing jobs as
well as demand for commercial, financial, and
public services. Novel building technologies,
coupled with new forms of transportation,
ensured that living conditions were adequate
for the most part. Medical technology made
cities relatively healthy places in which to live.
As conditions of urban primacy intensified,
however, smaller cities languished. Rapidly
growing primate cities were as dependent as
ever on imported technology, in the form of
modern machinery and replacement parts,
fostering external indebtedness and balance-
of-payment deficits.
To address these shortcomings, national
development shifted from an exclusive focus
on nurturing domestic industries to a focus
on establishing development growth poles.
Growth-pole development precipitated elabo-
rate national development plans with a range
of outcomes. Chile embraced this strategy, but
152 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
it proved to reinforce preexisting patterns of
industrialization and urban primacy. Brazil
invoked this development model in efforts to
allay the vast differences in living standards
between the more prosperous and industrial-
izing coastal southeast and the largely agrar-
ian and impoverished north and northeast.
Although growth-pole development can be
credited with the expansion of northeastern
industry and large-scale mining and highway
projects in Amazonia, it can also be blamed
for environmental degradation and enduring
socioeconomic deficiencies. The most suc-
cessful example of growth-pole development
occurred in Venezuela, where Ciudad Guay-
ana, founded along the Orinoco River in 1961,
benefited from hydroelectric power and min-
eral resources to become a center of steel and
heavy manufacturing.
By the mid-1970s, many growth poles were
perceived to be mere enclaves of foreign capi-
tal, since investment favored export industries,
which were more closely linked to northern
firms than to regional or national economies.
Hence, most surplus capital left the region,
precluding any significant spin-off of related
firms and services. Development failed to
trickle down the urban hierarchy and, instead,
elicited massive cityward migration and fur-
ther growth of already dominant cities. Few
well-paying manufacturing jobs were avail-
able to the largely underskilled rural migrants
Figure 4.6 At 4,000 meters above sea level, bolivia’s capital city La Paz extends throughout and beyond its crater-like valley etched into the Altiplano. the metropolitan region encompasses more than 2 million people and is the largest urban agglomeration in bolivia. it includes El Alto, a poor and dynamic community perched on the rim of La Paz valley that, with the influx of unemployed tin miners and Aymara migrants, now surpasses La Paz city in population. Source: Photo by Maureen hays-Mitchell.
Historical Perspectives on South American Cities 153
who swarmed to the cities. Most were left to
seek employment at low pay and low levels of
productivity, further polarizing rich and poor
throughout the region (Figure 4.7).
Despite these problems, national govern-
ments continued to finance costly devel-
opment—especially industrialization and
infrastructure—through borrowing from
foreign capital markets. Northern commer-
cial banks aggressively courted both private
and state interests in South America, as nearly
every country in the region accumulated sig-
nificant debt. Yet, each moved steadily along
the economic and social development trajec-
tory. Primate cities remained important (see
Table 4.3). They served as national headquar-
ters for local ruling groups and multinational
enterprises and as centers for the accumula-
tion of capital and diffusion of a globalizing
consumer-based lifestyle. Moreover, they pro-
vided living space for increasing numbers of
working-class and marginalized peoples.
The period between 1950 and 1980 saw
consistent improvement in urban living
standards. Most urban centers were char-
acterized by an expanding middle class and
active government promotion of home
ownership. Mortgage systems became more
accessible and urban infrastructure and ser-
vices improved. Water, sanitation, education,
medical care, and cultural opportunities were
readily accessible. Although updated motor-
ways and increased automobile ownership
facilitated the growth of elite suburban com-
munities, cars and mortgages were largely
inaccessible to lower-income city dwell-
ers. Consequently, cities underwent explo-
sive growth in self-help housing—primarily
squatter settlements—and related programs
to service them.
By the early 1980s, however, the global
economy had experienced a series of unan-
ticipated shocks that would devastate urban
life within the heavily indebted countries of
Figure 4.7 Money-changers on the streets of Lima’s historic center jostle to change dollars and Euros as well as “rotos” and “deteriorados”—broken and deteriorated bills. Source: Photo by Maureen hays-Mitchell.
154 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
South America. The International Monetary
Fund required countries to exercise extreme
fiscal restraint at every level of national life, in
order to build up state revenue for debt ser-
vice and eventual repayment. The debt crisis
and related reforms precipitated a sustained
period of deep recession and development
reversal. While most countries transitioned
from military to civilian rule by the 1990s, the
dominant neoliberal model of privatization
and deregulation increased socioeconomic
polarization. Factories closed, public-sector
employees were laid off, and social programs
critical to the poor were slashed. Through-
out the region, access to adequate shelter and
public services worsened, and physical and
social infrastructures deteriorated. Underem-
ployment (the underutilization of one’s skills
or the inability to secure full-time employ-
ment) came to characterize a large portion of
the economically active population in many
cities.
The early twenty-first century has wit-
nessed a rise of social activism and pro-
gressive democratic governments in Brazil,
Argentina, Bolivia, Venezuela, and Ecuador;
and more moderate-conservative tendencies
in Chile, Colombia, and Peru. Creation of
the South American Community of Nations
(UNASUR) in December 2004 signaled
increasing political-economic cooperation,
despite remaining conflicts among partici-
pants. Increased commodity trade (espe-
cially oil, minerals, soy, and other agricultural
products) and the rise of China’s economic
presence have been accompanied by a sig-
nificant decline in poverty and broadening
of domestic markets, most notably in Brazil,
now the world’s seventh largest economy. On
the other hand, the distribution of income
remains highly uneven and slum growth con-
tinues throughout the region.
DISTINCTIVE CITIES
The spatial structure of South American cit-
ies has been an important topic for compara-
tive urban research, given variations in urban
form. While distinctive Spanish and Portu-
guese urban traditions differentiated colo-
nial cities, subsequent postcolonial influences
from France, Britain, and the United States
broadly affected the region during periods
of rapid urbanization. Contemporary cit-
ies experience heightened degrees of internal
differentiation through inner-city gentrifica-
tion, affluent suburbanization, land squats by
informal communities, gated communities,
and peripheral commercial development of
“edge cities.” In larger metropolises, intense
competition for available land often brings
wealthy and poor populations into close prox-
imity, while functional decentralization cre-
ates urban realms of varying socioeconomic
levels, replete with shopping centers, office
parks, and gated communities separate from
the older CBDs (central business districts).
Although South American cities appear
modern, cosmopolitan, and globally con-
nected, they are beset by problems of poverty
unparalleled in the Global North. It is tempt-
ing to speak of these urban landscapes as “dual
cities” in which a modern, affluent, and pro-
gressive element has little to do with a poor,
obsolete, and unseemly element. In reality, the
affluent modern city and the impoverished city
are intertwined aspects of the same metropo-
lis. This urban landscape of extreme wealth
and poverty epitomizes the region’s endur-
ing legacy of underdevelopment, economic
polarization, and social injustice. Although
every city is distinct, each also reflects the
evolving urban experience of South America.
Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, joint anchors
of Brazil’s dominant city-region, epitomize
Distinctive Cities 155
Luso-American urbanization, while Brasília
deserves study as the most famous newly
planned capital of the twentieth century. Lima
epitomizes Spanish-American urbanization
for Andean America, just as Buenos Aires does
for the Southern Cone. Curitiba and Bogotá
have played leading roles in urban sustainabil-
ity planning.
Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo: Anchors
of South America’s Megalopolis
The vast São Paulo-Rio de Janeiro conurba-
tion in southeastern Brazil stands alone for its
urban size and scale in South America. As the
twin nerve centers of a vast country and one
of the world’s leading emerging economies,
these two megacities in southeastern Brazil
have sprawled to form the joint nuclei of an
integrated megalopolis with the population of
a medium-sized European country. The Bra-
zilian megalopolis now encompasses some 50
million people—one-quarter of the national
population—and generates one-third of the
country’s GNP. Much of this huge agglomera-
tion lies in São Paulo state, including the capi-
tal city-region (with more than 21 million in
2015) and the nearby urban areas of Campi-
nas, Santos, and São José dos Campos (total-
ing another 10 million people). Altogether,
this São Paulo “Expanded Metropolitan Com-
plex” now comprises more than 31.5 million
residents in 72 municipalities. Rio de Janeiro’s
portion of the Brazilian megalopolis includes
its own capital city-region (12.9 million),
along with the urbanized Paraíba Valley (2
million) and the coastal Costa Verde and Capo
Frio/Búzios areas (1.5 million). The metropo-
lis of Juiz de Fora (0.5 million) in the adjacent
state of Minas Gerais also forms part of this
interconnected urban region, which stretches
over an area the size of Austria (Figure 4.8).
The concentration of population and eco-
nomic activity in southeastern Brazil has
contributed to widespread environmental
problems, including air and water pollution,
seasonally elevated temperatures of urban
“heat islands,” frequent torrential rains and
flash floods, and periodic shortages of potable
water. Given the widespread removal of for-
ests, due to agricultural expansion and urban-
ization, regional watersheds have increasingly
been unable to store and release water as relia-
bly as in the past. During the drought of 2014–
2015, the reservoirs of the major regional cities
virtually went dry. While rainfall was less than
normal, infrastructural neglect and pollution
of major urban rivers also contributed to the
overall shortage of potable water.
Coinciding with World Water Day on 22
March 2015, the environmental organiza-
tion SOS Mata Atlântica Foundation released
a report indicating that nearly a quarter of
the 111 Brazilian rivers studied in southeast-
ern Brazil suffered from “bad” or “extremely
bad” water quality. Some of the worst levels of
water pollution were found in the cities of Rio
and São Paulo, which both contain dead rivers
devoid of healthy biological activity and unfit
for human consumption.
Despite similar environmental and socio-
economic problems, metropolitan São Paulo
and Rio de Janeiro retain their own dis-
tinct identities. Residents of Rio (known as
Cariocas) and those of São Paulo (known as
Paulistas) are famous for their competitive,
dueling dispositions. Hackneyed images of
the fun-loving, easy-going Carioca and the
intense, hardworking Paulista are exaggerated,
but like many stereotypes it reflects a particu-
lar social history. Rio de Janeiro—famous for
its spectacular seaside views and popular cul-
ture of the samba, bossa nova, and carnival
celebrations—has long been an international
156 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
playground and beach resort. By the time Rio
lost the national capital to Brasília in 1960,
rival São Paulo had taken the economic and
demographic lead in this rapidly modern-
izing country. As Rio deindustrialized and
grew increasingly dependent on tourism
and other urban services, São Paulo grew to
become the preferred location for multina-
tional industrial, commercial, and financial
headquarters in South America. Now consid-
ered the business capital of Mercosur—the
emerging common market centered on Brazil
and Argentina—São Paulo is known as a fast-
paced and creative metropolis with distinctly
urban charms and daunting socioeconomic
and environmental challenges.
Rio de Janeiro: The “Marvelous City”
On March 1, 2015, São Sebastião do Rio de
Janeiro commemorated the 450th anniver-
sary of its founding by Portuguese forces,
which had just expelled French invaders.
After Rio’s founding in 1565, the city grew
up along Guanabara Bay, one of the world’s
great natural harbors. With its busy port, the
settlement maintained a population of sev-
eral thousand before the discovery of gold
and diamonds in Minas Gerais intensified
growth during the eighteenth century. As a
result, the colonial capital moved from Salva-
dor da Bahia to Rio de Janeiro in 1763. After
the Napoleonic invasion of Portugal, the
royal family fled to Brazil and Rio served as
capital of the Portuguese realm from 1808 to
1821. The imperial court’s arrival stimulated
building and establishment of new institu-
tions. Extending along the bay and scaling the
surrounding hills, the city acquired a linear
spatial pattern (Figure 4.9).
Rio de Janeiro’s status as the main seaport
and capital of independent Brazil (1822–
1960) secured its urban primacy. As the larg-
est national metropolis, the port boomed,
Figure 4.8 the Rio de Janeiro-São Paulo-Campinas extended metropolitan region. Sources: instituto brasileiro de Geografia e Estatistica (ibGE); Centro de informações e dados do Rio de Janeiro (CidE); and the Fundação Sistema Estadual de Análise de dados (SEAdE), 2007. Source: Map by brian Godfrey.
Distinctive Cities 157
industry and commerce prospered, and cul-
tural affairs flourished. Determined to com-
pete with Buenos Aires as South America’s
most cosmopolitan city, reformers mounted
extensive urban renewal programs to trans-
form Rio into a “tropical Paris” during the
early twentieth century. Using sanitation
campaigns against Yellow Fever as a rallying
point, authorities demolished thousands of
old buildings to make way for new boulevards
and high-rise structures. The port moved
to modernized facilities on Guanabara Bay,
while new transportation arteries encour-
aged real estate development in socially sorted
neighborhoods during the early twentieth
century. Gradually the northern zone became
predominantly industrial and working class
in character, while affluent populations gravi-
tated to fashionable districts near the south-
ern beaches.
Even as Rio grew, social-class barriers
remained in place. The poor are primarily non-
white and the middle and upper classes largely
white—racial disparities that coincide with
patterns of residence. While a sharp north-
south split plagues Rio’s social geography,
settlements of self-constructed or “informal”
housing known as favelas are highly visible on
hills above fashionable southern seaside dis-
tricts. Although these informal communities
date from the turn of the twentieth century,
they proliferated after World War II. By official
figures, nearly one-quarter of Rio’s population
now resides in more than 600 favelas, scat-
tered among the hills and lowland areas. One
of Rio’s largest favelas, Rocinha, has an official
population of 70,000, but unofficial estimates
range up to 180,000. Providing rent-free
housing on public or disputed terrain close to
employment, favelas have become permanent
features on the cityscape, despite recurrent
efforts by authorities to remove them.
By the late twentieth century, long-term
governmental neglect left a power vacuum
that facilitated the rise of drug-trafficking
cartels, which gained control of many favelas.
Not surprisingly, there are strong correlations
between impoverished slums afflicted with
drug traffic and rates of violent death, par-
ticularly among young male residents. Begin-
ning in late 2008, as Rio prepared to host the
2014 FIFA World Cup and the 2016 Summer
Olympics, special-operations forces mounted
military-style “pacification” operations to rid
favelas of drug cartels. These campaigns have
so far installed units of pacifying police (UPP)
in about forty of the city’s favelas, including
the “City of God” district (featured in the
famous film).
Authorities have concentrated the “pacifi-
cation” campaigns on favelas near the inter-
national airport, sporting venues, tourist
attractions, public transportation system, and
wealthy neighborhoods. These locational pat-
terns suggest that the major strategic goal is
to protect vital infrastructures, governmental
institutions, foreign visitors, and affluent local
residents. Governmental and NGO programs
to ameliorate conditions in the favelas have
focused on infrastructure improvements (e.g.,
street paving, provision of water and sewerage)
and social services (e.g., health center, schools,
and recreational facilities). With enhanced
security and better services, several commu-
nities with UPPs have begun to experience
real estate appreciation and even gentrifica-
tion. On the other hand, violent episodes have
poisoned police-community relations and led
to protests in several communities. Still, the
more accessible favelas of the city’s southern
zone have become tourist attractions for curi-
ous foreign visitors, and bed-and-breakfast
lodging has sprung up here for adventure-
some youthful travelers (Figure 4.10).
158 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Figure 4.9 this panoramic view of Rio de Janeiro includes Sugarloaf Mountain (Pão de Açúcar) at the entrance to Guanabara bay, Corcovado Mountain with its majestic statue, Rodrigo de Freitas Lake, and the lush forests of tijuca national Park. Source: Photo by brian Godfrey.
Distinctive Cities 159
Rio’s environmental problems have
mounted with urbanization. Torrential sum-
mer storms often devastate precariously
perched favelas and flood low-lying streets
below. Fifty years ago, thick hillside vegeta-
tion absorbed most of the rainfall, but now
the water runs off impermeable urbanized
surfaces, dislodges unstable structures, and
blocks transportation arteries. Water pollu-
tion is another major environmental problem.
The state’s environmental agency admits that
only a third of the city’s sewage receives treat-
ment, while most spills raw into rivers, bays,
and coastline. A study by the SOS Mata Atlan-
tica NGO, released in March 2015, found that,
of fifteen rivers sampled in Rio, ten suffered
from “bad” water quality and only five had
“normal” levels of contamination. Not a sin-
gle river studied was considered in “good” or
“excellent” condition.
Rio’s Guanabara Bay, one of the world’s
greatest natural harbors, has served as a dump-
ing ground for centuries. While the enclosed,
148-square-mile bay shelters the port from
Atlantic storms, the narrow entrance also
inhibits the ocean’s natural flushing action,
particularly with mounting landfill, pollution,
and sedimentation. The highly urbanized
waterfront now contains large populations,
industries, oil refineries, two major airports,
the seaport and naval base, and the federal
university. For decades, the beaches within
the bay have been unsuitable for swimming.
About 8 million people live within the bay’s
watershed, many in precarious housing condi-
tions with little sanitation. Trash and untreated
sewage flow into the bay from 55 rivers and
streams, most of them highly contaminated.
An ambitious clean-up program, launched
after the Rio “Earth Summit” of 1992, failed to
Figure 4.10 A view of the Cantagalo district, located on steep hillsides between Copacabana and ipanema beaches, illustrates the informal, adaptive geography of Rio’s favelas. Source: Photo by brian Godfrey.
160 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
make significant progress in cleaning up the
bay. Recently, concern has mounted that the
bay and other local bodies of water may not
be clean enough, despite assurances, to hold
the sailing, rowing, and other aquatic events
for the 2016 Summer Olympics.
Recognition of the city’s fragile urban envi-
ronment came in 2012, when the UNESCO
World Heritage Program inscribed a new
property, “Rio de Janeiro: Carioca Landscapes
between the Mountain and the Sea.” The
site comprises the key natural elements that
have shaped and inspired the city’s develop-
ment, from the peaks of the Tijuca National
Park down to the scenic coastal areas. It also
includes such cultural attractions as the
Botanical Gardens, Corcovado Mountain
with its famous statue of Christ the Redeemer,
the historic hills around Guanabara Bay, and
the designed landscapes along Copacabana
Beach. UNESCO has emphasized the need to
address the issues of water pollution and envi-
ronmental conservation. While ambitious
conservation and management plans have
been approved, the key will lie in the imple-
mentation, monitoring, and enforcement
of the guidelines. These issues have gained
international visibility as a result of hosting
international athletic mega-events, which
have provoked heated debates about the city’s
development priorities, environmental prob-
lems, and displacement of low-income popu-
lations (Box 4.3).
São Paulo: The Making of a Megacity
São Paulo’s distinctive origins began with its
inland site, which contrasted with the coastal
locations of most other early Luso-Brazilian
cities. Jesuits founded São Paulo de Piratin-
inga in 1554 on the gently rolling hills of
an inland plateau, strategically located at a
critical transportation juncture between the
coast and interior. Lacking valuable resources
or lucrative plantations, the village remained
small for three centuries. São Paulo’s loca-
tional advantage became more apparent
during the mid-nineteenth century, when
the city became the center of a prosperous
coffee-growing region, favored by fertile soils
and mild subtropical climate. With railroads
financed by British capital, São Paulo became
the chief point of transshipment for the lucra-
tive new cash crop. As a result, turn-of-the-
century São Paulo grew rapidly, increasingly
populated by Italian and Japanese immigrants
after the abolition of slavery in 1888 led to a
shortage of labor in the coffee fields. Profits
from the coffee trade were invested in urban
commerce, industry, and real estate develop-
ment. Enterprising immigrant families made
fortunes in food processing, textiles, and other
early industries. By the 1920s, São Paulo over-
took Rio de Janeiro as the principal industrial
center of Brazil.
São Paulo’s dizzying growth, sometimes
called “three cities in a century,” occurred in
successive urban layers. During the late nine-
teenth century, São Paulo rapidly changed
from an agricultural boomtown with colo-
nial features, largely constructed of mud and
thatch, to a modern industrial and commer-
cial hub. A dense, concentrated city with a
high-rise core began to take shape through
early programs of urban renewal, as in Rio de
Janeiro, during the early twentieth century.
Large-scale demolition, redevelopment, and
new transportation lines facilitated the growth
of a burgeoning office and commercial district
downtown; in outlying areas served by trains
and streetcars, real estate speculation encour-
aged housing development in socially sorted
districts. Working-class districts emerged in
run-down central slums and near industry in
Distinctive Cities 161
Box 4.3 Mega-events: the 2014 FiFa World Cup and the 2016 olympics in Brazil
Like the world fairs of earlier eras, contemporary mega-events have become important strat- egies for urban and national development. With the olympic games and the FiFA World Cup for soccer every four years, advances in transportation and media coverage have globalized international athletic spectacles as never before. Given the high costs of such mega-events, however, their socioeconomic, ecological, and political impacts have come under increasing scrutiny. Such concerns became apparent in planning the 2014 FiFA World Cup in 12 brazil- ian cities, and similar issues remain for the upcoming 2016 Rio olympic Games.
Although an upbeat developmentalist perspective on these mega-events initially pre- vailed, brazilians soon became critical of apparent corruption and misplaced governmental priorities. this shift in outlook came as a surprise, since brazilians are so passionate about soccer (futbol) and sports generally. in a context of slowing economic growth and rising inflation, large demonstrations rippled across the country a year before the World Cup. Ener- gized by young people, networked by social media, protests began in São Paulo over hikes in bus fares and then spread nationally. on June 17, 2013, an estimated 100,000 people marched through downtown Rio against political corruption and in favor of expenditures on health, education, and other services. While generally peaceful, such protests turned violent as fringe groups engaged in vandalism and the police responded forcefully.
Even before the national team’s humiliating loss to Germany in the quarter-finals, public disillusionment became widely apparent. brazil spent about US$4 billion—80 percent of its public funding—on 12 new or renovated stadiums for the World Cup. FiFA required only eight stadiums, but organizers decided to build four more than needed to satisfy regional interests. Several of the host cities did not have top-level professional soccer teams, raising questions about the long-term value of investments. total spending on World Cup prepara- tions ballooned to $15 billion, swallowing entire regional development budgets. brazilians demanded “FiFA-quality” hospitals and schools, but those projects often did not materialize as cost overruns mounted.
in Rio, development for the spectacles resulted in record real-estate values and inflated consumer prices, along with cost overruns and the displacement of low-income popula- tions. A 2014 report documented the displacement of 3,507 families—12,275 people in 24 communities—due to projects for the two mega-events. the areas of greatest displacement included the communities near the Maracanã stadium and adjacent to the olympic Village in the city’s western area. the latter project largely removed Vila Autódromo, where a close-knit community of 3,000 residents dwindled under pressure from authorities to accept monetary compensation or replacement housing.
these two sports extravaganzas in brazil provide cautionary tales for other countries. Some previous mega-events, such as the barcelona olympics of 1992, have been widely praised for transformative investments in infrastructure and urban revitalization. More often,
162 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
the low-lying river basins and railroad cor-
ridors. Generally, the wealthy sought higher
terrain in the city’s southwestern districts,
distant from industry, along the Avenida Pau-
lista (Figure 4.11). Programs of import-sub-
stitution industrialization, initiated during
the depression of the 1930s, consolidated São
Paulo’s industrial dominance.
After World War II, São Paulo metastasized
into a sprawling, dispersed metropolis with a
center-periphery geography. Along the Ave-
nida Paulista, the town houses of coffee barons
and business leaders gave way to the head-
quarters of banks and corporations. After the
1956 Development Plan designated São Paulo
as site of the foreign-led automobile indus-
try, Volkswagen established the country’s first
automobile assembly plant here. Subsequent
investments by other Brazilian and multina-
tional firms expanded the industrial plant.
Construction of São Paulo’s modern freeway
and subway systems encouraged new areas
of urban expansion in peripheral areas. Since
the 1950s, metropolitan transportation policy
has favored individual automobile travel by
the middle and upper classes through a mas-
sive investment in new arterial roads, while
the poorer sectors of society are underserved
by the city’s inadequate public transportation
system. Working-class areas and peripheral
shantytowns often depend on tortuous, unre-
liable bus service.
During the late twentieth century, met-
ropolitan São Paulo experienced complex
processes of economic restructuring, dein-
dustrialization, and decentralization. The
metropolis shifted from a modernist center-
periphery model to a more diverse and
fragmented urban geography, marked by
relatively greater proximity of social classes
and guarded by heightened forms of security,
surveillance, and militarized space. Discourses
of violent crime now often incorporate racial
and class-based referents, which intensify
social polarization in the huge metropolis.
Shopping malls increasingly draw customers
away from the old downtown. The suburban
industrial region faces cutbacks and job loss
as industries move away to neighboring states
that offer attractive tax breaks to lure auto-
mobile assembly plants. Meanwhile, outlying
satellites are known for their universities and
high-technology sectors.
São Paulo also faces severe problems of
environmental degradation and related health
concerns, accumulated during years of explo-
sive growth. Given its inland location and
concentration of heavy industry, motor vehi-
cles, and informal peripheral growth, São
Paulo endures heavy air and water contami-
nation. Air pollution worsens particularly in
the winter, when temperature inversions trap
pollutants and prevent contaminants from
blowing away. While state agencies monitor
host countries have suffered from the “olympic curse” of high costs and little public gain. Certainly the World Cup of 2014, even after a massive public investment, did not fulfill promises of widespread economic growth and improved public services. on the contrary, evidence suggests that elites succeeded in socializing the costs while privatizing the profits. overall, it appears unlikely that the political-economic benefits will outweigh the financial and human costs of hosting such international mega-events, at least in developing countries with a free press, such as brazil.
Distinctive Cities 163
pollution and impose penalties on the offend-
ing industries, it is difficult to regulate more
than 4 million cars and buses since vehicular
emissions are the concern of federal authori-
ties. Sewage and waste treatment systems also
remain inadequate, particularly in the infor-
mal favela settlements, where wastewater often
pollutes surrounding areas. Fiscal problems
have hindered ambitious clean-up programs
for befouled rivers that snake through the
metropolitan area, and the Billings Reservoir
remains a heavily polluted cesspool on the
southern metropolitan fringe. Such continu-
ing pollution of metropolitan rivers has elimi-
nated potential sources of potable water.
São Paulo also found itself at the center of
a severe regional drought in 2014 and 2015. In
fact, shortages of potable water affected all of
southeastern Brazil, including Rio de Janeiro,
Belo Horizonte, and other metropolises. The
region received only about half the normal
rainfall during a prolonged dry period, and
Brazilian experts voiced concern that such
climatic variability may be increasing due to
a combination of global, regional, and local
environmental factors. As reservoirs ran dry,
a regional “water war” erupted between São
Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, while agricultural,
industrial, and residential users also bat-
tled over scarce supplies of potable water.
Authorities considered imposing mandatory
water rationing in São Paulo, but fearing the
public response they simply lowered water
pressure to limit consumption of the scarce
resources.
Some observers have dismissed this
regional water shortage as a temporary fluke
of nature, or blamed the privatization of the
state’s water and waste management company,
SABESP. Environmentalists point to long-term
Figure 4.11 once lined by elite mansions, the Avenida Paulista became the city’s corporate “Miracle Mile” after World War ii. Source: Photo by brian Godfrey.
164 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
ecological problems. Massive urbanization has
destroyed regional forests that once absorbed,
filtered, and gradually released water into local
rivers, while São Paulo has created urban “heat
islands” that often divert rainfall from rural
catchment areas and reservoirs. Another cause
of the regional water shortfall may derive
from deforestation of the Amazon Basin, due
to the expansion of agriculture, ranching, for-
estry, and other activities. When intact, the
dense Amazon forests generate rainfall by cir-
culating water in hydrological cycles that ben-
efit local and even more distant ecosystems.
The continuing deforestation of the Amazon,
many experts fear, disrupts the “floating riv-
ers” of humidity that typically circulate over
central and southern Brazil.
No easy solutions are in sight for what
appears to be a long-term struggle with scarce
water resources in populous southeastern Bra-
zil. While authorities have proposed expensive
infrastructural solutions to capture and trans-
fer more regional water supplies, conserva-
tion measures have not received adequate
attention. An estimated 25–30 percent of São
Paulo’s water is lost in leaks, as opposed to
about 10 percent in New York City. In addi-
tion, watershed protection remains a daunting
challenge, given the array of vested develop-
ment interests in opposition to environmen-
tal protection. Without a concerted regional
effort, Brazil’s most populous and economi-
cally productive southeastern region faces
major questions about its long-term ecologi-
cal sustainability.
After a century of rapid growth, Brazil’s
two leading metropolitan areas now face the
challenges of deteriorating physical and social
infrastructures, traffic congestion, air and
water pollution, fear of crime, housing scar-
city, and saturated job markets. While the
twin anchors of the Brazilian megalopolis
are unlikely to lose their global and national
prominence, metropolitan decentralization,
economic restructuring, and environmental
degradation have created increasing problems
of social inequality and urban livability.
Brasília: Continental Geopolitics
and Planned Cities
Urbanization has now spread to South Amer-
ica’s long-forsaken interior, including the Bra-
zilian central plateau (planalto), the Amazon
Basin, and other inland areas. The founding
of new inland cities has presented a prime
opportunity for modern urban planning and
industrial development, as in Ciudad Guy-
ana of Venezuela and, in Brazil, Goiânia, Belo
Horizonte and, most famous of all, Brasília.
The transfer of the federal capital from Rio de
Janeiro to Brasília in 1960 served as a dramatic
notice of the determination to redistribute
the population from the coast to precon-
ceived cities of the interior. Under Juscelino
Kubitschek, president of Brazil from 1956 to
1961, construction of the new capital played
an important part of an ambitious program
of national urban-industrial development.
The new capital’s spectacular modern design
and rigorous land-use controls were meant to
contrast with more spontaneous earlier cities,
seen to be plagued by irregular urban growth
(Figure 4.12).
Brasília’s construction began in 1957 on
a barren site in the state of Goiás, about 600
miles (970 km) from the coast. Brazilian
architect and planner Lúcio Costa designed
the new capital’s visionary land-use mor-
phology, while his colleague Oscar Niemeyer
designed the city’s most impressive modern-
ist buildings, such as the National Cathedral,
Senate and Chamber of Deputies complex,
the Itamaraty Palace of the Foreign Relations
Distinctive Cities 165
Ministry, the Planalto Palace executive build-
ing, and the Alvorada Palace of the president.
Costa’s highly symbolic “Pilot Plan” of Bra-
sília features two great intersecting axes, one
governmental and the other residential, which
observers have likened to the outline of a bird
or an airplane with the wings outstretched.
Costa himself saw the new capital’s ground
plan to be “born of the primary gesture of one
who marks or takes possession of a place: two
axes crossing at right-angles—the very sign of
the Cross” (Figure 4.13).
In functional terms, federal government
buildings cluster at the eastern end of the plan’s
monumental axis, centered on the Plaza of the
Three Powers, which joins the executive, leg-
islative, and judicial branches of government.
At a central intersection of major boulevards
sit the bus terminal, stores, hotels, and cultural
institutions. Farther west is the local govern-
mental complex of the Federal District, along
with a sports arena and recreational facilities.
Residential areas, which extend north and
south along the “wings” of the plan, comprise
groups of six-story apartment buildings to
house government functionaries and their
families. Each “superblock” of apartments
contains a school, playground, shops, theaters,
and so on. On the eastern side of the Pilot Plan
lies the scenic Lake Paranoá, where expensive
private residences have been built, especially
in the exclusive Lago Sul (“South Lake”) sec-
tor (Figure 4.13).
In his critique of Brasília, James Holston
suggests that “the modernist strategy of
defamiliarization intends to make the city
strange.” The Pilot Plan imposed a new order
at odds with prior expectations of urban life.
Figure 4.12 the spectacular modern architecture of brasília, designed by brazilian architect oscar niemeyer, highlights the federal buildings located along the Monumental Axis (Eixo Monumental). here we see the Ministry of Justice in the foreground with the iconic congressional complex in the distance. Source: Photo by brian Godfrey.
166 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Indeed, early residents and architectural crit-
ics often found Brasília sterile and monoto-
nous, lacking the vibrant street life of other
Brazilian cities. Many government officials
initially maintained homes in Rio, the former
capital. In time, however, Brasília filled in with
upscale businesses, diverse services, appealing
residences and, along with the new ameni-
ties, the capital developed a certain character.
Residents have adapted public spaces to their
uses, such as the informal craft markets held
regularly in the central mall. Brasília certainly
has become an effective symbol of national
identity, symbolized by the exuberant free-
form architecture of the National Congress,
the National Cathedral, and other modernist
monuments.
UNESCO designated the Federal District’s
central planned area—the Pilot Plan—as a
World Heritage site in 1987. The organization’s
International Committee on Monuments and
Sites (ICOMOS) found that “the creation of
Figure 4.13 Map of brasília. Source: Compiled by brian Godfrey.
Distinctive Cities 167
Brasília is unquestionably a major feat in the
history of urbanism,” although it also cau-
tioned that the “new capital of Brazil encoun-
tered serious problems which, even today,
have not been totally overcome.” This decision
to recognize Brasília included a precautionary
warning that “minimal guarantees of protec-
tion” must “ensure the preservation of the
urban creation of Costa and Niemeyer.” That
the central Pilot Plan of the modernist capital
of Brazil would be historically preserved, less
than 30 years after its founding, reflects more
than admiration of an architectural icon; it
also speaks of widespread concerns over the
rapid and largely unplanned urbanization of
the rest of the Federal District.
Away from the central Pilot Plan of the new
capital, informal settlements quickly emerged
in what were called the “satellite cities”—out
of sight but within commuting distance of the
city center. Housing was not provided for the
construction crews, other workers, and their
families. So, a series of spontaneous suburbs
some distance from the attractive residential
“superblocks” of the city center were built by
and for the migrant laborers and their kin.
These unplanned communities were com-
posed mainly of low-rise, self-constructed
wooden homes and initially exhibited a ram-
shackle frontier atmosphere. Several of the
early settlements, like Taguatinga, in time
became established centers with public ser-
vices, while other more recent areas are still
in rudimentary conditions. The majority of
the population—in 2015, 2.85 million in the
Federal District and 4.2 million in the metro-
politan region—lives outside the Pilot Plan in
what are now preferably called “surrounding
cities” (cidades do entorno). Despite the wide-
spread early criticism of Brasília, the Federal
District’s steady growth suggests a successful
pole of in-migration. Yet the inability to plan
effectively the entire Federal District, the sym-
bol of a modernizing regime, underscores the
persistence of familiar social problems, such
as widespread poverty, self-constructed hous-
ing, and the informal sector. The experience
of Brasília speaks to the challenges of central-
ized planning in a developing country beset
by high levels of income concentration and a
dearth of basic public services.
Lima: Tempering Hyperurbanization
on South America’s Pacific Rim
Historical and modern, cosmopolitan and
deprived, luxurious and squalid, problem
plagued and splendid—this is Lima, capital
of Peru. Lima and its port Callao are cen-
trally located on South America’s Pacific coast,
squeezed into a narrow coastal desert between
the Pacific Ocean and the Andes Mountains.
Initially serving as a point of contact between
Spain and its colonial empire in South Amer-
ica, Lima quickly evolved into a transshipment
point for the mineral, agricultural, and textile
wealth extracted from the Andean interior
as well as the unrivaled capital of Spanish-
American high culture (Figure 4.14).
Although Lima was founded before the
“Laws of the Indies,” its founding anticipated
them; the city was laid out in a grid pattern,
with streets radiating from a central plaza in
a regular east-west and north-south pattern.
Urban development took hold along a set of
axes, each of which had a distinctive character.
The area north-westward to the port of Callao
would become the city’s industrial corridor;
the seacoast to the southwest would develop
into an elite residential zone; and small indus-
try would intermingle with working-class
housing to the east. By the mid-twentieth
century, the areas radiating from the old Lima
center to the Pacific coast were fully urbanized.
168 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Soon, shantytowns would be commonplace in
the desert regions to the north and south of
the city (Figure 4.15).
Today in downtown Lima, ornate colo-
nial architecture contrasts sharply with the
modern high-rise buildings that accom-
modate government ministries, banks, law
firms, and businesses. The enclosed wooden
balconies that typified the colonial city have
become a point of interest for preservation;
UNESCO designated much of central Lima
a World Heritage site in 1991 (Figure 4.14).
Notwithstanding, many private-sector busi-
nesses and international agencies have moved
their offices to less congested and more secure
suburbs, and deteriorating colonial mansions
have transitioned to slum housing. Yet, the
most defining feature of Lima is its expan-
sive shantytowns, which have been euphe-
mistically renamed pueblos jóvenes (young
towns) or asentimientos humanos (human
settlements). Shanties have been constructed
on the barren slopes that rise above the red-
tiled roofs of the inner suburbs and on the
flat desert benches that encircle Lima (Fig-
ure 4.16). Approximately forty percent of
the city’s population is estimated to reside in
asentimientos humanos.
Population growth, agricultural stagnation,
economic injustice, and armed violence in
rural Peru are responsible for successive waves
of cityward migration. Until mid-century,
mostly rural elites and people from nearby
provinces migrated to Lima. In the two to
three decades following World War II, Peru-
vians from all regions, lured by new industry,
found their way to the city. The political vio-
lence and economic crisis of the 1980s and
1990s brought an influx of poorly prepared
and traumatized displaced persons, primarily
from the southern highlands, seeking safety
and refuge. In relatively short order, provin-
cial migrants and their offspring transformed
Lima from a bastion of elitist creole culture
Figure 4.14 Lima’s central plaza, known as the Plaza de Armas, dates to the city’s founding and served as the central point from which streets extended in the four cardinal directions consistent with the Laws of the indies. Source: Photo by Maureen hays-Mitchell.
Distinctive Cities 169
Figure 4.15 Growth of Lima, 1910–2000. Source: Centro de Promoción de la Cartografía en el Perú, Avda. Arequipa 2625, Lima 14, Peru. (Continued on next page)
170 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Figure 4.15 (Continued)
Distinctive Cities 171
(European culture within America) into a
microcosm of contemporary Peru. Today,
food, music, dance, artisanry, accents, dress,
and festivals from every region of Peru are
found in Lima.
The social fabric of present-day Lima is
more complex than ever. Race, ethnicity, and
class defy easy classification. As Lima’s popu-
lation shifts, Andean, and to a lesser extent
Amazonian, culture infuses its streets and
public spaces. Pressure to assimilate is less
today as migrants and their offspring assert
their cultural heritage and their claim to Lima
as a multicultural city. In response, wealthy
Limeños pick up the process begun centuries
ago of distancing themselves from the poor.
Now they are moving not simply to the tradi-
tionally more elite western districts of the city,
but also beyond to quasi-rural settings to the
east as well as the more distant seaside com-
munities to the north and south (Box 4.4).
Lima dominates all aspects of national
life. Seventy-nine percent of the national
population currently resides in cities, with
nearly one-third of that population, approxi-
mately 10 million, living in greater Lima. The
city’s primate status is the cause and effect of
growth. The concentration of political influ-
ence, capital, industry, communications,
workforce, consumers, and the most prestig-
ious institutions of research, learning, and
culture induces further concentration of all
these activities and reinforces Lima’s primacy.
In recent years, the Peruvian government
has undertaken a decentralization process
intended to stimulate political and economic
Figure 4.16 Villa El Salvador is among the oldest and most well-known shantytowns (asentimientos humanos). Established as a land invasion south of Lima by migrant families from the Andean highlands in 1970, it epitomizes the self-help housing movement. it was awarded formal status as a district within metropolitan Lima in 1983. today, it is home to some 400,000 people and hundreds of businesses. the pink buildings are schools. Source: Photo by Alex Pustelnyk.
172 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Box 4.4 Street Working Children in the andes
Kate Swanson, San diego State University
Working children are a common sight on the streets of Andean cities. they juggle at busy intersections, beg on crowded sidewalks, sell in public markets, and sing on city buses. For some, it can be quite jarring to see an eight-year-old girl carrying her two-year-old brother on her back while she sells packages of gum to passers-by. For those from the Global north, it is at odds with common understandings of how children should behave. isn’t childhood supposed to be a time for play, innocence, and fun? Why do children in so many parts of the world have to work? the reality is that not so long ago, children everywhere had to work. the modern Western construction of childhood—an understanding that prioritizes play, educa- tion, and innocence—stems from a place of wealth and privilege. As nations in the Global north developed and grew in prosperity, children became valued more for their intrinsic worth than their economic worth. this means that families no longer needed children’s labor to survive, as they could make ends meet through adult wages alone. yet in the Andes, there remains tremendous poverty, which forces families to enlist each family member into paid labor. this poverty is highly racialized and disproportionately affects those of indigenous and Afro-Latino descent. in some Andean indigenous communities, they joke that children get four years to live for free. After four, they have to start working in order to contribute to their family’s economic well-being. As a result, on weekends, after school, and on school holidays, children head to the streets to sell goods, shine shoes, sing, perform, and beg in the hopes of earning a little extra money (Figure 4.17).
Figure 4.17 three young girls find time for fun as they assist their mothers who labor as ambulantes (street vendors) in the informal economy of huancayo, a city in the Peruvian central Andes. Source: Photo by Maureen hays-Mitchell.
Distinctive Cities 173
development in rural regions, while mitigat-
ing Lima’s growth and dominance.
As Lima emerges from the severe eco-
nomic and political crisis of the late twenti-
eth century, poverty rates are declining and
its middle class is expanding; construction
is booming; roads are being paved, and pub-
lic spaces illuminated. Yet, the city confronts
problems of unprecedented proportion and
complexity. Not only is prosperity highly con-
centrated there, but it is unequally distributed
within the city; and the gap between Lime-
ños who benefit from improved economic
conditions and those who do not remains
wide. The city’s rapid and unplanned growth
has also caused severe environmental degra-
dation, especially of the city’s water and air.
Lima is a megacity in a desert. The rapid loss
of Andean glaciers threatens Lima’s sources
of water. The very rivers that gave rise to
human settlement here some 4,000 years ago
are shrinking and contaminated by mining
and agricultural runoff as well as residential
and industrial waste. Traffic congestion and
unregulated industries pollute the air. Urban
sprawl has eaten away at green space and con-
sumed wetlands, reducing biodiversity and
affecting microclimates within the metropoli-
tan region.
The UNEP (United Nations Environmental
Program), among others, has identified water
as the most critical environmental problem
in the Lima-Callao conurbation. More than
1 million Limeños, primarily in poor districts,
lack access to potable water and sewer service,
and more than forty percent of the city’s water
supply is lost to leakage. Efforts are underway
to address this. “Water for All,” a $715 mil-
lion public-awareness campaign designed to
increase efficient water use, has constructed
water treatment facilities and initiated pro-
jects to bring potable water to underserved
districts. AguaFondo, or Lima Water Fund,
works with local communities in water con-
servation by stabilizing slopes, recovering
lagoons, and reforesting watersheds. The
private sector is also contributing to green
innovations. In 2012, an advertising agency
partnered with Lima’s University of Engineer-
ing and Technology to create a billboard that
of course, some argue that the streets are no place for a child. in Ecuador and Peru, there are state and municipal-level anti-child labor campaigns designed to remove children from the streets. they argue that the streets expose children to many dangers, such as crime, air pollution, youth gangs, and traffic, among others. there is certainly truth to these argu- ments. on the other hand, some argue that children’s work is empowering and builds many entrepreneurial skills to help them succeed into adulthood. Some advocate for children’s right to work and push back against organizations that try to remove them from the streets. others suggest that children’s income is critical as it helps them pay for school supplies, such as uniforms, textbooks, and school lunches. in fact, many children say that they enjoy working on the streets as it gives them a great deal of personal freedom—something that is lacking for young people in the United States and Canada these days due to helicopter parenting, municipal curfews, and high-tech surveillance systems. Ultimately, it is poverty that forces so many Andean children to work on city streets. to address this issue, nations must tackle the deeply entrenched structural inequalities that plague the region.
174 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
captures moisture from air and converts it to
filtered drinking water.
Most Limeños, however, consider air pol-
lution the most pressing environmental issue.
Limeños who frequent the city center and/or
reside in poorer districts inhale large quanti-
ties of airborne particulates and other pol-
lutants. A study conducted between 2007 and
2011 found that the high pollution rate caused
over 5,000 deaths, 80 percent of which were
directly attributable to pollution from public
transport. Government-led initiatives, such
as the Clean Air Initiative and innovations in
public transport, seem to be having impact as
Lima’s air quality gradually improves. In 2010,
Lima launched a high-capacity transportation
system of rapid buses—“El Metropolitano”—
that run on natural gas and link the north and
south corridors of the city. The system moves
nearly 1 million passengers per day along a
26 kilometer corridor. In 2014, construction
began on Lima’s first subway system. When
complete, the train line will link the port area of
Callao on the west with Ate in the east through
a 35 kilometer tunnel, and cut travel time from
2 hours to 45 minutes. To increase the share of
green space, 49 districts in the metropolitan
area have signed the “Green Lima and Callao
Pact.” The program prioritizes building large
recreational areas and parks in the city’s poor-
est neighborhoods, as well as revamping pub-
lic squares and green areas along main avenues
in the city center. Green spaces have increased
by over 50 percent in the past decade, enhanc-
ing the health and quality of urban life while
creating a shared sense of civic identity for
many Limeños.
Lima has long served as the gateway
between the outside world and the rest of
the country. Indeed, in hosting the UN
Framework Convention on Climate Change
(COP20) in December 2014, Lima—and by
extension Peru—sought to establish its rep-
utation as a forward-thinking society con-
cerned with critical issues of local, national,
regional, and global magnitude. Notwith-
standing, serious problems continue to plague
this national capital and primate city. Recent
initiatives to address Lima’s seemingly intrac-
table problems—social, economic, political,
and environmental—may be cause for cau-
tious optimism not only among Limeños but
all Peruvians.
Buenos Aires: Global City of the Southern Cone
Long regarded as one of Latin America’s great-
est cities, Buenos Aires stands as the most
visible symbol of Argentina’s history and
identity. Once a minor colonial outpost of
Spain, Buenos Aires grew rapidly as a center of
immigration, urban design, and modernism
from roughly 1880 to 1930. While the coun-
try emerged as an agricultural and industrial
power, the Argentine capital became known as
the “Paris of South America”—an elegant city
of broad boulevards, graceful public squares,
and impressive public buildings. Monumental
Buenos Aires has long served as the stage for
national political movements, as dramatized
by the famous scenes of Juan and Eva Perón
addressing the multitudes from the balcony of
the Casa Rosada, the presidential palace. More
recently, Mothers of Plaza de Mayo have con-
tinued to demonstrate to protest the “disap-
pearance” of their children during the “dirty
war” of the military regime. Despite a contem-
porary decline in regional importance vis-à-
vis São Paulo, Greater Buenos Aires remains a
vital metropolis with a 2015 population of 15
million and a high degree of national primacy.
The city’s residents, known as porteños (port-
dwellers), continue to be trendsetters. On the
other hand, the Argentine metropolis now
Distinctive Cities 175
faces growing problems of socioeconomic
inequality, popular discontent and insecu-
rity, spatial segregation, and environmental
degradation.
Colonial Buenos Aires followed the char-
acteristic Spanish-American urban form. The
central plaza (later named the Plaza de Mayo)
served as the core of the colonial settlement,
surrounded by the important governmental,
religious, and commercial structures. The city
council, or Cabildo, sat across from the Cathe-
dral and a commercial arcade lined much of
the plaza. While colonial Buenos Aires typified
a Spanish “Laws of the Indies” town, the post-
colonial city’s design increasingly reflected
French and British influences. To resolve
prolonged centralist-federalist conflicts, Bue-
nos Aires was federalized and removed from
the dominant Buenos Aires Province in 1880
and developed rapidly. British-financed rail-
roads fanned out into the pampas, opening
up an agricultural breadbasket to world trade,
while the development of refrigeration and
improved port facilities allowed export of
Argentine beef to Europe.
An emergent country needed a world-
class capital city, graced by monuments and
public buildings, worthy of Argentina’s new
wealth and aspirations. The Avenida de Mayo,
completed in 1894, provided a striking visual
corridor, reminiscent of the Champs-Élysées
in Paris, linking the executive seat of govern-
ment and the national capitol. The Avenida 9
de Julio, one of the world’s widest avenues, is
centered on an Obelisk visible from various
vantage points downtown. With the opening
of additional boulevards in the early twentieth
century, the city’s reputation as the “Paris of
South America” was sealed (Figure 4.18).
As Argentina became a postcolonial beacon
of order and prosperity, European immigrants
poured in, and 30 percent of the Argentine
population was foreign born by 1914. As the
federal capital, transportation hub, commer-
cial center, cultural mecca, and immigrant
port of entry, Buenos Aires experienced a
high degree of urban primacy in the national
city-system. The metropolitan population
now represents roughly a third of the coun-
try’s total, more than 15 million residents (see
Tables 4.2 and 4.3). With suburbanization,
however, only about a fifth of the metropoli-
tan population resides in the capital city itself.
Unimpeded by physical barriers, districts
called barrios covered the Federal District by
1930. New immigrants first settled in central
barrios near the port; the local Italian-Spanish
dialect known as “Lunfardo” emerged here,
along with the Argentine “Tango” dance. The
city’s southeastern areas generally became
industrial, working-class districts. In contrast,
elegant upper-class neighborhoods emerged
on the northwestern side of Buenos Aires.
The two socially sorted residential sectors—
generally more affluent to the northwest of
downtown, more working class toward the
southeast—continued their historic trajec-
tories in contemporary metropolitan growth
beyond the Federal District. A massive influx
of impoverished migrants from the Argen-
tine interior, Bolivia, and Paraguay has cre-
ated extensive shantytowns or villas miserias
(“towns of misery”). An estimated 640 villas
miserias encompass up to a million people
in the suburbs in Greater Buenos Aires, and
studies suggest that urban slums now grow ten
times faster than the national population.
Argentine society has long been regarded
as affluent—given middle-class living stand-
ards, high levels of education, and good public
health—but economic restructuring and neo-
liberal reforms shattered such assumptions
during the 1990s. The country grew economi-
cally but suffered a contraction of government
176 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
services, privatization of state enterprises, and
widespread deindustrialization. While elites
prospered, much of the population suffered
from increasing unemployment and poverty.
An economic recession began in 1998 and
culminated in the crisis of 2001–2002, when
Argentina defaulted on international debt
obligations and devalued the peso. With grow-
ing public protests came new social move-
ments, such as the piqueteros, unemployed
workers who blocked roads, bridges, and
buildings. Unemployed workers organized
into cooperative markets and businesses, and
neighborhood-based assemblies (asambleas
populares) arose.
As elsewhere, Buenos Aires has witnessed
a proliferation of gated communities, charac-
terized by low-density residential complexes
guarded by defensive enclosure and private
security. These affluent enclaves cluster pri-
marily in suburban areas with good highway
access to the city center and, paradoxically, in
poor localities with relaxed land-use laws. The
clustering of exclusive gated communities in
low-income jurisdictions has deepened social
polarization by juxtaposing wealthy and poor
households.
The Argentine metropolis also faces grow-
ing environmental problems. Given the city’s
low-lying coastal location on the edge of the
humid pampas, water management has long
played an important role in urban develop-
ment. Buenos Aires suffers increasingly from
flooding, wastewater disposal, and industrial
pollution. The city is also at risk from cli-
mate change and sea-level rise. Due to rapid
urbanization and the concentration of imper-
vious surfaces, the drainage system cannot
adequately handle storm runoff. Since the
1980s, the contamination of aquifers has led
to increased reliance on surface water supplies.
As part of neoliberal restructuring, the
French Suez Company won the metropoli-
tan concession for water management and
Figure 4.18 the diagonal norte (northern diagonal boulevard), officially the Avenida Presidente Rouge Saenz Pena, highlights the imposing obelisk monument in downtown buenos Aires. Source: Photo by brian Godfrey.
Distinctive Cities 177
sanitation in 1992. While controversial, pri-
vatization initially resulted in improvements
to water service and a 27 percent reduction
in customer bills. The Suez profit margin
remained low, however, and a renegotiation of
contract terms in 1997 led to widespread pro-
tests. Suez lost the concession in 2006, after
which a conglomerate of companies, Aguas del
Gran Buenos Aires, has managed metropolitan
water and sewer provision. Currently, four
wastewater treatment plants treat only about
5 percent of wastewater before discharging it
into the Rio de La Plata.
Another major challenge comes from high
levels of industrial discharge. The most pol-
luted area is the Matanza-Riachuelo River
basin, home to Argentina’s largest concentra-
tion of urban poor. Among the 3.5 million
inhabitants in the basin, one-third live below
the poverty level and an estimated 10 percent
reside in flood-prone informal communities
that suffer from contact with both untreated
organic waste and toxic industrial chemicals.
In 2004, a group of residents sued the national
government, the Province of Buenos Aires, the
Federal District of Buenos Aires, and 44 busi-
nesses for damages suffered from pollution of
the Matanza-Riachuelo River. In a 2008 land-
mark decision, the Argentine Supreme Court
ruled in favor of the residents and determined
the defendants to be liable for ecological resto-
ration of the river basin.
Overall, Buenos Aires now finds itself in
the midst of swirling currents of change that
are restructuring the metropolis. While the
emergence of suburban shopping centers,
office parks, and informal and gated com-
munities challenges the supremacy of the
traditional urban core, contemporary redevel-
opment projects suggest a continuing concern
for the central city, as evidenced in the reno-
vation of the abandoned downtown piers at
Puerto Madero (Figure 4.19). While Buenos
Aires retains a cosmopolitan air and cultural
status, the contemporary intensification of
socioeconomic inequality and spatial segrega-
tion raises troubling questions for the future.
Long thought to be different from other South
American megacities, Buenos Aires now con-
verges with them in terms of growing urban
socioeconomic and environmental problems.
Curitiba and Bogotá: Planning For
Sustainable Urban Development
Written with Andrés E. Guhl, Universidad de
los Andes, Bogotá
Given high rates of urbanization and envi-
ronmental degradation, many South American
cities now pursue policies of sustainable urban
development. Two world-famous examples
are Curitiba, Brazil and Bogotá, Colombia. In
these continental trendsetters, governments
have adopted innovative policies intended to
encourage compact, livable, and environmen-
tally friendly urbanism. The cities both imple-
mented cost-effective bus rapid transit (BRT),
which inspired similar express-bus programs
in other cities. In their efforts to combat the
pressures of suburban sprawl, urban planners
have endeavored to implement pedestrian
streets, preserve historic centers, concentrate
growth along commercial corridors, pro-
mote ecological design and green buildings,
and encourage parks and open spaces, among
other progressive measures.
In Curitiba, capital of the state of Paraná,
sustainability planning began as urbanization
rates exceeded five percent in the 1960s. Long
a regional center of agriculture and timber
production, industrialization and rural-urban
migration accelerated after World War II. Fears
that rapid urban growth threatened the qual-
ity of life prompted development of a 1965
178 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Preliminary Plan by a team under architect
Jaime Lerner, who later served as mayor and
governor. The Institute for Urban Research
and Planning of Curitiba developed a Mas-
ter Plan (Plano Diretor) officially adopted in
1966. This plan proposed to minimize traffic
congestion, control urban sprawl, preserve the
historic city center, provide parks and open
space, and develop an efficient public transit
system. Implementation began dramatically
in 1972, when planners converted one of the
major downtown thoroughfares, November
15 Street, into a pedestrian street. Although
disgruntled motorists threatened to ignore the
traffic ban, local authorities dissuaded them
with an act of public theater, which featured
the unfolding of large sheets of paper for
school children to paint on the street.
Subsequent zoning regulations promoted
development along arterial corridors, revi-
talization of the commercial core, and main-
tenance of peripheral open space. A “Trinary”
road system, consisting of five traffic arterials
that converge downtown, separates automo-
bile traffic in two outer lanes, going oppos-
ing directions, from central lanes reserved for
express buses. “Tube stations” feature elevated
passenger shelters to facilitate fare collection,
rapid entry to, and exit from express buses.
As of mid-2014, there were more than 350
tube stations in the metropolitan area. The
Integrated Transport Network permits transit
Figure 4.19 Recent renovation of Puerto Madero, long a deteriorated inner harbor, created a revitalized waterfront district adjacent to the downtown of buenos Aires. Source: Photo by brian Godfrey.
Distinctive Cities 179
between any points in the city with a unified
fare. Curitiba also promotes design-with-
nature principles of urban ecology; low-lying
areas subject to flooding are reserved for parks.
Despite continuing problems of poverty and
service provision in peripheral shantytowns,
the city’s program of “Faróis de Saber” (Light-
houses of Knowledge) offers free educational
centers, including libraries, internet access,
and other social and cultural resources.
These successes, however, have generated
new problems. With an official city popula-
tion of 1.75 million and a metropolitan pop-
ulation of 3.5 million in 2010, Curitiba is a
major political and economic center of south-
ern Brazil. The metropolitan demographic
growth rate of 3.19 percent between 2005 and
2010 remained among the country’s highest,
as were per-capita incomes and rates of auto-
mobile ownership. This relative prosperity has
added to growth pressures. Although express
buses continue to be heavily used, develop-
ment of the transit corridors has encouraged
metropolitan sprawl. Whether planners can
build on Curitiba’s innovative record of tran-
sit-oriented development and environmental
conservation to meet these new challenges
remains to be seen.
The larger metropolis of Bogotá has faced
even more daunting growth pressures. The
Colombian capital’s rate of urbanization
reached a dizzying seven percent between
1950 and 1965, gradually dropping to a more
manageable 2.9 percent in 2005–2010. And
from 1950 to 2010, the metropolitan area
grew from 630,000 to 8.5 million residents.
Fortunately, governmental reforms in the
early 1990s facilitated local innovation which,
in turn, has gained momentum under a series
of progressive mayors. As a result, Bogotanos
have witnessed significant improvements in
urban transportation, utilities, and public
space. Additionally, the city’s health services
and libraries have expanded, and virtually all
children have gained access to public schools.
In 2000, Bogotá adopted a master plan (Plan
de Ordenamiento Territorial or POT), revised
in 2004, which has helped prioritize resources
and improve quality of life. The plan sets clear
zoning patterns to regulate land use, promote
transit-oriented development, and restore the
ecological assets of the city.
The most dramatic change has occurred in
public transit with the implementation in 2000
of the Transmilenio, a network of express-bus
lanes based on the model of Curitiba. This
BRT system is part of an integrated trans-
portation plan designed to provide subway
and train service throughout Bogotá and sur-
rounding municipalities. In late 2014, Trans-
milenio supplied about 40 percent of the city’s
transportation needs, with 70 miles (113 km)
of exclusive bus lanes and 411 miles (663 km)
of bus routes feeding into the system. Yet,
the system has developed just one-third of
the originally planned BRT lines; it has not
expanded since 2012 and is overwhelmed by
escalating demand.
Transit mobility throughout the city is
worsening with a steady increase in car and
motorcycle usage. The city now plans to build
its first subway line, which is likely to take
decades to complete. To mitigate congestion,
Bogotá has encouraged the use of bicycles
by building exclusive bike lanes that provide
a safe and environmentally friendly way to
move around the city. As of 2015, there were
233 miles (376 km) of bike lanes in the city
that served roughly 14 percent of the popu-
lation. The number of people using bicycles
has grown more than 20 percent in the last
two years. Every Sunday, main thoroughfares
turn into recreational space in the Ciclovia
program, as about 2 million residents flock to
180 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
the streets on bicycles, roller skates, and other
means of recreation.
The POT master plan further seeks to
restore ecosystems lost to ill-conceived twen-
tieth-century policies. It encourages the res-
toration of natural assets and has engaged
the private sector as providers of valuable
ecosystem services, ecological design, and
green building. The city has invested heavily
in parks, recreational facilities, sidewalks, and
public spaces. For example, Avenida Jimé-
nez, a central boulevard in the historic center,
has been transformed into a leisurely walk-
way (Figure 4.20). This urban intervention
restored an important stream by transform-
ing it into a popular linear park known as Eje
Ambiental (Environmental Axis). However,
much remains to be done. Air pollution is a
persistent problem, and sewage continues to
be dumped largely untreated into the metro-
politan watershed. Ecological restoration has
been difficult due to limited resources and
lack of environmental consciousness on the
part of many Bogotanos.
As in Curitiba, Bogotá has improved the
quality of life of its citizens through coordi-
nated urban planning, economic develop-
ment, and environmental protection. Many
challenges remain, however. The city cur-
rently is undergoing a governance crisis that
pits the mayor and city council at odds. The
early success of the Transmilenio BRT and
ecological restoration now requires sys-
tematic and far-reaching efforts to address
emerging problems. While both Bogotá and
Curitiba have clearly moved along the path
toward sustainable urbanism, they must con-
solidate this trend through careful planning
Figure 4.20 Eje Ambiental in historic bogotá, where a dechannelized stream is part of a linear park along Avenida Jiménez. Source: Photo by Andrés Guhl.
Urban Challenges and Prospects 181
to ensure inclusive, equitable, and environ-
mentally friendly urbanism.
URbAN CHALLENGES AND PROSPECTS
The Urban Economy and Social Justice
Recent trends in economic globalization are
benefiting some countries, most notably Chile
and Brazil where middle classes are grow-
ing and poverty rates declining somewhat.
Most countries in South America are not as
fortunate. Throughout the continent, the
proportion of poverty households remains
relatively high. In cities, long-standing condi-
tions of socioeconomic inequality and social
and environmental injustice endure. Issues
of employment, housing, and environmen-
tal degradation affect the poor more severely
than they do other sectors of urban society. It
is a sad fact that the areas of cities where life
expectancy is lower than citywide averages are
low-income communities with high levels of
contamination.
It is not uncommon for many urban resi-
dents to spend more than half of their cash
income on food—only to barely meet nutri-
tional needs. In the absence of unemployment
insurance or an adequate social security sys-
tem, many South Americans cannot afford
to be unemployed and are forced to turn to
their own resourcefulness. Research on urban
labor markets in South America indicates
that, although participation within the paid
workforce has improved, participation in the
informal economic sector has increased. This
is especially true among lower-income groups
and the more vulnerable, such as poor women
and children.
Despite indicators of stabilization, even
expansion, at the macro level (e.g., growth in
gross national income), socioeconomic polar-
ization persists in South American cities as
the benefits of economic development accrue
unevenly. When such conditions are concen-
trated among certain social groups or regions,
they can generate restive conditions that chal-
lenge the cohesion of a society and the stabil-
ity of a government. The rise of indigenous
politics and social protest in Bolivian cities is a
fascinating example that is playing out on the
streets of La Paz, the national capital, Cocha-
bamba, site of the infamous water wars, and
Santa Cruz, where a secession movement is
underway (see Box 4.2).
Defensive Urbanism and Self-Help Housing
South America’s cities reveal a curious socio-
spatial pattern of segregation that often jux-
taposes those with wealth in secure high-rises
or gated communities alongside those with-
out in favelas, asentamientos humanos, villas
miserias (shantytowns). Indeed, large-scale
urbanization has spawned “defensive urban-
ism.” The fear of crime has led the urban
elite to retreat into protected areas in luxury
apartment buildings or suburban communi-
ties, where security is enforced by walls and
armed guards, and children are chauffeured
to private schools. New security infrastruc-
tures—video surveillance, remote-controlled
gates—are proliferating in cities across the
continent (Box 4.5).
Today, one- to two-thirds of the population
of any given city resides in informal-sector
housing. Similar to its employment counter-
part, the informal housing sector exists out-
side the bounds of “officialdom” in that it
ignores building codes, zoning restrictions,
property rights, and infrastructure standards.
In South America, informal-sector housing
is commonly known as “self-help” housing,
182 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
Box 4.5 urban Security and Human rights
increasing concerns with violent crime now plague South American cities. Fears of violence have been fed by vivid accounts in the news media, tourist guides, and popular films. Such acclaimed recent films as “City of God” (brazil, 2002) or “our Lady of the Assassins” (Colom- bia, 1999) feature racy stories full of sex, drugs, violence, and armed conflict in urban slums. Such representations sensationalize violence and serve to stigmatize the urban poor, who are disproportionately of indigenous or African racial origins. the preoccupation with urban insecurity has created a culture of fear, which teresa Caldeira relates to “the increase in violence, the failure of institutions of order (especially the police and the justice system), the privatization of security and justice, and the continuous walling and segregation of cities. . . .” Widespread concern over crime has served to maintain class and racial bounda- ries, despite the expansion of formal democratic rights.
official statistics often underreport crime, since distrust of the police discourages resi- dents from reporting incidents. Rates of homicide (murder and manslaughter) represent the most reliable data, given compulsory death registrations. in 1980, national homicide rates in brazil and the United States were about the same (about 10 per 100,000 residents), but the brazilian rates were twice as high by the late 1990s. of course, violent crime tends to be worse in large cities than rural areas, especially related to urban drug traffic, gang wars, and police brutality. Even so, while north American crime rates dropped dramatically in new york and many other U.S. cities, brazilian cities like São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and Recife became steadily more violent, although their homicide rates have tended to drop somewhat in the last decade.
São Paulo, for example, experienced a dramatic rise in homicide rates between 1980 and 2000, usually involving firearms. Most victims have been young men (15–29 years old) suf- fering from both poverty and drug-trafficking activities. other factors commonly include socio-spatial segregation, high unemployment, and widening income inequality. on a posi- tive note, São Paulo’s murder rate fell to 14/100,000 in 2007, which researchers attrib- uted to more effective policing methods and better enforcement of gun-control legislation, despite the persistence of socioeconomic problems. Subsequently, the cities of both Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo both experienced a significant decrease in homicides from 2007 to 2011. despite the decline in the brazilian southeast, violent crime has risen in other parts of the country, particularly the north and northeast. the booming Amazon metropolis of Marabá in the state of Pará, for example, is now one of brazil’s most violent cities with homicide rates as high as 125 deaths per 100,000 residents, according to recent federal statistics.
Such high levels of urban violence reflect issues of human rights. Community initiatives now feature programs to prevent violence, particularly among young people in poor com- munities. nongovernmental organizations (nGos) began in the 1990s to offer programs to reduce firearm injuries, promote social justice, and provide vocational training for young people in poor communities. For example, the Mangueira Social Project, located in one of the
Urban Challenges and Prospects 183
city’s favelas, provides after-school programs for local youth who demonstrate regular school attendance. Such grassroots campaigns attempt to change the perception of communities through the internet, media outreach, and partnerships with the government, universities, and the private sector.
a term that carries a double meaning. Most
commonly, self-help refers to the character-
istics of the homes and the process through
which they are built. Self-help housing tends
to be built by the inhabitants themselves, using
simple—often hazardous—materials that
the owner-builder-occupier has accumulated
over time. Additionally, the term conjures up
images of impoverished, yet well-intentioned,
urban dwellers “helping themselves” to unoc-
cupied land—in the absence of a more via-
ble option. Self-help housing communities
are commonly considered shantytowns (see
Figures 4.10 and 4.16). Many settlements lack
basic services, such as running water, sewer-
age, electricity, and garbage removal. They are
constructed of scrap materials that often do
not provide adequate protection from inclem-
ent weather, have limited access to services, are
overcrowded, and lack the security of tenure
(i.e., title to the land). Shantytowns—or self-
help communities—are marginal in terms of
both their location on the urban periphery
and the quality of the land occupied, which
tends to be undesirable and often unhealthy
and dangerous. They may be constructed on
toxic “brownfield” sites, alongside noxious
landfills, on steep hillsides, or in polluted wet-
lands. Their overcrowded conditions are ideal
for the transmission of disease. Shanties are
the first structures to collapse in mudslides
and the first to be carried away in floods, and
they easily go up in flames.
Under favorable conditions, self-help com-
munities strengthen and improve over time.
After the initial land invasion, settlements
can evolve into consolidated and well-organ-
ized communities. Structures are steadily
improved and basic services are addressed in
one way or another. With time, municipal gov-
ernments officially recognize the communities
and extend urban infrastructure, supplying
water and electricity, paving roads, extending
public transportation lines, providing gar-
bage removal, building schools, and staffing
clinics. El Alto, perched above La Paz, and Villa
El Salvador, outside Lima, are cases in point
(see Figures 4.6 and 4.16). Despite the celebra-
tion of the self-help movement in many cir-
cles, it is nevertheless an inadequate proxy for
regulated housing and urban services.
Spatial Segregation, Land Use, and
Environmental Injustices
Although South American cities have long
been highly segregated, the pattern of segrega-
tion is more complex today. Population expan-
sion and variegated topography are bringing
distinct social groups into closer contact. As
intervening land is occupied, self-help com-
munities and elite developments often exist
side by side. An interesting phenomenon is
the proliferation of affluent enclaves within
low-income districts, where relaxed land-use
laws attract real estate developers. There is lit-
tle indication that residential segregation is
abating and, ironically, proximity accentuates
class tensions. Indeed, South American cities
are characterized by greater polarization in
184 WORLD URBAN DEVELOPMENT
lifestyle. Glass-fronted skyscrapers and shop-
ping malls characterize business districts and
elite neighborhoods, while peripheral shan-
tytowns are built of scrap materials and lack
basic services.
Metropolitan expansion and decentraliza-
tion have eroded the relative dominance of
the traditional city center. Employment in the
center is decreasing as industrial activity shifts
to peripheral or nearby rural locations, and
government and professional offices move
to affluent suburbs that are less plagued by
traffic congestion and crime. Although his-
toric preservation and heritage sites in tradi-
tional downtowns have encouraged tourism,
there is little evidence of residential gentrifi-
cation and high-end commercial revitaliza-
tion. Affluent residents now prefer suburban
locations with their amenities and security
infrastructure. Indeed, urban elites are more
likely to enjoy the advantages and to escape
the disadvantages of urban living. Affluent
business and residential districts tend to be
better serviced with running water, sewerage,
electricity, garbage service, public transpor-
tation, paved streets, sidewalks, and public
parks. In contrast, low-income districts are
characterized by inadequate urban services
and infrastructure.
A differentiated urban landscape is also
evident in terms of environmental justice. Air
pollution in some cities commonly surpasses
safe levels as established by the World Health
Organization. The wealthy can more read-
ily escape these negative externalities as they
listen to car stereos while waiting out traffic
jams in air-conditioned cars. Meanwhile, the
less affluent are crowded onto hot, noisy, die-
sel-spewing buses. The discharge of untreated
urban sewage into rivers and streams occurs
more regularly in low-income districts. Chil-
dren who live in shantytowns are especially
vulnerable to gastrointestinal and respiratory
illnesses, due to the poor water, inadequate
sanitation, contaminants, open garbage, and
burning refuse that characterize their living
spaces. In contrast, the better-off reside in less
polluted areas, are more able to control some
aspects of their living environment, and are
more able to escape to country clubs and vaca-
tion homes. Indeed, evidence clearly suggests
that vulnerability to environmental hazards
parallels income and status in South Ameri-
can cities.
Widespread efforts are now underway,
however, to reconcile urbanization and envi-
ronmental quality in South America. Munici-
pal governments and grassroots organizations
now promote urban sustainability, environ-
mental justice, and the greening of cityscapes
around the continent. Inspired by innova-
tive programs in such role models as Bogotá,
Colombia, and Curitiba, Brazil, many addi-
tional cities now endeavor to provide more
socially inclusive, equitable, and environ-
mentally friendly forms of urbanism. His-
toric preservation, express buses, bicycling,
pedestrian spaces, ecological restoration,
community gardens, recycling programs, and
tree-planting campaigns—the residents of
South America’s cities are paragons of creativ-
ity and resourcefulness.
AN EyE TOWARD THE FUTURE
The cities of South America have long played
crucial roles in a global urban network and
capitalist economy. Economic, political, social,
and cultural currents from around the world
have flowed through the region’s cities since
the arrival of Iberian conquistadores. Today,
as in the past, these global forces and the
region’s cities continue to shape and influence
Suggested Readings 185
one another. Indeed, the escalating reach of
globalization is adding new urban dimensions
to long-standing problems of uneven develop-
ment, regional shifts of industry, environmen-
tal degradation, socioeconomic polarization,
urban insecurity and violence, and spatial and
environmental injustice. Such urban problems
are stimulating economic decentralization and
rising growth rates of small and intermediate-
sized cities in South America. In cities large
and small, the region’s intractable social divide
can be read on its urban landscape, which is at
once magnificent and tragic. South America’s
cities contain a disproportionate concentra-
tion of regional wealth and power, as well as
a disproportionate concentration of margin-
alized people who are undeterred in laying
claim to their cities. Contemporary democra-
tization has facilitated the rise of social move-
ments and political activism throughout the
continent, often shifting the balance of power
to new groups. Although the future remains
uncertain, it is being debated, contested, and
enacted now.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Browder, J., and B. Godfrey. 1997. Rainforest Cities:
Urbanization, Development, and Globalization
of the Brazilian Amazon. New York: Columbia
University Press. Comparative study of urbani-
zation in Amazônia.
Goldstein, D. 2012. Outlawed: Between Security
and Rights in a Bolivian City. Durham, NC:
Duke University Press. Reveals how indigenous
residents of marginal neighborhoods in Cocha-
bamba, Bolivia balance security with rights
through “community justice.”
Goldstein, D. 2003. Laughter Out of Place:
Race, Class, Violence, and Sexuality in a Rio
Shantytown, Berkeley: University of California
Press. Paints an intimate ethnographic portrait
of women in Rio’s favelas who use black-humor
storytelling to deal with tragedy.
Holston, J. 2009. Insurgent Citizenship: Disjunctions
of Democracy and Modernity in Brazil. Prince-
ton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Explores
struggles for homeownership and service provi-
sion of residents of São Paulo’s peripheries.
Kohl, B., and L. Farthing. 2012. From the Mines to
the Streets. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.
Draws on the life of a Bolivian political activist
to convey how profoundly political systems can
affect individual life.
Mann, C. 2006. 1491: New Revelations of the Ameri-
cas before Columbus. New York: Knopf. Reveals
that large indigenous populations actively
shaped their environments through early agri-
culture, trade, and urbanization.
McGuirk, J. 2014. Radical Cities: Across Latin Amer-
ica in Search of a New Architecture. New York:
Verso. Features Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires,
Caracas, Bogotá, Medellín, Lima, Santiago
(Chile), and Tijuana, among other cities.
Perlman, J. 2010. Favela: Four Decades of Living on
the Edge in Rio de Janeiro. Oxford: Oxford Uni-
versity Press. Restudy of author’s earlier work
finds that most favela residents are more pes-
simistic about prospects for social mobility and
fearful of violence in their communities.
Scarpaci, J. 2005. Plazas and Barrios: Heritage Tour-
ism and Globalization in the Latin American
Centro Histórico. Tucson: University of Arizona
Press. Examines local experiences of historic
preservation and heritage tourism in nine Latin
American cities.
Ward, P., E. Jiménez Huerta, and M. DiVirgilio.
2015. Housing Policy in Latin American Cities:
A New Generation of Strategies and Approaches
for 2016 UN Habitat III. New York: Routledge.
Considers policy choices in dealing with the
“first suburbs,” or squatter settlements, that
came to surround Latin American cities.
Figure 5.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of Europe. Source: United nations, department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population division (2014), World Urbanization Prospects: 2014 Revision, http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/.
5
Cities of Europe LINDA MCCARTHY AND COREY JOHNSON
KEy URbAN FACTS
Total Population 547 million
Percent Urban Population 73%
Total Urban Population 402 million
Most Urbanized Countries Belgium (98%)
(not including microstates) Netherlands (90%)
Luxembourg (90%)
Least Urbanized Countries Bosnia-Herzegovina (40%)
Moldova (45%)
Slovenia (50%)
Number of Megacities 2
Number of Cities of More Than 1 Million 41
Three Largest Cities Paris (11 m), London (10 m), Madrid (6 m)
Number of World Cities (Highest Ranking) 30 (London, Paris, Milan, Frankfurt,
Madrid, Amsterdam, Brussels)
Global City London
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. Europe is integral to the study of urban development because of its long history and the
extraordinary impact of European urban influences worldwide.
2. Europe’s urban system is dominated by the world cities of London and Paris, the result of
their dominance within former vast empires.
3. Europe has quite a few cities larger than 1 million people, but in general these cities are
growing more slowly than those in other world regions.
4. European cities exhibit great diversity in style and form, the result of a long history and
complex mix of people and cultures.
188 CITIES OF EUROPE
5. The demand for low-wage labor in western Europe has meant that immigration has gradu-
ally produced new cultural mixes in the largest cities.
6. Complex land-use patterns within European cities have certain similarities but also impor-
tant differences when compared with U.S. cities.
7. Cities within the European Union form part of an international trading bloc that contains
more than half a billion people with a combined gross national income greater than that of
the United States.
8. Since the end of the Cold War, Communist-era cities have undergone radical transforma-
tions, bringing them closer to their western European counterparts.
9. Europe became the birthplace of modern city planning as it reacted to the drawbacks of
uncontrolled growth during the industrial period.
10. Sustainable urban management, including a search for best practices in water management,
is increasingly becoming a priority in Europe.
Europe is a vital focus in the study of cities for
a number of reasons (Figure 5.1). First, Euro-
pean cities are interesting in their own right;
indeed, the great ones, like London, Paris, and
Rome, come to mind when we think about
Europe or plan a trip there. Second, because
European cities are quite old, they reflect the
history of many different economic, politi-
cal, social, and technological changes. Third,
a study of European urbanization then is
made all the more exciting by the tumultu-
ous changes since the fall of Communism.
Fourth, as a hearth area of urban design,
European cities are essential to understand
the urban landscapes elsewhere. Fifth, Euro-
pean cities are part of global networks that
they directly impact and are impacted by. A
global city, such as London, is an important
node in networks of capital investment, cor-
porate decision making, and transportation
infrastructure.
History, even recent history, has strongly
conditioned the character of European cities.
During the period of Soviet-style totalitarian
governments after World War II, for instance,
cities in much of central and eastern Europe
diverged in form and function from their
western European counterparts. In the early
twenty-first century, the once-pronounced
legacies of Communism and totalitarianism
on urban landscapes have in many places
given way to gleaming skyscrapers and subdi-
visions, although in others, socialist-era apart-
ment blocks and factories still predominate.
Today, cities within the European Union (EU)
fall under a single economic and political
framework that affects the living and working
conditions of urban residents. The predomi-
nantly urban European Union contains more
than half a billion people with a combined
gross national income greater than that of the
United States. Yet, while cities across Europe
share many characteristics, including bustling
city centers and compact form, differences
remain, in land-use patterns, quality of urban
infrastructure, and city planning and architec-
tural design, to name a few.
Europe is more than 70 percent urban, but
there is no continent-wide definition for a city.
National definitions range from a minimum
population of 200 in Norway and Sweden
to 20,000 in Greece and Spain. Nevertheless,
most Europeans live and work in urban areas,
and Europe’s urban population of about 400
Historical Perspectives on Urban Development 189
million represents approximately 10 percent
of the world’s urban population.
Just as there is disagreement over what
constitutes an urban population, there is also
disagreement about how to define Europe as a
region. A look at a world map shows that the
region labeled “Europe” is, physically speak-
ing, a peninsula of a much larger region, Eura-
sia. As sensitive debates illustrate, including
political disagreements in Brussels about the
accession of Turkey to the EU or Georgia to
NATO, a definition of Europe as a region is
not settled. Geographic labels such as those in
the chapter titles of this book are more con-
venience than objective truth. Indeed, Europe
is much more a cultural idea than a neatly
bounded region on a map.
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON URbAN DEVELOPMENT
One of the exciting things about studying
cities is learning to decipher the landscapes
of bygone eras—their streets, buildings, and
monuments. An historical perspective is nec-
essary for understanding the evolution of the
European urban system because the same
forces that modify the built environment of
individual cities also determined where cities
were initially located and how they flourished
or declined.
Classical Period: 800 bce to 450 ce
In the ancient Greek realm, independent city-
states were located along coastlines, reflecting
their sea-faring culture, and on easily defenda-
ble hill sites, reflecting the need for security in
turbulent times. As cities like Athens, Sparta,
and Corinth grew, bands of colonists left to
establish cities around the Aegean and Black
Seas, along the Adriatic Sea, and as far west as
present-day Spain.
Greek towns shared common traits. At the
center was the acropolis, or high city, which
contained temples and municipal buildings.
Below the high city, in the “sub-urbs,” were the
agora (market place), more government build-
ings, temples, military quarters, and residen-
tial neighborhoods. These cities were laid out
in a north-south grid pattern and surrounded
by defensive walls. Greek cities, though,
remained quite small by today’s standards.
Although Athens probably reached a popula-
tion of about 150,000, most cities ranged from
10,000 to 15,000, while the majority had only
a few thousand people.
Greek civilization was displaced during the
second and first centuries bce by the expand-
ing Roman Empire. Although the structure
of Roman cities (like Pompeii) was similar
to their Greek predecessors—including the
grid system, central market place (forum),
and defensive walls—there were important
differences. Roman cities were established
mainly inland and operated as command-
and-control centers. They functioned within
a well-organized empire and were designed
along hierarchical lines, reflecting the rigid
Roman class system. By the second century ce,
the Roman Empire extended over the south-
ern half of Europe (Figure 5.2). Roman cit-
ies, though, remained fairly small. Although
Rome’s population probably reached the mil-
lion mark by 100 ce, large Roman towns con-
tained only about 15,000–30,000 inhabitants,
while most had fewer than 5,000.
The vacuum created by the collapse of the
Roman Empire in the fifth century was filled
by various tribes who greatly disrupted urban
life. Most urban centers became depopulated,
and their crumbling buildings were a source
of building materials for rural residents. At the
190 CITIES OF EUROPE
same time, the constant threat of attack spurred
the construction of castles and other fortifica-
tions, even in some parts of Europe that had pre-
viously seen more limited urban development.
Medieval Period: 450–1300 ce
Feudalism curtailed the development of cit-
ies during the early medieval period because
its highly structured nature favored the self-
sufficient country manor as the basic building
block of settlement. The only urban places to
thrive or even survive were religious, trade,
or defensive centers. With the resumption of
long-distance trade after 1000, many medi-
eval towns grew along commercial routes that
crisscrossed Europe (Figure 5.3).
At the center of the typical medieval city
was the town square. In larger cities, this
market square was surrounded by the main
cathedral or church, town hall, guildhalls, pal-
aces, and houses of prominent citizens. Close
to the center were streets or districts that spe-
cialized in particular functions, such as bank-
ing, furniture, or metalwork. The streets and
alleys were quite narrow. The enclosing walls
often had water-filled moats to enhance defen-
sive capability. Finally, medieval towns were
decidedly unhygienic. Given the cramped
conditions, lack of air circulation, poor sani-
tation, and absence of waste treatment, it is lit-
tle wonder that the Black Death (1347–1351)
progressed so easily, killing one-third of the
people in urban Europe.
Most development during the medieval
period was in the western and southern parts
of Europe that had a Roman heritage of city-
building. Urban development was impeded
in southeastern Europe where the Byzan-
tine Empire was in control, whereas much of
Figure 5.2 Roman Cities in Europe, second century ce. Source: Adapted from n. J. G. Pounds, An Historical Geography of Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990), 56. Reprinted with permission.
Historical Perspectives on Urban Development 191
western and northern Europe remained in a
pre-urban state. Conversely, the Moors, who
spread into Iberia in the early 700s, founded
or restored many cities and elevated urban
culture in what would become Spain. At the
close of the medieval period, Europe had
about 3,000 cities, most of which had fewer
than 2,000 people; only Milan, Venice, Genoa,
Florence, Paris, Córdoba, and Constantinople
(now Istanbul) had more than 50,000.
Renaissance and Baroque
Periods: 1300–1760 ce
The Renaissance, beginning ca. 1300, was
marked by significant changes: in the economy
(from feudalism to merchant capitalism), in
politics (rise of the nation-state), and in art
and philosophy. Beginning in Florence in the
1300s, these changes spread throughout west-
ern Europe; conversely, feudalism was still
strong in eastern parts of Europe; southeast-
ern Europe fell under the grip of the Ottoman
Empire; while much of northern Europe
remained outside the progressive influences
of the Renaissance.
Spurred by heightened demand for such
luxury goods as spices and silks introduced
during the time of the Crusades (1095–
1291 ce), merchants greatly expanded the
trade functions of Mediterranean cities. Later,
the economic center of gravity shifted to the
Figure 5.3 Ljubljana, Slovenia, took advantage of the collapse of Communist rule to bring out the medieval elements of the city’s center, including the dragon bridge and St. nicholas Cathedral. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
192 CITIES OF EUROPE
port towns along the North and Baltic Seas
in conjunction with the Hanseatic League,
an association of towns with the goal of pro-
moting trade. Remarkably, these networks of
trading cities presaged contemporary trading
patterns amid globalization. At the height of
the Hanseatic League, cities such as Lübeck,
Hamburg, and Visby were highly integrated
with each other through mercantile trade.
Today, a global city such as London is more
functionally networked with distant world
cities, such as New York and Tokyo, than it is
with much closer cities with dissimilar eco-
nomic and political profiles.
Changes in the political system, particularly
the growth of nation-states, had an impact on
European urbanization. Best exemplified by
Paris and Madrid, the central location of these
capitals aided the process of political consoli-
dation; in turn, both cities were given further
impetus for growth by their administrative
functions and enhanced status at the vor-
tex of social, economic, and political change.
Similarly, regional centers and seats of county
government emerged to fill out expanding
national urban networks.
The overall appearance and structure of
cities changed because of the new forms of art,
architecture, and urban planning. Especially in
capital cities, flourishing artistic and architec-
tural expression brought about greater use of
sculpture in public areas, other urban beauti-
fication such as fountains, and embellishment
on monumental buildings, which reached a
peak during the baroque period (1550–1760).
Changes during this period were not just
cosmetic. After the introduction of gunpow-
der, massive city walls became obsolete. In
many cities, the walls were removed to make
space for wide boulevards that were becoming
fashionable. Also, the accumulation of great
wealth by the nobility led to opulent palaces
being built in many cities, notably Vienna and
Paris, and to replanning parts of cities. Begin-
ning in Paris, many districts containing nar-
row medieval streets were torn down to make
way for wide boulevards that radiated outward
and connected the various palaces and formal
gardens laid out for the nobility. The empha-
sis on the control of visual perspective and
the rediscovery of classical models of design
marked a significant departure from medieval
times. Overall, the urban network remained
largely unchanged, although individual cities
had grown larger.
Industrial Period: 1760–1945 ce
Large-scale manufacturing began in the Eng-
lish Midlands in the mid-1700s and spread
to Belgium, France, and Germany, reach-
ing Hungary by the 1870s. New factories,
making a range of products from textiles to
machine tools, changed the structure of cities
and led to massive rural-to-urban-migration
(Figure 5.4).
In many cities, whole districts of factories
emerged, easily identified by their belching
smokestacks, deafening machinery, and gen-
eral hustle-and-bustle of industrial activity.
By the mid-nineteenth century, trains trans-
ported much of the industrial inputs and
products, so new tracks, stations, and rail traf-
fic began to play a significant role in urban
development. Public transportation—trolleys
and subway systems—also modified the look
and functioning of cities. Large tracts of often
cramped worker housing were constructed.
The industrial period also heralded the devel-
opment of the CBD with its office buildings
and corporate headquarters.
The growth of cities closely mirrored the
spread of industrialization. By the mid-1800s,
industrial towns in the English Midlands
Urban Patterns across Europe 193
(notably Birmingham) and Scotland (notably
Glasgow) had grown to more than 100,000
inhabitants and the proportion of the popu-
lation living in cities larger than 10,000 had
risen to 30 percent. The growth of indus-
trial cities in France, Belgium, and Germany
reflected the same pattern. In contrast, expan-
sion of the industrial sectors in southeastern
Europe did not occur until the early- or mid-
twentieth century.
URbAN PATTERNS ACROSS EUROPE
A glance at the map of Europe shows the
impact of central place theory on the size
and spacing of urban places. In southern
Germany, the largest metropolitan areas—
Frankfurt, Munich, and Stuttgart—are spaced
about the same distance apart. In Hungary,
centrally located Budapest is ringed by the
regional centers of Debrecen, Miskolc, Szeged,
and Pécs. Of course, political, economic, cul-
tural, environmental, technological, and other
changes can alter the role and rank of a place
within an urban hierarchy. Still, the empirical
observation of rank-size distribution holds
for Belgium, Germany, Italy, Norway, and
Switzerland. In other national urban systems,
a deviation occurs at the top of the hierarchy
to create primacy. Primate cities that are also
national capitals include Athens, Budapest,
Dublin, London, Paris, Reykjavik, Sofia, and
Vienna.
Historically, rural-to-urban migration
has been the most important component of
urban growth, especially during the industrial
period. This form of migration within Europe,
though, has largely ceased. And as birth rates
have fallen considerably in recent decades,
European cities are among the slowest grow-
ing in the world, averaging just 0.2 percent a
Figure 5.4 Much of the coal that fired the industrialization of cities came through the Welsh port of Cardiff. that era is commemorated with public art on the reclaimed waterfront, along with one of the chimerical animals from a bob dylan poem. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
194 CITIES OF EUROPE
year, with most of this growth accounted for
by immigration from abroad.
The cities of Europe, however, have coa-
lesced into conurbations in tandem with the
transportation and communications infra-
structure. Europe now contains about 50
conurbations with more than a million inhab-
itants. The metropolitan regions between Lon-
don and Newcastle form an area of extensive
urbanization in England. Germany’s Rhine-
Ruhr conurbation has a diameter of about 70
miles (110 km) and runs from Düsseldorf and
Duisburg in the west to Dortmund in the east
(Figure 5.5). Of similar diameter is the Rand-
stad, a densely populated horseshoe-shaped
region in the Netherlands that runs from
Utrecht and Amsterdam in the north through
The Hague and Rotterdam in the west, to
Dordrecht in the southeast (Figure 5.6). Only
about 60 miles (100 km) apart, these two con-
urbations may eventually coalesce to become
a dominant European metropolitan core.
Postwar Divergence and Convergence
Western Europe
After World War II, separate urban systems
developed on either side of the Iron Cur-
tain—the boundary that divided Europe into
a capitalist west and Communist east. Cit-
ies in western Europe cultivated connections
with the capitalist world, especially the United
Figure 5.5 the Rhine-Ruhr Conurbation in Germany. Source: Compiled from various sources.
Urban Patterns across Europe 195
Figure 5.6 the Randstad Conurbation of the netherlands. Source: Compiled from various sources.
196 CITIES OF EUROPE
States, whose Marshall Plan funded rebuilding
in cities that had suffered appalling wartime
destruction. The reconstruction effort was
seen as an opportunity to replan bombed-out
urban areas. Some of the most heavily dam-
aged cities, like Rotterdam and Dortmund,
completely redesigned their street systems
for new commercial and industrial buildings
(Figure 5.7). Most cities, including Cologne
and Stuttgart, incorporated the surviving his-
toric structures and medieval street patterns
into their reconstructed city centers. Rouen
and Nuremberg went so far as to rebuild exact
replicas of their destroyed historic buildings.
Rapid economic and demographic growth
fueled remarkable urban growth. Cities of all
sizes grew in residents as well as in extent due
to suburbanization. But this period of remark-
able urban growth began to slow by the early
1970s as widespread economic recessions fol-
lowed the end of the postwar Baby Boom. In
addition, counterurbanization (metropolitan
decentralization) promoted development in
nearby towns and rural areas, while growth
slowed toward the urban core. Peripheral
areas attracted residents and businesses look-
ing for more space and less pollution and
crime. Most city centers lost retail and office
employment to outlying areas. Medium-sized
cities attracted employment in expanding sec-
tors of the economy like information services,
high-tech industries, or modern distribution
activities. These smaller cities at the periphery
of major metropolitan centers had lower rents
and congestion while enjoying nearby trans-
portation routes, airports, universities, and
skilled workers.
Deindustrialization and corporate restruc-
turing contributed to massive job losses
and urban decline in traditional centers of
industry. The jobs created by the relocation
of labor-intensive manufacturing benefited
some urban areas in Ireland, Spain, Portugal,
and Greece. Branch plant operations, however,
Figure 5.7 nation building is a function of every capital city’s landscape. in Amsterdam, a statue says thank you to Queen Wilhelmina, who gave her subjects hope during World War ii. next to the dutch flag is the U.S. flag. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Urban Patterns across Europe 197
are vulnerable to decisions made outside the
area and to company relocations when gov-
ernment tax incentives expire. Since the early
1990s, competition for investment has come
from central and eastern Europe where pro-
duction costs are lower.
During the last few decades, the city centers
have seen quite significant changes as employ-
ment has shifted to professional and business
services such as banking and insurance. New
developments include shiny new high-rise
offices, luxury condos and apartments, and
gentrified neighborhoods with expensive res-
taurants, bars, and boutique stores. In world
cities like London and Paris, the most visible
group of people on the streets of the CBDs
are young professionals chatting on their cell
phones and wearing the latest fashions.
Socialist Urbanization
Following World War II, cities behind the Iron
Curtain developed independently of their
western counterparts. Totalitarian govern-
ments engaged in sweeping reforms that led to
considerable changes to their national urban
systems, which evolved in response to central-
ized planning rather than market forces.
Communist governments had to con-
tend with the pressing need to rebuild cities
left in ruins after the war. The damage sus-
tained by these cities, particularly Dresden,
Berlin, and Warsaw, was more severe than in
western Europe, but subsidies were not avail-
able to Communist bloc cities through the
Marshall Plan. The earliest stage of postwar
economic development involved rapid expan-
sion of heavy industry, particularly iron and
steel, chemicals, and machinery. Coupled
with collectivization and increased mecha-
nization in agriculture, this extensive indus-
trial development soon led to unprecedented
rural-to-urban migration. Levels of urbaniza-
tion rose quickly in conjunction with rising
levels of primacy, severe housing shortages,
insufficient social infrastructure and basic ser-
vices, and environmental degradation.
So, beginning in the mid-1970s, Commu-
nist governments set out to erase the difference
between city and village life by emphasizing
light industry and services, decentralizing pro-
duction from capital and larger cities to smaller
ones, developing transportation networks,
and increasing levels of public infrastructure
and housing in cities. Rural-to-urban migra-
tion slowed significantly. Despite these efforts,
by the fall of Communism, the urban network
in much of central and eastern Europe was still
less developed than in the West.
Post-Socialist Changes
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Commu-
nist governments were toppled, Germany was
reunited, and Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and
the USSR were broken up. Central economic
planning was abandoned in favor of democra-
tization and transformation from socialist to
market economies. The demise of the Soviet
Union opened the way for western investment
to move in and people to move out. Many
countries have since joined the western politi-
cal, economic, and military alliances, includ-
ing the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) and the European Union.
These changes impacted cities and urban
systems in a number of ways. First, city
names that were inspired by revolutionaries,
such as Leninváros (Lenin City) in Hungary
(now Tiszaujvaros) and Karl-Marx-Stadt
in Germany (now Chemnitz) were changed
back to their prewar names or to honor indi-
viduals or events associated with the 1989
revolutions. Statues of Communist and Soviet
198 CITIES OF EUROPE
leaders were removed and some were later put
on display in statue parks or museums like
Memento Park in Budapest. Second, foreign
direct investment flooded in, targeted mainly
at capital cities. This boosted the transition to
capitalism and fueled speculative construction
booms and gleaming, Western-style commer-
cial and residential developments. Warsaw’s
skyline, for example, was once dominated by
the Stalinesque Palace of Culture and Science,
the tallest building in the Eastern Bloc outside
of Moscow. Today, its unmistakable “wedding
cake” architectural style building is dwarfed by
newer steel-and-glass skyscrapers (Figure 5.8).
Third, decentralization gave more authority to
city planners.
More color and neon lights now character-
ize the cities of central and eastern Europe.
Advertising has replaced Communist slogans
on billboards. Shabby, old department stores
have been renovated or replaced by boutiques
and shopping malls. Beggars have appeared, as
well as casinos and night clubs; crime has risen
and congestion is ubiquitous. Social differen-
tiation in housing has increased tremendously.
Democratization and market economies are
erasing the Communist legacy and bringing
these cities closer to their western European
counterparts.
Core-Periphery Model
A core-periphery model is often used to
describe urban patterns in Europe (Figure 5.9).
The dominance of cities and conurbations at
the European core is based on their superior
endowment of factors influencing the loca-
tion of economic activity, such as accessibility
to markets. The largest cities are connected by
the most advanced transportation and com-
munications systems. Labor force quality and
government policies make the core the most
attractive area for modern companies. French
geographer, Roger Brunet, identified the
“Blue Banana,” a curving urban corridor of
high-tech industry and services that includes
London, the Randstad and Rhine-Ruhr con-
urbation, and Milan.
Cities in the core and periphery are linked
in a symbiotic if unequal relationship. Core
cities prosper and maintain their economic
dominance at the expense of the periphery
by capturing flows of migrants, taxes, and
investment in cutting-edge industries such as
high-tech manufacturing and in command-
and-control functions like the headquarters
of transnational corporations (TNCs). At the
other extreme, peripheral cities have more
limited potential for economic development,
and attract tourists and investment in branch
plants from core locations.
The European core, however, has been
shifting to the south and east, to areas of
high-tech industrial growth. Newer core cities
include Munich in Germany, Zürich in Swit-
zerland, Milan in Italy, and Lyon in France.
This southeastward shift intensified after the
fall of the Iron Curtain; people and com-
panies have been attracted to cities such as
Bratislava and Budapest because of the surge
in economic activity, as well as to the region
as a whole due to its relatively low produc-
tion costs. London and Paris, however, have
retained their historic importance because of
their size and established positions as major
national and international cities. The con-
tinued economic strength of the core is rein-
forced by the considerable political control
that comes with the role of the largest cities
as major centers of international decision
making.
European cities are also part of a global
core-periphery model of urbanization. World
cities, such as London, Paris, Frankfurt, and
Urban Patterns across Europe 199
others, are vital nodes in international net-
works of investment capital, business decision
making, and transportation infrastructure,
while other once important centers have
melted into relative oblivion, at least as far as
global processes are concerned. One measure
of this is rents: central Frankfurt’s commer-
cial real estate is in a league with such cities
as Tokyo, Hong Kong, and New York, given its
status as a banking center, while in comparably
Figure 5.8 Warsaw’s skyline, once dominated by the Stalinesque Palace of Culture and Science’s “wedding cake” architectural style, and the tallest building in the Eastern bloc outside of Moscow, is today dwarfed by newer steel-and-glass skyscrapers. Source: Photo by Linda McCarthy.
200 CITIES OF EUROPE
sized cities such as Essen and Dortmund, rents
are dramatically lower.
IMMIGRATION, GLObALIzATION, AND PLANNING
The Challenge of Integrating Immigrants
The rebuilding of western Europe’s urban
infrastructure and industry after World War II
generated strong demand for labor, especially
in the more prosperous countries. In the 1950s
and 1960s, rural-to-urban migration fueled
growth, especially in the largest cities. In addi-
tion, foreign guest workers were brought in to
fill low-wage assembly-line and service-sector
jobs that the more skilled domestic labor force
would not take. Guest workers came from
Mediterranean Europe and former colonies.
Then West Germany attracted immigrants
from Turkey and Yugoslavia; France brought
in workers from northern and western Africa;
and Britain drew on Commonwealth citizens
from the Caribbean, India, and Pakistan.
In the European Union today, about 7 per-
cent—about 35 million—of the people were
Figure 5.9 Europe’s conurbations within the context of Europe’s “blue banana” and core- periphery conceptualizations. Source: Photo by Linda McCarthy.
Immigration, Globalization, and Planning 201
born outside its 28 member countries (Figure
5.10). More than one-third of the foreign-
born immigrants in France are concentrated
in the Paris region, where they represent over
15 percent of the population. Foreign-born
residents from outside the European Union
comprise 15–25 percent of the population in
German cities such as Frankfurt, Stuttgart,
and Munich. More than half the population
of Amsterdam is non-Dutch, being strongly
represented by individuals from Morocco,
Turkey, and Indonesia. In addition to the
demographic data, the presence of recent
immigrant arrivals is reflected in other data
such as the list of most popular baby names
for cities like Brussels or London (Table 5.1)
or in the most popular ethnic food in different
cities across Europe (Table 5.2).
Europe’s aging population coupled with
demand for low-wage labor means that some
jobs will continue to be filled by immigrants.
But there has been an anti-immigrant backlash
by some people, often xenophobic and racist,
against newcomers as well as minorities, such
as the Roma, who have lived in Europe for
centuries. They have been the target of dis-
crimination and persecution, including by the
Nazis who murdered hundreds of thousands
Figure 5.10 the salon de thé (tea house) is a common element of urban landscapes in French-speaking north Africa. As Arab immigrants arrive in brussels, they bring with them their preferences for particular tastes and social settings. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Table 5.1 Top 10 boys’ and Girls’ Names in London
Boys Girls
1. Muhammad Amelia
2. Daniel Olivia
3. Alexander Sophia
4. Mohammed Isabella
5. Joshua Mia
6. Oliver Emily
7. Harry Jessica
8. Samuel Sophie
9. Thomas Ava
10. James Chloe
Source: London Evening Standard, 2014, http://www.standard.
co.uk
202 CITIES OF EUROPE
of Roma. More recently, in a 2009 referendum,
the Swiss voted to ban the construction of
new minarets. Since then, France and Belgium
have passed legislation banning the wearing
of face-covering veils and other conspicuous
religious symbols in public. Most countries
have enacted immigration restrictions. The
contradiction between rising demand for low-
wage labor and an unwillingness to accept
nonnationals has proven quite costly and dan-
gerous, as the weeks of rioting in the largely
Muslim working-class suburbs of Paris amply
demonstrated in 2005.
European and Global Linkages
European cities are part of urban networks
that operate at different spatial scales. Since
1989, cities on either side of the former Iron
Curtain have become more interconnected.
Increasing EU economic and political inte-
gration has influenced the development of
the European urban system. For example, the
removal of national barriers to trade within
the European Union, with the internation-
alization of the European economy, has
encouraged population increase along certain
border regions. Urban growth zones strad-
dle the boundaries between the Netherlands
and Germany, Italy and Switzerland, and the
southern Rhine regions of France, Germany,
and Switzerland.
European cities are linked through trade
and other mechanisms to major urban areas
throughout the world. A select group of cit-
ies contain the headquarters of major interna-
tional agencies, many of which were founded
after World War II to promote economic,
political, or military cooperation. Geneva
is the main European center for the United
Nations. Paris is the headquarters for the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD) and the European
Space Agency. Vienna is the headquarters for
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC).
Table 5.2 Popular Ethnic Food in European Cities
City Country Ethnic Food Description Original Influence
Amsterdam Netherlands loempi spring roll Indonesia (former Dutch colony)
Berlin Germany döner kebab “rotating” grilled meat on a spit (aka gyros (Greek)), served sliced, typically in flatbread
shawarma (Arabic) (e.g., pita)
Turkish immigrants
Bucharest Romania covrigi pretzels Italian monks; German bakers later
London United Kingdom chicken tikka masala
chicken curry India (former British colony)
Paris France falafel deep-fried chickpeas +/or fava beans, typically served in flatbread (e.g., pita)
Middle Eastern immigrants
Sarajevo Bosnia & Herzegovina burek filled baked phyllo dough pastries
Ottoman Empire
Immigration, Globalization, and Planning 203
Important decision-making functions are
located in the EU’s “capital cities”: Brussels
(both the Council and the European Com-
mission), Strasbourg (Parliament), and Lux-
embourg (Court of Justice). Brussels is also
the headquarters of NATO and Strasbourg
additionally serves as the headquarters of
the Council of Europe, an organization of
nearly 50 countries that promotes European
unity, human rights, and social and economic
progress.
The major centers of international bank-
ing and finance in Europe have been London
and Paris, but now include Frankfurt and Lux-
embourg. Frankfurt hosts the Bundesbank,
Germany’s influential central bank, as well as
the European Central Bank that manages the
euro, making Frankfurt the financial capital
of the European Union. Luxembourg, on the
other hand, is the headquarters of the Euro-
pean Investment Bank and over 150 other
banks serving an international clientele.
London and Paris rank among the select
number of world cities that contain the head-
quarters of some of the most powerful TNCs
in the world. London contains about 21 of
the 500 largest global companies (78 percent
of the United Kingdom’s total), including BP,
HSBC, and Lloyds. Paris has even more—28
of these companies (90 percent of France’s
total), including BNP Paribas, Christian Dior,
and Vivendi. In addition to housing 3 of the
500 largest global companies, Rome contains
Vatican City, the seat of the Roman Catholic
Church. Paris and Milan are major centers of
fashion and design, while London is the pre-
mier insurance center. In addition, despite the
proliferation of fast-food restaurants such as
McDonald’s, a city such as Paris can still be
recognized as the global capital of haute cui-
sine and is the European city with the most
restaurants with Michelin stars for fine dining.
Adding to Parisians’ cultural pride and iden-
tity, the United Nations cultural organization,
UNESCO, added France’s multicourse gastro-
nomic meal to the world’s “intangible cultural
heritage” list in 2010.
Accessibility via the latest transportation
and communications technologies allows
some cities to strengthen their interna-
tional positions. High-speed trains reinforce
the dominance of London, Paris, Brussels,
Amsterdam, and Frankfurt. The cities with the
busiest airports are London, Paris, Frankfurt,
and Amsterdam. These four cities form one of
the world’s major clusters of airline hubs in
a global network of air travel. As such, these
airports are important not only as final des-
tinations for passengers and cargo, but also as
transit hubs where people and goods change
planes along their route.
At the mouth of the Rhine, Rotterdam is
Europe’s largest port and one of the largest in
the world. Its annual turnover of more than
400 million metric tons of cargo is third only
to Shanghai and Singapore. Rotterdam’s water
and pipeline connections with the Ruhr in
Germany make it the main oil distribution
and refining center in Europe. Antwerp, Mar-
seille, and Hamburg are other major ports.
Trucking is the most important mode of
ground transportation for freight. Nearly
2,000 billion tons of goods are transported by
road annually in the European Union alone
compared to about 400 billion by rail. There
are close to 500 passenger cars for every 1,000
people in the European Union. With about
600 cars per 1,000 inhabitants, German and
French levels already match those of Canada,
but even Italy’s higher rate of nearly 700 is
still far below the U.S. level of more than 800.
Steadily increasing automobile ownership,
with the distance traveled tripling since 1970,
has overwhelmed existing and new highway
204 CITIES OF EUROPE
capacity and led to traffic congestion within
and between cities.
Formerly Communist areas of Europe still
lag behind in terms of the extent and efficiency
of their transportation systems, though this is
rapidly changing. In Germany, rail and road
links abandoned during 40 years of Commu-
nism that divided the country into West and
East have been rebuilt. Even though Com-
munist states were allied with each other and
the Soviet Union, this did not ensure a high-
performing network of connecting infrastruc-
ture. Traveling between Budapest and Warsaw
by land, for example, entailed multiple border
crossings, transit visa requirements, and long
waits. Travel was slowed by narrow, danger-
ous, often prewar roads. In part due to large
investments by the European Union, new
multilane highways are being built, but it will
be years before transport linkages resemble
those in the West.
Urban Policy and Planning
Europe became the birthplace of modern city
planning as it reacted to uncontrolled growth
during the industrial period. Planning to
address urban problems now pervades Euro-
pean city life. After World War II in western
Europe, national policies promoted regional
decentralization. Industry, commercial activ-
ity, and population were redirected from the
large congested cities to new towns, as in the
case of Abercrombie’s Plan for Greater Lon-
don. Postwar planning for growth ended,
however, in the early 1970s. Declining popu-
lation growth rates and widespread economic
recessions forced governments to reconsider
large-scale publicly funded projects and the
need for new towns.
Given the dissatisfaction with alienating
high-rise buildings and open spaces, policy
shifted to planning for conservation and
restructuring, and combating urban decline.
This reappraisal has had two, often conflicting,
components: budgetary constraints forcing
governments to seek private-sector investment
in revitalization projects, and growing concern
for social equity, citizen participation, envi-
ronmental protection, and aesthetic quality.
A shift to neoliberal policy and planning
reflected factors such as the severity of decline
in the central parts of larger cities and their
importance as national engines of growth
in a global economy. The government of the
United Kingdom established Urban Develop-
ment Corporations to attract businesses to
declining industrial and port areas in cities
like London and Liverpool. In recent years,
most countries in western Europe have decen-
tralized power and responsibility for urban
planning to local governments. In addition,
smaller units of local government have been
consolidated into larger regional ones to
achieve economies of scale. These policy and
administrative changes have set the scene for
more coordinated regional planning. The
Dutch “compact city” policy in the Randstad
endeavors to curb counterurbanization by
concentrating new development within exist-
ing major cities in an effort to maintain their
economic competitiveness.
The urban revitalization policies in the
older industrial cities of western Europe have
promoted economic restructuring away from
traditional manufacturing. Cities use local,
national, and EU funds to attract private-sec-
tor investment in high-tech and service indus-
tries. The transition toward K-economies
(knowledge economies) has favored diver-
sified metropolitan economies with highly
skilled workforces, major universities, and
good quality of life. Traditionally in southern
Europe, cities in lower-cost production areas
Immigration, Globalization, and Planning 205
attracted labor-intensive branch plant indus-
tries. More recently, cities like Montpellier in
France, Bari in Italy, and Valencia in Spain
have focused on providing attractive environ-
ments for high-tech industries.
In Communist central and eastern Europe
after World War II, government planning was
guided by the basic tenets of Marxist-Lenin-
ist ideology: to remove the “contradiction”
between living standards in urban and rural
areas and to create a classless society. Urban
planners sought to avoid excessive population
concentration in large cities and to achieve a
balanced urban infrastructure. These social
goals, however, often clashed with economic
directives, especially the development of heavy
industry.
In an attempt to increase overall indus-
trial capacity and provide urban functions
to underserved areas, governments imple-
mented a program of new town construction
away from existing cities. These towns were
developed around a large industrial facility,
typically an iron and steel mill or chemical
processing plant. New towns included Eisen-
hüttenstadt in East Germany and Nova-Huta
in Poland. By the 1970s and 1980s, Commu-
nist planners had turned their attention away
from promoting large-scale industry and new
towns to developing light industries and fill-
ing out the national urban systems. In many
countries, central place theory became an
explicit guide as planners tried to create mul-
titiered urban hierarchies that provided goods
and services to particular regions according to
their size and function.
Since the early 1990s, central and eastern
European cities have experienced dramatic
changes because the transition to a market
economy involved rapid, large-scale privati-
zation of state-owned housing, industry, and
services. Similar to their western counterparts,
Communist-era cities like Dresden, Budapest,
and Warsaw, now work to attract new com-
mercial and industrial investment. National
policies have evolved to address urban prob-
lems that were unknown in the former social-
ist states, such as unemployment, crime,
poverty, and homelessness. EU integration has
helped alleviate somewhat some of the prob-
lems through a number of urban redevelop-
ment projects.
In fact, Europe is the scene of significant
international urban planning and manage-
ment initiatives. The Council of Europe and
the European Union, for example, celebrate
Europe’s cultural heritage through European
Heritage Days. Cultural events are planned in
cities and towns across the European Union
that are aimed at bringing European citizens
together through highlighting local traditions,
skills, and works of art and architecture. The
European Union also selects two cities every
year as European Capitals of Culture, with
Donostia-San Sebastian in Spain and Wroclaw
in the Poland selected for 2016.
The European Union established the Euro-
pean Green Capital Award to promote local
government efforts to improve their urban
environment, and to showcase best practice.
The first award winner in 2010 was Stock-
holm; Copenhagen won in 2014; and the first
eastern European city to win was Ljubljana,
Slovenia, in 2016. In terms of more measure-
able environmental quality, Copenhagen and
Stockholm also lead the rankings on the Euro-
pean Green City Index (Table 5.3).
EU integration efforts have led to unprec-
edented achievements in international policy
and planning. The publication of the “Green
Paper on the Urban Environment” in 1990
reflected the need for EU policies to address
specifically urban issues. European cities are
generally predisposed to being “green” because
206 CITIES OF EUROPE
of their high density and compact form and
associated walkability and high usage of public
mass transit. Even so, European cities are not
exempt from environmental problems associ-
ated with issues such as climate change and
sea-level rise (Box 5.1) or traffic congestion
and associated high levels of airborne particu-
late matter and unhealthy ozone levels. Over
the years, the European Union has adopted
policies that have provided funding for
innovative environmental management pro-
jects, including the Sustainable Cities project
involving research, information exchange, and
networking in conjunction with the imple-
mentation of Local Agenda 21, the TRUST
(Transitions to the Urban Water Services of
Tomorrow) project involving sharing best
practice for urban water cycle solutions, sup-
port for Mayors Adapt, which involves adapta-
tion to climate change in cities, and Eurocities,
a network of well over 100 major cities across
more than 30 countries that provides a plat-
form for best practice exchange.
CHARACTERISTIC FEATURES WITHIN CITIES
“Our cities are like historical monuments to
which every generation, every century, every
civilization has contributed a stone” (Ilde-
fons Cerdà, Spanish town planner, 1867). The
landscape of European cities today represents
an incomplete catalog of urban development
and redevelopment over time. Typical historic
and contemporary features include:
Town Squares
The town square, the heart of Greek, Roman,
and medieval towns, has often survived as an
important open space. Some medieval town
squares boast a continuous tradition of open-
air markets. In central and eastern Europe, the
large open square, typical of socialist cities,
was used for political rallies. Today, like their
western European counterparts, many central
squares and their historic buildings contain
modern commercial functions, such as tourist
offices and fashionable restaurants and cafés.
Major Landmarks
Historic landmarks in western European city
centers have become symbols of religious,
political, military, educational, and cultural
identity. Many cathedrals, churches, and stat-
ues serve their original purpose and some
still dominate the skyline. Town halls, royal
palaces, and artisan guildhalls have been con-
verted into libraries, art galleries, and muse-
ums. Medieval castles and city walls are tourist
attractions. Today, of course, the major land-
marks are expressions of economic power—
offices of TNCs and sports stadiums, for
instance.
Table 5.3 European Green City Index: Top 10 Cities
Rank City Score*
1 Copenhagen 87.31
2 Stockholm 86.65
3 Oslo 83.98
4 Vienna 83.34
5 Amsterdam 83.03
6 Zurich 82.31
7 Helsinki 79.29
8 Berlin 79.01
9 Brussels 78.01
10 Paris 73.21
*Out of a possible 100, based on eight categories (CO2, energy,
buildings, transport, water, waste and land use, air quality, envi-
ronmental governance) using 30 indicators, conducted by the
Economist Intelligence Unit, sponsored by Siemens, 2012.
Characteristic Features within Cities 207
Box 5.1 Venice and the Challenges of Climate Change
the stark reality of climate change and the resulting sea-level rise raise significant chal- lenges for European cities. An extreme case is Venice, italy. Situated in the 210-square-mile (550 km2) Venetian Lagoon on italy’s northern Adriatic coast, Venice is famous for an iconic urban landscape that dates from the thirteenth to seventeenth centuries, when it had a mer- chant empire of its own. the city itself sits atop a human-made foundation of wooden piles that are now hundreds of years old. its location at the interface of land and water served it well in the past, but Venice is now facing multiple threats to its very existence from climate change and environmental degradation.
the health of the Venetian Lagoon is vital to the well-being of the city. Apart from serv- ing as home to humans and wildlife alike, the lagoon is also a source of economic prosperity in the form of fishing and, of course, tourism, which is the biggest economic engine of the region. the natural processes that initially created the lagoon have been altered by Vene- tians since the city’s founding. these environmental alterations often come at the expense of the lagoon’s ecosystem. Sea-level rise means that the balance between saltwater and freshwater is changing in the estuarine environment, which impacts everything from fisher- ies to the iconic summertime odors of the city’s canals.
A far more serious challenge is flooding. As a city built on canals, Venice is barely above sea level and experiences frequent tidal floods in the fall and winter months during the acqua alta (high water) season. this regular flooding has become more severe recently because of the rising sea level. Photos of the iconic Piazza San Marco submerged under more than a foot of water are becoming more frequent. if action is not taken, flooding will become more severe.
the problem of sea-level rise and flooding is exacerbated by the sinking and shifting of the lagoon’s silt floor upon which Venice rests. Centuries ago, in-flowing river sediment was seen as a threat to the watery advantages of the lagoon, so rivers flowing into the lagoon were diverted to the Adriatic Sea to halt the silting process. but now this loss of sediment is threat- ening the city. the city’s subsidence is a natural phenomenon, but the rate of sinking has been increased due to urban development, fresh water and natural gas extraction from beneath the city, and pollution of the lagoon’s water. While urban growth and underground extraction have created pressure differentials, pollution from industrial dumping and inadequate sewage infrastructure has substantially changed the ability of native plant species to thrive. yet the lagoon plants are essential to preventing faster erosion rates of the lagoon floor.
the italian government is close to completing the MoSE (Modulo Sperimentale Elettromec- canico), a massive engineering project designed to protect Venice from the sea. MoSE con- sists of a system of gates located on the lagoon floor near the inlets that connect the lagoon to the Adriatic. the system is designed to protect the city from the extreme flooding events during high tide that have been exacerbated by subsidence and sea-level rise. As a city uniquely tied to water, Venice provides an example of why the needs of the human com- munities and the natural environment must be balanced in order to maintain a sustainable relationship between the two.
208 CITIES OF EUROPE
In central and eastern Europe, in addition
to prewar landmarks, the hallmarks of social-
ist cities included massive buildings in “wed-
ding cake” style, red stars, and “heroic” statues.
Since the late 1980s, socialist political symbols
have been replaced by billboards advertising
the trappings of consumer culture.
Complex Street Pattern
The narrow streets and alleys of the medi-
eval core developed in the pre-automobile era
(Figure 5.11). During the medieval period,
suburban areas grew around long-distance
roads that radiated outward from the city
gates. In the nineteenth century, cities like
Munich, Marseille, and Madrid made radial
or tangential boulevards the axes of their
planned suburbs.
High Density and Compact Form
The constraints of city walls kept population
density high during medieval times. Several
factors maintained the compact form that
is now characteristic of many large cities in
Europe. A long tradition of planning that
restricts low-density urban sprawl dates back
to strict city-building regulations in the earli-
est suburbs. Compact urban form also reflects
the relatively late introduction of the automo-
bile, as well as high gasoline prices.
Bustling City Centers
Their high density and compact nature cre-
ate city centers that bustle with activity
(Figure 5.12). Heavily used public transpor-
tation systems of buses, subways, and trains
converge on the core, and central train sta-
tions figure prominently.
In larger cities, distinct functions dominate
particular districts. Institutional districts house
government offices and universities. Financial
and office districts contain banks and insurance
companies. A pedestrianized retail zone often
leads to the train station. Cultural districts offer
museums and art galleries. Entertainment areas
include theater and “red light” districts.
Many buildings in the city center have
multiple uses. Apartments are found above
shops, offices, and restaurants. Large depart-
ment stores, such as Harrods in London and
Kaufhaus des Westens in Berlin, are promi-
nent features in most city centers. Modern
quite centrally located malls include Westfield
Figure 5.11 here on Ludgate hill in the City of London, a new immigrant from bangladesh directs people to the nearest Mcdonald’s. in medieval times, this area would have been a shadowy tangle of narrow alleys that passed for streets. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Characteristic Features within Cities 209
London (more than 300 stores) and Prague’s
Palác Flóra, both accessible by mass transit.
Suburban malls are becoming prevalent.
Many cities on a coast or a river have also
refurbished old port and industrial buildings
to house mixed-use waterfront developments
like Ķīpsala in Riga and HafenCity in Ham- burg. Other cities have renovated obsolete
historic structures, such as London’s Covent
Garden, as festival marketplaces with special-
ized shops, restaurants, and street performers.
Low-Rise Skylines
For North American visitors, the most striking
aspect of the older parts of many European
cities is the general absence of skyscraper
offices and high-rise apartments. City centers
were developed long before reinforced steel
construction and the elevator made high-rises
feasible. Building codes designed to mini-
mize the spread of fire maintained building
heights between three and five stories during
the industrial period. Paris fixed the building
height at 65 feet (20 m) in 1795, while other
large cities introduced height restrictions in
the nineteenth century. Still regulated today,
high-rises are found in some cities only in
redevelopment areas or on land at the periph-
ery of the city, such as La Défense in Paris.
Skyscrapers have also been built in the central
financial districts of some of the very largest
cities, including London.
Neighborhood Stability and Change
Western European cities historically have
enjoyed remarkable neighborhood stability.
Europeans change residences much less fre-
quently than North Americans. As a result,
some older neighborhoods at or near the
center of large cities enjoy remarkably long
lives, despite suburbanization.
Some districts of handsome mansions built
by speculative developers for wealthy families
in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
remain stable, high-income neighborhoods,
such as Belgravia and Mayfair in central
London. High-income suburban neighbor-
hoods developed in the western parts of older
industrial cities, upwind of factory smoke-
stacks and residential chimneys.
Wealthy residents, in fact, have situated
themselves at or near the city center in west-
ern Europe since before the Industrial Revolu-
tion. Higher taxes on city land until the late
nineteenth century kept the poorest people
outside the city walls. Beginning in Paris in
Figure 5.12 busy, pedestrianized shopping streets, such as this one in the heart of dublin, are typical of the European city centers. Source: Photo by Linda McCarthy.
210 CITIES OF EUROPE
the mid-nineteenth century, this tradition was
strengthened by the replacement of slums and
former city walls with wide boulevards and
imposing apartments.
Since the eighteenth century, however, urban
growth has also spread to suburban areas and
even enveloped freestanding villages and towns.
These separate urban centers became distinct
quarters within the expanding city as they
maintained their long-established social and
economic characteristics and major landmarks
and links to the city center by public transit.
During the second half of the nineteenth cen-
tury, annexations of these suburban areas pro-
duced distinctive city districts with their own
shopping streets and government institutions.
In the past few decades, city governments
funded urban renewal projects designed to
attract higher-income residents to the revi-
talized parts of central areas. The success of
these large-scale redevelopments has given
rise to gentrification in the surrounding area.
Demand for housing that can be renovated for
higher-income occupants, however, has raised
property values in certain areas and pushed
out lower-income residents.
The presence of recent immigrant arrivals
is evident in the cultural diversity reflected in
the names of stores and restaurants in some
neighborhoods. Immigrants typically live in
poor quality suburban high-rise apartments
or inner-city enclaves left vacant through sub-
urbanization. Each enclave is dominated by a
particular ethnic group. Enclaves in Frankfurt
and Vienna are home to mostly Turks, while
in Paris and Marseille, they house Algerians
and Tunisians. In large British cities, in con-
trast, there is significant mixing of different
ethnic groups. Within each neighborhood,
however, the ethnic groups are highly segre-
gated from each other. And although there
are large numbers of Asians and West Indians,
the foreign-born population represents only
15–20 percent of the population within most
neighborhoods.
In addition to outright discrimination, the
labor and housing markets help create inner-
city enclaves. Low wages force immigrants to
rent lodgings in deteriorating inner-city loca-
tions. The internal cohesiveness of the ethnic
groups also contributes to residential segrega-
tion. Existing residents are more likely to share
information about vacancies in their neighbor-
hood with members of their own ethnic group.
Housing
Apartment living is common in Europe.
Apartments are a good land-use choice when
space is at a premium and land values are
high. Instead of growing outward, cities grew
upward, to the limit of the height regulations.
The multistory apartment building origi-
nated in northern Italy to accommodate the
wealthy during the Renaissance. By the early
eighteenth century, apartment buildings
had spread to the larger cities in continental
Europe and Scotland. Until the invention of
the elevator, social stratification within indi-
vidual buildings was vertical: wealthier fami-
lies occupied the lower floors; poorer residents
lived in smaller units above. Horizontal social
stratification also developed within apart-
ment blocks. Larger expensive units faced the
front; small low-rent units faced the rear. By
the late eighteenth century, as the Industrial
Revolution spurred increasing urbanization,
apartment blocks had spread to medium-size
cities. Speculators built large-scale standard-
ized tenements for middle-income occupants
and barracks for low-income residents.
The two-story, single-family row houses
with small gardens are found in England,
Wales, and Ireland (Box 5.2). This tradition
Characteristic Features within Cities 211
Box 5.2 Growing Power: urban agriculture in europe
With growing concerns over environmental sustainability and food security, attention in European cities has turned to the possibilities for urban agriculture. Liberalized laws mean that apartment dwellers in London and Rome, for instance, can keep chickens. Rooftops and garden patios now double as vegetable gardens, while old allotments are seeing new life as people want food security and quality assurance about the food they eat.
Urban agriculture is not new. Rapidly industrializing Germany became a pioneer in the nineteenth century as socially conscious lords and later city governments sought to offer relief to migrants who lived in squalid conditions in cities such as berlin, Munich, and Leip- zig. Urban community gardens had their origins as part of larger projects of providing low- income residents with a means to feed themselves. Allotment gardens, in Germany called Kleingärten (small gardens) or Schrebergärten (after a physician who promoted gardening as a means for urbanites to escape the ills of city life), were usually located on low value land, such as railroad rights-of-way. in Scotland, the 1892 Allotments Act provided a legal means for working-class people to petition for an allotment garden. during wartime in the twentieth century, allotments served a crucial role as sources of food. “dig for Victory” was a rallying cry for britons during World War ii in the same way as victory gardens sprouted across the United States. After the war, when critical shortages of food in central Europe caused widespread malnutrition in cities, small plots provided much needed vegetables. As Europe became more and more prosperous after World War ii, though, increasingly the population’s food requirements were met by an increasingly industrial, large-scale system of agriculture. this lengthening of the food chain meant that the food for most people in European cities was coming from an ever more complicated web of suppliers spanning the world.
Urban agriculture’s recent strong comeback across Europe is not about fear of starvation, but about a trend toward a “return to roots.” the slow food movement, which originated in italy and spread throughout the world, emphasizes that overall physical and psychological health is tied to healthy eating and locally produced food. trends such as the slow food movement can be seen as a desire to shorten food chains—making them closer to what they had been historically—in order to gain environmental and human-health benefits. the EU’s common agricultural policy (CAP), which constitutes the largest share of the massive EU budget, has historically privileged large, rural farms in its payment schemes, but recent initiatives have called upon the CAP to fund more urban agriculture.
the geography of urban agriculture reflects general shifts in urban morphology during the last century. Where market gardens once occupied peripheral lands around European cit- ies, those areas have long been overtaken by suburbanization. Since urban land commands premium prices, gardeners have found novel locations for farming. old tourist boats that once plied Amsterdam’s canals have found new life as floating greenhouse gardens. Sections of the former “no-man’s land” of the berlin Wall are now community gardens. Paris rooftops
212 CITIES OF EUROPE
hum with beehives, providing honey to kitchens and restaurants. And the nineteenth cen- tury allotment gardens are abuzz with a rejuvenated agricultural economy centered on the sustainable local provision of food.
Resources on the Web: (a) CoSt—Action Urban Agriculture Europe, and (b) European Federation of City Farms.
can be traced back to efforts to restrict conges-
tion in London in the late 1500s that made it
illegal for more than one family to rent a new
building.
The serious housing shortage that started
with the economic recession of the 1930s was
exacerbated by the lack of construction and
significant destruction during both world
wars. The public-housing programs that began
in Vienna in the early 1920s were stepped up
after World War II across western Europe.
Modern architecture and urban design were
combined with low-cost factory produc-
tion. Many war-damaged historic houses and
dilapidated nineteenth-century tenements
were replaced by monotonous high-rise apart-
ments after World War II.
In the 1950s and 1960s, most governments
adopted a policy of metropolitan decentrali-
zation. Massive modern high-rise apartment
blocks were concentrated in large periph-
eral housing estates known by their French
name—grands ensembles. The amount of
public housing was highest in cities with seri-
ous housing shortages and liberal municipal
governments such as Edinburgh and Glasgow
in Scotland, where the number of public units
grew to well over half the housing stock. Tradi-
tionally, public housing comprised 25 percent
of the total in England, France, and Germany,
and 10 percent in Italy. Public housing rep-
resents only 5 percent or less of the housing
in the more affluent and conservative Swiss
cities. Since the 1970s, however, dependence
on public housing has declined significantly
due to government cost cutting and privatiza-
tion programs.
In contrast, cities that developed under
socialism were less spatially segregated. Cer-
tainly mansions, the prewar residences of the
social elites, were used for political purposes
to house party officials, foreign delegations, or
institutes. But housing was viewed as a right,
not a commodity, and each family was entitled
to its own apartment at reasonable cost.
In the face of the tremendous housing
shortfalls following World War II, as well as
the needs of rapid industrialization, Com-
munist governments built massive housing
estates. Prefabricated multistory apartment
blocks were constructed in groups to form a
neighborhood unit, with shops, green space,
and play areas for children at the center. Indi-
vidual apartments were small. The housing
estates were typically built in large clusters,
forming massive concrete curtains, on land
near the edge of cities. As a result, urban pop-
ulation densities could actually increase near
the urban periphery.
MODELS OF THE EUROPEAN CITy
The concentric zone model, with concentric
circles of increasing socioeconomic status with
distance from the center, is most applicable to
Models of the European City 213
British cities. In contrast, Mediterranean cit-
ies, as in Latin America, exhibit an inverse
concentric zone pattern. There, the elite typi-
cally concentrate in central areas near major
transportation arteries, while the poor live in
inadequately serviced parts of the periphery.
In Europe, the number of people per house-
hold usually increases with distance from the
city center.
The sector model explains the pattern
of socioeconomic status in which different
income groups congregate in sectors radiating
outward from the city center. The wealthy may
prefer to locate along monumental boulevards
or upwind of pollution sources. Poorer resi-
dents are left with unattractive sectors along
railway lines or strips of heavy industry.
Finally, the multiple nuclei model describes
the pattern of ethnic differentiation in which
different groups are concentrated in ethnic
neighborhoods within the inner city or in
high-rise public housing near the periphery.
Northwestern European City Structure
The preindustrial city center contains the town
square and historic structures such as a medi-
eval cathedral and town hall (Figure 5.13).
Apartment buildings host upper- and middle-
income residents above shops and offices. Nar-
row, winding streets extend out about a third
of a mile. Some wider streets may radiate out
from the square to form a pedestrianized cor-
ridor that runs to the train station and con-
tains major department stores, restaurants,
and hotels. Skyscrapers are concentrated in
the commercial and financial district. There
are downtown shopping malls or festival mar-
ketplaces in refurbished historic buildings.
Some old industrial and port areas may have
been recycled into new retail, commercial, and
residential waterfront developments.
Encircling the core are some zones in tran-
sition. The area of the former wall is a circular
zone of nineteenth-century redevelopment.
Some of the deteriorated middle-income
housing has been gentrified, while other sec-
tions provide low-rent accommodation for
students and poor immigrants.
Surrounding this area is another zone in
transition—an old industrial zone with dis-
used railway lines. In the 1950s and 1960s, new
industrial plants (e.g., light engineering, food
processing) replaced many of the derelict old
factories and warehouses. Low-income rent-
ers and owners live in run-down nineteenth-
century housing. Some houses have been
refurbished or replaced. Certain neighbor-
hoods are quite distinctive because they house
foreign immigrants who often live above their
exotically painted stores and restaurants.
Beyond this inner area is a zone of “work-
ingmen’s homes”: a stable, lower middle-
income zone dating from the early twentieth
century. These streetcar suburbs contain apart-
ment blocks and houses without garages, and
are typically anchored by small shopping areas,
community centers, libraries, and schools.
Beyond these areas are middle-income auto-
mobile suburbs containing apartments and
single-family homes with garages that corre-
spond with the zone of better residences in the
concentric zone model. Farther out are clus-
ters of the most exclusive neighborhoods.
The multiple nuclei model best explains
the estates of public high-rise apartments and
new middle-income “starter” homes at the
urban periphery that lack basic amenities like
shops and banks. The periphery also contains
commercial and industrial activities, such as
shopping malls, business and science parks,
and high-tech manufacturing.
Beginning in the early twentieth century,
cities like London established a greenbelt at
214 CITIES OF EUROPE
the edge of the built-up area where devel-
opment was prohibited. The greenbelt was
intended to prevent urban sprawl and provide
recreational space. Commuters live outside
the greenbelt in dormitory villages and small
towns that correspond with the commuters’
zone in the concentric zone model. Airport
and related activities, such as hotels and mod-
ern factories, are located farther out on major
freeways.
Mediterranean City Structure
The structure of the preindustrial core reflects
the history of each city (Figure 5.14). In Greece
and Italy, the historic core can show traces of
the grid pattern of streets from the first walled
enclosure of Greek or Roman origin. In Spain
and Portugal, remnants of narrow alleys of the
Arab quarters date back to Moorish control.
The central town square is home to markets
and festivals; and in Spain, bullfights. The
Figure 5.13 Model of northwestern European City Structure. Source: Linda McCarthy.
Models of the European City 215
area around the town square contains the
cathedral, town hall, and the narrow streets of
the walled medieval city. Lower-income resi-
dents live at high densities above street-level
shops and offices. A retail corridor runs from
this old commercial core to the train station.
The high-rise offices of the modern CBD are
nearby. As in the multiple nuclei and sector
models, new industries are found in former
old industrial sites and in locations well served
by the Mediterranean region’s generally more
limited transportation infrastructure.
Until the nineteenth century, urban growth
was absorbed in increasing densities within
the medieval city. Larger cities like Barcelona
that removed their medieval walls in the nine-
teenth century laid out new monumental dis-
tricts. A grand new thoroughfare lined with
public works such as statues and fountains was
extended out from the city. This area attracted
Figure 5.14 Model of Mediterranean City Structure. Source: Linda McCarthy.
216 CITIES OF EUROPE
commercial development and wealthy resi-
dents, as suggested by the sector model. These
elite residential areas of parks and tree-lined
boulevards were flanked by middle-income
neighborhoods.
In the early twentieth century, suburban
sprawl began to be an issue, especially in cities
experiencing rapid growth due to industriali-
zation and rural-to-urban migration. Squat-
ter settlements encircled the outskirts of cities.
After World War II, these were replaced with
low-cost, high-rise public housing that today
contains low-income households. Farther out,
near a natural resource or industrial plant,
are the remote, poorly serviced satellite com-
munities for low-income residents and recent
immigrants.
Central and Eastern European City Structure
Prior to World War II, the internal structure
of cities in central and eastern Europe was
much the same as in western Europe. Begin-
ning in the late 1940s, however, the imposition
of socialist planning set “Eastern Bloc” cities
on a different trajectory, resulting in a set of
features that typified Communist-era cities.
These cities did not conform to Western mod-
els of urban structure because land use was
based more on government decisions than
economic forces.
A typical socialist city contained a central
square for political gatherings. Following the
imposition of socialism, former mansions
were converted to government use, religious
establishments were used for other purposes,
and statues of revolutionary heroes dot-
ted the cityscape. Clusters of housing estates
and neighborhood units were interspersed
with factories, transportation hubs, and retail
establishments. Not all cities exhibited these
features to the same degree. Few socialist
elements are evident in central Prague, which
escaped major destruction during World War
II. The socialist city model was most clearly
achieved in cities such as Warsaw that had
been severely damaged during the war, in the
industrial new towns, and in countries where
socialist ideology was especially strong.
One of the first changes to occur in the
structure of Communist-era cities after 1989
was an increase in tourist facilities—hotels,
restaurants, and entertainment—to cater to
foreign visitors. A building boom, especially in
the capitals, larger cities, and tourist centers,
resulted in foreign-financed office buildings,
trade centers, and shopping malls becoming
a common feature of cities like Berlin, Buda-
pest, and Prague (Figure 5.15). These are also
found in brownfield redevelopments. Corpo-
rate logos and billboards have become very
visible signs of change. Suburbanization has
increased dramatically, but relatively strict tra-
ditions of planning regulation often mean that
a suburban development will have a core of a
historic village and be linked to the city center
by public transit. Nevertheless, many cities are
becoming increasingly oriented toward the
automobile, as witnessed by large commercial
and office park developments at the periphery
along ring roads.
DISTINCTIVE CITIES
London: Europe’s Global City
As hub of the British Empire, London became
the center of global economic and politi-
cal power in the nineteenth century. Today,
London enjoys global city status shared by
New York and Tokyo. Greater London has a
population of over 8.5 million, and, its metro-
politan area boasts more than 14 million peo-
ple. At the head of navigation on the Thames
Distinctive Cities 217
River, London dominates the United King-
dom from southeast England. It is the seat of
national government, core of the English legal
system, headquarters for TNCs, and a leading
center for banking, insurance, advertising, and
publishing.
Figure 5.15 Model of Central and Eastern European City Structure. Source: Corey Johnson.
218 CITIES OF EUROPE
In 1666, a fire destroyed virtually the
entire city, setting off an immediate building
boom. Many historic structures survived until
bombed in World War II. London’s old nick-
name, “The Smoke,” recalls the days when a
haze of pollution from industrial and domes-
tic chimneys hung over the city. London has
since undergone deindustrialization and a
shift to services and modern manufacturing.
Despite these changes, London remains firmly
rooted in its historic past.
Central London grew around two core
areas, both along the Thames: the City of Lon-
don (port and commercial hub) and the City
of Westminster (government and religious
hub). The former developed from a Roman
fort, Londinium, which became the fifth-larg-
est city north of the Alps with trade networks
extending as far as the Baltic and Mediterra-
nean. In the medieval period, London’s pro-
tected inland site and strategic location for
North Sea and Baltic trade allowed port and
commercial activities to thrive. The docks
spread from the Tower of London into the
East End. Specialized market areas developed
near St. Paul’s Cathedral in the original square
mile of the Roman city. This “City of London”
is now the financial precinct, containing the
offices of the world’s largest banks and insur-
ance companies. The City also houses pow-
erful institutions such as the Stock Exchange
and the Bank of England.
About two miles (3.2 km) upriver, the
“City of Westminster” developed around
Westminster Abbey to become a second
core during the medieval period. The pre-
sent Houses of Parliament were built in the
mid-nineteenth century and Queen Victoria
made Buckingham Palace the monarch’s res-
idence in 1837. This institutional core grew
eastward toward the commercial core along
Whitehall, where government offices include
10 Downing Street, the prime minister’s resi-
dence (Box 5.3). The royal hunting grounds
in the west became St. James’s, Green, Hyde,
and Regent’s Parks. The area attracted man-
sions of the nobility, centers of culture such
as the National Gallery, and exclusive shops.
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
large-scale townhouse developments were
speculatively built for the aristocracy. Belgra-
via, the last of these West End developments,
has survived as an affluent neighborhood.
In the nineteenth century, major retail-
ing axes developed along Oxford and Regent
Streets. In addition to the The City, the inner
city (12 of London’s 32 boroughs) comprises
a ring of nineteenth- and early-twentieth-
century suburbanization. From the early
1840s, the railways allowed wealthier fami-
lies to move farther out. The higher-density
Victorian and Edwardian housing nearer to
the center included middle-income detached
and row houses such as those in Islington
and laborers’ cottages in the East End. With
increasing industrialization and the incredible
growth of new docks, the East End became
home to the poorest immigrants.
Much of the original housing in the East
End is gone—destroyed in World War II air
raids or replaced by high-rise public housing,
now deteriorating. Other housing, dispersed
among old factories, warehouses, docks, and
railway yards, is in poor condition too. Many of
the decaying middle-income residences have
been subdivided into low-rent apartments.
Within the inner city, however, residents are
differentiated into neighborhoods, each with
its own high street, socioeconomic and ethnic
mix, and political and sporting allegiances.
Since the early 1980s, an extensive area of
London, the Docklands, has been revitalized
through public and private investment. The
British government established an Urban
Distinctive Cities 219
Box 5.3 Security and Surveillance in london
Cities—especially world cities such as London—are a preferred location for terrorist attacks, for several reasons. First, they have symbolic value. they are not only dense concentrations of people and buildings but also symbols of national prestige and military, political, and financial power. A bomb in London’s Underground (subway) arouses international alarm and is communicated instantly to a world audience. Second, the assets of cities—densely-packed with a large mix of industrial and commercial infrastructure—make them rich targets for ter- rorists. third, cities are nodes in vast international networks of communications—reflecting not only their power but also their vulnerability. A well-placed explosion can cause enormous reverberations by triggering fear and economic dislocation. Finally, word gets around quickly in high-density localities. these kinds of environments can be a source of recruits for ter- rorist organizations.
Central London has attempted to reduce the real and perceived threat of terrorist attacks. Physical and increasingly technological approaches to security have been adopted at ever more expanded scales. in 1989, the prime minister installed iron security gates at the entrance to downing Street to control public access (Figure 5.16). in 1993, a security cordon was set up to secure all entrances to the financial zone of the City of London (the “Square Mile”).
Figure 5.16 the iron security gates at the entrance to downing Street in London prevent the public from getting close to the official residence of the Prime Minister. Source: Photo by Linda McCarthy.
220 CITIES OF EUROPE
the 30 entrances to the City were reduced to seven, with road-checks manned by armed police. over time, the scale of this security cordon was increased to cover 7 percent of the “Square Mile” (Figure 5.17).
Figure 5.17 Since the 1990s, terrorist threats have increased and so has the security zone in London’s financial district, “the City.” Source: Adapted from J. Coaffee, “Rings of Steel, Rings of Concrete and Rings of Confidence,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 28 (2004): 204.
As a territorial approach to security, this cordon was augmented by enhanced surveil- lance, especially by retrofitting the closed circuit tV (CCtV) system. the police, through its “CameraWatch” partnership effort, encouraged private companies, such as retail estab- lishments, offices, and warehouses, to install CCtV. At the seven entrances to the security cordon, 24-hour Automated number Plate Recording (AnPR) cameras, linked to police data- bases, were installed. the City of London is now the most surveilled space in the United Kingdom, and perhaps the world, with some estimates of the number of private and public CCtV cameras as high as nearly half a million. this level of surveillance raises important questions about how best to balance the benefits of surveillance associated with crime pre- vention and detection against the drawbacks for urban residents associated with the loss of privacy and threats to civil liberties.
Sources: J. Coaffee, “Rings of Steel, Rings of Concrete and Rings of Confidence,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 28 (2004): 201–11; h. V. Savitch with G. Ardashev, “does terror have an Urban Future?” Urban Studies 38 (2001): 2515–33.
Distinctive Cities 221
Development Corporation that used public
funds to stimulate private development. Until
the Shard was built at London Bridge, the city’s
tallest building was a 50-story tower contain-
ing offices and specialty stores built at Canary
Wharf. Dockland revitalization projects such
as this now extend as far west as upscale Saint
Katharine Docks (just east of the Tower of
London). These dockland developments have
attracted higher-income occupants and pro-
moted gentrification.
Outer London is a lower-density belt of
interwar housing with some shopping streets
and industrial parks. These outer suburbs
comprise the remaining 20 of London’s 32
boroughs. Between 1918 and 1939, the expan-
sion of the London Underground (subway)
and private automobile use promoted subur-
banization. Middle-income residents live in
well-maintained houses with gardens. Neigh-
borhood stability is strong. Second-gener-
ation immigrants have moved into pockets
of older housing. An innovative approach to
London’s traffic congestion was the introduc-
tion of a daily congestion charge for motor-
ists driving into the most heavily congested
zone of the city. The estimated benefits have
been a more than 20 percent reduction in traf-
fic entering the zone, and funds to reinvest in
public transportation.
The outer suburbs end abruptly at a 5–10
mile (8–16 km) wide greenbelt within which
development is restricted to prevent sprawl
and provide recreational space. Villages and
small market towns remain much as they were
when the greenbelt was established in 1939.
Growth pressures are evident only in the rural
dwellings that have been gentrified by newer
wealthy residents. Prohibiting development
within the greenbelt has forced growth into
either the existing built-up area or farther
out. Eight new towns were built beyond the
greenbelt to house London’s overspill popula-
tion and migrants from the rest of the United
Kingdom. This metropolitan fringe extends
more than 50 miles (80 km) from the city
center and includes large towns like Guildford,
Reading, and Luton. The relatively strong
economy, the removal of trade barriers within
the European Union, and business from the
Channel Tunnel have put pressures on hous-
ing, government infrastructure, and transpor-
tation services. The high-speed rail line that
includes the Channel Tunnel (or “Chunnel”)
passes under the English Channel and con-
nects London to Paris and Brussels.
Paris: France’s Primate City Par Excellence
The city of Paris has a population of over 2
million people, but with more than 12 million,
it is Europe’s second-largest metropolitan
area. As France’s primate city, Paris dominates
the national urban system and the country’s
economy, politics, and culture. In the wake of
deindustrialization, Paris has become a major
international center for modern industry and
finance. The outer suburbs contain high-tech
plants and research and development compa-
nies. Inner-city workshops produce haute cou-
ture and jewelry.
Since World War II, Paris has grown almost
continuously due to migration from the rest
of France and the former French empire, and
the city’s high proportion of young adults
of childbearing age. Much of this growth
has been concentrated in the outer suburbs.
The city center and inner suburbs are losing
population.
The original site of Paris was an island in the
Seine, today called Île de la Cité (Figure 5.18).
The Romans seized the island in 52 ce from the
Parisii, a Gallic tribe. They built a temple and
a palace for the city’s governor, and the island
222 CITIES OF EUROPE
settlement attracted convents and churches.
The magnificent Gothic cathedral of Notre
Dame was begun in the twelfth century and
took more than 170 years to complete.
As a royal center, the grandeur of its archi-
tecture and planning made Paris an intensely
monumental city. The “Royal Axis” is the
imposing entry to the city. It runs from the
Louvre (a royal palace, now national art gal-
lery) and Tuileries Gardens across the Place
de la Concorde, along the Champs-Élysées,
to the Arc de Triomphe. The nearby Eiffel
Tower was erected for the Paris exposition
of 1889. The tallest structure in Paris, the
Eiffel Tower is one of the most recognizable
monuments in the world. Paris still produces
imposing architecture. Initially, controversial
structures include the sleek glass pyramid in
the nineteenth-century forecourt of the Lou-
vre and the Pompidou Center, the national
museum of modern art, nicknamed the “arty
oil refinery” for its multicolored exterior ven-
tilation and steel-and-glass escalators.
The Paris region, Île de France, comprises
eight administrative units (départements) that
date from the French Revolution. Most famil-
iar to tourists, the innermost coincides with
the historic City of Paris. This high-density
area developed within the confines of the
medieval wall. Its distinct quarters include Île
de la Cité. Facing downstream, the “right bank”
of the Seine has become the economic heart
of Paris. It contains offices, fashionable shops,
hotels, restaurants, and high- and middle-
income apartments. The “left bank,” the seat
of intellectual and cultural life, is dominated
Figure 5.18 Paris evolved around an island in the Seine River: Île de la Cité. today, it is most famous for the cathedral of notre dame, whose spire is barely visible here. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Distinctive Cities 223
by its oldest part, the Latin Quarter, with the
Sorbonne University, bookshops, theaters, and
middle- and low-income apartments. Unlike
London, there are few large parks. Paris gets
its feeling of openness and greenery from the
wide boulevards and tree-lined river walkways.
The outer parts of Paris include the “little
ring” (petite couronne) of inner suburbs that
extends out about 15 miles (24 km) from the
center. It developed between the late 1800s
and World War II. Interwar speculative devel-
opments of single-family homes were built on
prime sites. Public high-rise apartments were
erected later on the less marketable land. The
big ring (grande couronne) of outer suburbs
spreads out another 10–15 miles (16–24 km)
and contains the postwar grands ensembles of
poorly serviced public high-rise apartments.
These poor suburban communities contain
the highest proportions of Muslims in France.
Three groups of immigrants—from North
Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Turkey—
together comprise about 50 percent of the
immigrant population in the Ile-de-France
region. As many as one-third of suburban res-
idents—increasingly not only newly arrived
but also second- and third-generation—live
below the poverty line. Although France
prides itself on being a progressive society,
discrimination against many of these subur-
ban residents continues to fly in the face of the
ideals of liberty, equality, and fraternity.
Beginning in the late 1940s after the publi-
cation of Jean-François Gravier’s book, Paris
and the French Desert, planners began to focus
on counteracting the extraordinary economic
and demographic primacy of Paris. National
decentralization policies attempted to limit
growth and congestion problems within the
Paris region, while promoting development
in the eight métropoles d’équilibre of Lille-
Roubaix-Tourcoing, Metz-Nancy, Strasbourg,
Lyon, Marseille, Toulouse, Bordeaux, and
Nantes-St. Nazaire. Five new towns (St. Quen-
tin-en-Yvelines, Evry, Melun-Senart, Cergy-
Pontoise, and Marne-la-Vallée) were built
along two east-west axes of growth to the
north and south of Paris. These new towns
grew as extensions to the city, however, and
became middle-income dormitory communi-
ties for some of the more than 1 million daily
commuters to central Paris.
Complementing the new towns are four
suburban employment centers. The largest and
most successful is La Défense. It boasts high-
rise offices containing the headquarters of
TNCs, shops, public buildings, and housing. Its
modern Grand Arche is visible from the Arc de
Triomphe along Avenue Charles-de-Gaulle—
the modern extension of the “Royal Axis.”
Barcelona: Capital of Catalonia
With more than 1.6 million people, Barcelona
is Spain’s second-largest city after the capital,
Madrid. On the northeastern coast of Spain,
Barcelona is the country’s largest port and
leading industrial, commercial, and cultural
center. Housing the seat of the Catalan gov-
ernment, this regional capital of Catalonia is a
bilingual city: Spanish and Catalan are widely
spoken official languages (Figure 5.19).
The Phoenicians founded Barcelona more
than 2,000 years ago. The street plan reflects its
three main phases of growth—its ancient and
medieval origins, nineteenth-century addi-
tions, and late-twentieth and early twenty-
first-century suburbs. The old town is the
symbolic and administrative center of the city.
Remnants of the Roman wall and grid pattern
of streets are overlain by the narrow streets of
the medieval core. Here, residents and tour-
ists alike stroll along the famous Ramblas.
Barcelona is the most popular tourist port
224 CITIES OF EUROPE
in the Mediterranean with more than 7 mil-
lion annual visits, including 2.5 million from
cruise ships.
In 1859, Ildefons Cerdà drew up a plan of
expansion into the area of the former medi-
eval wall. His pioneering design was based
on a grid pattern with wide, straight boule-
vards and unique 8-sided city blocks contain-
ing parks surrounded by apartment houses.
Largely ignored during the nineteenth- and
early-twentieth-century era of speculative
growth, Cerdà’s plan was fully realized only in
the Eixample district, a new precinct that was
built just north of the old city. This new devel-
opment also contains the high-rise offices and
apartments of the modern CBD.
At the end of the Spanish Civil War in 1939,
when the country was still a dictatorship, Bar-
celona’s Catalan culture was suppressed and
the city experienced uncontrolled speculative
development without adequate public infra-
structure and services. Massive rural-to-urban
migration fueled rapid population growth.
Tens of thousands of illegal squatters ended
up in shantytowns at the sprawling edge of
the city. In the 1960s and 1970s, several hun-
dred thousand poorly designed and serviced
peripheral high-rise public apartments were
built to address the acute housing shortage.
Since the mid-1970s and the establish-
ment of Spain’s parliamentary democracy,
the increased autonomy of Barcelona’s elected
local governments contributed to a rebirth of
planning as well as growing prosperity. Barce-
lona’s urban renewal program benefited from
funding for infrastructure from the European
Union. The construction of the 1992 Olympic
village helped rejuvenate an area of derelict
docks into waterfront redevelopments (Box
5.4). Popular World Heritage sites include
a park by Antoni Gaudí—Park Güell—and
his unfinished church—Sagrada Familia—
financed by private donations since 1882!
At the same time, a continued influx
of poor residents puts pressure on hous-
ing, infrastructure, and services. These poor
migrants become socially, economically, and
locationally polarized in the poorest inner-city
Figure 5.19 throughout Catalonia, signs of Catalan nationalism— and separatism—are to be found. this banner, in Girona, speaks to the world in English. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Distinctive Cities 225
Box 5.4 Making the Spectacular Happen: Mega-events in european Cities
Mega-events such as the olympics, FiFA’s World Cup, and world expos, involve huge public expenditures, massive construction projects in already dense built environments, and logis- tical and security nightmares. Why, then, do cities across Europe continue to covet them? Some people see mega-events as a way of putting their city on the map. the spectacle and intense scrutiny that a mega-event brings are seen as potentially associated with investment and tourism long after the event is over. Whether the legacies of mega-events justify their incredible upfront costs remains open to debate.
nevertheless, these legacies do have long-lasting impacts on urban landscapes across Europe. barcelona, Spain, hosted the 1992 Summer olympic Games, and it is often touted as a city that was transformed positively by hosting this mega-event. Local and national govern- ments invested in infrastructure projects, such as demolishing waterfront factories and ware- houses and building parks and an olympic village in their place. nearly 50 miles (80 km) of new roads were constructed (15 percent more than before), the airport was renovated, and hotel capacity was dramatically increased. barcelona now ranks among Europe’s most popular tourist destinations, and this in part can be attributed to the city’s reputation shifting after 1992 from a run-down industrial city to a vibrant, culturally rich, and beautiful city on the sea. other Euro- pean cities to host Summer olympic Games recently include Athens (2004) and London (2012).
London’s 2012 olympics illustrate some of the challenges of organizing mega-events in big cities. Coming in the wake of terrorist bombings in the city several years before and generalized fears about terrorists targeting spectacles with spectacular attacks, the London games were a massive security operation. by some accounts they were the largest peacetime security operation in the country’s history. during the games, 13,500 military troops—in addition to tens of thousands of police—were deployed to help keep order, an aircraft car- rier docked on the thames, and surface-to-air missiles were stationed on apartment roof- tops. Protestors protested, and debates raged in the London newspapers about displacing low-income people to build venues, banning displays of brand names that were not official sponsors, and costs to the public in the wake of the financial crisis and government belt tightening. At the conclusion of the games, the success seemed to be measured by the world press in large part by the fact that nothing truly disastrous or embarrassing occurred.
there is growing debate in Europe and elsewhere as to whether the production costs of hosting mega-events are worth the potential benefits. Certainly investments in infrastructure carry benefits for host cities long after the visitors leave, but specialized stadiums and other venues often simply fall into disuse, as the case of Athens illustrates. the swimming pavil- ion, beach volleyball arena, and softball arena built for the 2004 olympics are crumbling, causing many Athenians to ask themselves if the $15 billion dollars to host the games might have been better spent.
Source: Ferran brunet y Cid. The economic impact of the Barcelona Olympic Games, 1986–2004. barcelona: Centre d’Estudis olímpics UAb, 2005.
226 CITIES OF EUROPE
neighborhoods and peripheral public apart-
ment blocks. In contrast, higher-income
residents live in nicer central districts or well-
serviced lower-density parts of the suburbs.
Oslo: Low-Key Capital of Norway
Oslo is the largest urban center in Norway as
measured by both the more than 600,000 peo-
ple that inhabit the city and its metropolitan
area population of about 1.5 million. At the
mouth of the Oslofjorden (Oslo Fjord), this
city is Norway’s capital, main port, and lead-
ing commercial, communications, and manu-
facturing center.
Oslo was founded around 1000 ce and
became the national capital in 1299. After a
devastating fire in 1624, King Christian IV
of Denmark designated another site for the
town nearer Akershus Castle on the east side
of the inner fjord. The new town was named
Christiania (later Kristiania). It was planned
with a grid system of spacious streets, a square
located between the town and castle, and
ramparts protecting its northern flanks. For
fire resistance, buildings were required to be
constructed of brick or stone; soon, however,
extensive tracts of wooden houses were built
on the outskirts of the built-up area. The
town grew slowly: in 1661 only around 5,000
residents had made Christiana their home; by
1800 the population had risen to only 10,000.
During the mid-1800s, the administra-
tive function of the city was augmented by
industry, based mainly on textiles and wood
processing. Many landmarks, such as the
university, royal palace, parliament, national
theater, and stock exchange, were built. The
city expanded in a largely unplanned manner
as the population swelled to 28,000 by 1850
and 228,000 by 1900. In 1925, the city reverted
to its original name, Oslo. After World War II,
Oslo’s outward expansion continued, largely
as a result of public policies that subsidized
owner-occupied housing.
Oslo has 40 islands and 343 lakes; about
two-thirds of the city comprises protected
natural areas, which give it a picturesque
appearance. While most of the surround-
ing forests and lakes are private, the public is
strongly against developing them. As is com-
mon throughout northern Europe, the city
extends around the port, is flanked by the
centrally located train station, has a royal pal-
ace overlooking the historic core, and pedes-
trianized shopping streets. Oslo is where the
Nobel Peace Prize is awarded because Alfred
Nobel decided that this prize—awarded to the
International Campaign to Ban Landmines,
Doctors without Borders, and the European
Union, to name a few—was to be awarded by
a Norwegian committee (while the other four
prizes were to be awarded by Swedish com-
mittees). Despite being Scandinavia’s oldest
capital, Oslo today is a modern, though low-
key, city.
Berlin: The Past Always Present
in Germany’s Capital
Around every corner, across every bridge,
and in nearly every U-Bahn (subway) station,
Berlin offers tantalizing morsels from its fasci-
nating past. Relatively unimportant for most
of its 800-year history, Berlin found itself in
the middle of many important political strug-
gles of the nineteenth and twentieth centu-
ries. More recently, as the capital of reunified
Germany and a key political node in the Euro-
pean Union, Berlin continues to undergo pro-
found changes.
Berlin had rather humble beginnings in
the thirteenth century on the flat, glaciated
marshlands of the North European Plain at a
Distinctive Cities 227
convenient crossing point on the Spree River.
The growth of Berlin reflected its political for-
tunes as the center of what would become the
Kingdom of Prussia. The architectural hey-
day of the city came after 1701 as the official
capital of Prussia. The royalty sought to give
the capital an impressive built environment
worthy of long-established capital cities such
as Paris, Vienna, and London. Walking along
Unter den Linden, the city’s most important
axis, you see the bravado of the Prussian ruling
family, the Hohenzollerns, who built up the
boulevard during the early nineteenth century
to project their pride after helping to defeat
Napoleon’s armies. The street culminates at
the Brandenburg Gate, a monument symbolic
of Prussian power, German Imperial preten-
sion, Cold-War division, and since 1990, a
reunified Germany. As people walk through
the Brandenburg Gate, they are confronted by
more history: to the south, the Memorial to
the Murdered Jews of Europe; to the north, the
center of Germany’s government in the reno-
vated Reichstag building with its huge glass
dome symbolizing the transparency of the
Federal Parliament. Perhaps more than any
other spot in the city, modern and old, painful
and joyous coexist in an almost surreal urban
assemblage.
The growing power of Prussia during the
1800s was accompanied by industrialization.
Large companies such as Siemens and AEG
were founded, while Berlin-based insurance
firms (e.g., Allianz) and banks (e.g., Deutsche
Bank) served the booming industrial econ-
omy. Reflecting shifting political fortunes,
none of these TNCs remain. But the evidence
of Berlin’s status as one of Europe’s major
industrial cities can still be seen. Working-
class apartment houses from its industrial
heyday are found in neighborhoods such as
Wedding and Kreuzberg, which encircle the
historic core. The city’s old industrial brew-
eries have found new life in post-unification
Germany as cultural and arts centers. The
Schultheiss brewery in Prenzlauer Berg is now
a cultural center and shopping area called Kul-
turbrauerei, and the Kindl brewery in Neu-
kölln houses artist studios and apartments.
Berlin also became a major transportation
hub during the nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries. The major trunk rail line winds its
way through the city center, stopping at iconic
stations like Zoologischer Garten, Lehrter Sta-
tion (the main station, the largest in Europe),
Friedrichstrasse, and Alexanderplatz.
Berlin’s economic and demographic peak
came in about 1940 when it was the industrial,
transportation, and government center of the
Third Reich. Its population was over 4 million
in 1939 on the eve of Germany’s invasion of
Poland, compared with just over 3.5 million
today. The Nazis left their indelible mark on
Berlin, although not entirely as planned. Hit-
ler’s planned Germania, a megalomaniacal
rebuilding of Berlin’s core as the capital of the
German Empire, was never realized. The most
readily apparent legacy of the war is destruc-
tion. The core of the city was up to 95 percent
destroyed during bombing raids by the Allies
and the bloody campaign of the Soviet Army
during the last days of the war.
After World War II, when Berlin was divided
into four sectors by the Allies (France, Britain,
United States, Soviet Union), the priority was
constructing housing for the remaining peo-
ple and large refugee population in both East
and West Berlin. The results were often more
functional than architecturally appealing.
Though bland housing blocks are still appar-
ent, some Cold-War prestige projects remain.
The Stalinallee (later Karl-Marx-Allee) in East
Berlin was designed as a showcase of Com-
munist architecture, and it offers remarkable
228 CITIES OF EUROPE
insights into the aesthetic ideals of the Com-
munist regime. In West Berlin, projects such
as the Cultural Forum, home to the concert
hall of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, is
a modernist icon, which was designed to show
off the merits of West Germany’s social mar-
ket economic system.
Since reunification in 1990, Berlin has been
the site of one of the largest urban reconstruc-
tion efforts of all time. Potsdamer Platz, a
prewar buzz of activity, was in the area of the
Berlin Wall during 1961–1989. Shortly after
reunification, it was rebuilt in the then popu-
lar steel-and-glass style. Friedrichstrasse, the
major north-south axis that the Wall once cut
in two, has blossomed as Berlin’s most fashion-
able shopping and office address. Meanwhile,
Kurfürstendamm, an icon of West German
consumerism, appears frozen in 1980’s time.
One of the few new airports to be constructed
in Europe in the last 20 years is on the out-
skirts of Berlin. The massive project, designed
to replace two airports close to city center, was
completed in 2011, but embarrassing plan-
ning mistakes and faulty construction, includ-
ing a fire suppression system that was not up
to standard, delayed the airport’s opening by
several years.
Berlin’s fascinating history is also the sub-
ject of frequent debates over appropriate land
uses, and nearly every major building decision
is accompanied by sensitive emotional excava-
tions of the more sordid periods of that past.
In recent years, this is perhaps best illustrated
by the reconstruction of the Stadtschloss (city
palace). The damaged nineteenth-century
original was destroyed after the war by the
East German regime, and on its site a modern-
istic Palace of the Republic was constructed,
a building intended to distance the site from
a militaristic, Prussian history. Demolished in
2008, the Parliament voted to rebuild an exact
replica of the city palace that would be called
the Humboldtforum and house the Humboldt
collection and gallery of non-European art.
Reconstruction began in 2013 and is sched-
uled to be completed in 2019.
Bucharest: A New Paris of the East?
On the Romanian Plain between the Car-
pathian Mountains to the north and the Dan-
ube River lowlands to the south, Bucharest is
by far Romania’s largest city, with a popula-
tion of nearly 2 million. In addition to being
the capital, it is the country’s most important
economic and industrial city. Like Berlin,
Bucharest bears the marks of its Communist
past, in the form of monumentalist Stalinist
architecture, large Communist-era apartment
blocks, and a somewhat run-down prewar
built environment. Prior to World War II and
the postwar Communist era, however, its ele-
gant architecture and social elite made it the
“Paris of the East.” Since Romania’s accession
to the European Union in 2007, there are signs
that Bucharest would like to reclaim that title.
Bucharest is relatively young by European
standards: the first references to the city date
to 1459. During the 1800s, Bucharest became
an important transportation hub, acquired
a manufacturing base, and became Roma-
nia’s capital when the country was formed
in 1862. By the end of the century, Bucharest
boasted a tram system and the world’s first
electric streetlights. The city enjoyed contin-
ued growth until World War II. The popula-
tion rose from about 60,000 in 1830 to slightly
more than 1 million at the end of World War
II. During the 1930s, a master plan for the city
sought to vastly change the compact medie-
val core and envisioned expansion like Berlin
and Paris with their wide boulevards, parks,
and grand public buildings. This laid the
Urban Challenges 229
groundwork for what would come later under
postwar Communist rule.
Bucharest suffered heavy damage during
World War II from Allied and Nazi bomb-
ing. After the war, socialist planning guided
development: industrial capacity was greatly
expanded; new housing was constructed;
and former villas were converted into gov-
ernment offices and foreign embassies. The
population increased to 1.4 million by 1966,
the year Ceauçescu came to power. Perhaps
no city in Europe bears the personal imprint
of an individual to the same extent as Bucha-
rest at the hands of this deposed leader, who
was executed in 1989 along with his wife after
a hasty trial amid a democratic revolution.
Romania’s capital allows fascinating insights
into the impact of a megalomaniac personal-
ity. Ceauçescu’s program for urban redevelop-
ment and systematization led to single-family
houses in some suburbs being replaced with
apartment blocks. He greatly expanded hous-
ing estate construction within existing dis-
tricts and redesigned certain boulevards as
impressive entryways to represent the revolu-
tionary aesthetics of socialism.
After a 1977 earthquake caused significant
damage, Ceauçescu turned his attention to
central Bucharest. By 1989, approximately
25 percent of the historic central area had
been bulldozed for a new civic center. An
estimated 40,000 families were evicted prac-
tically overnight, and those with dogs were
forced to let them go (giving rise to Bucha-
rest’s intractable stray dog problem). At the
heart of the construction scheme was The
House of the Republic, which was to be the
new seat of government. This grandiose
structure became one of the world’s largest
buildings. Over a thousand acres of neigh-
borhoods were torn down to make room
for the complex. This building consumed
virtually all the country’s marble during con-
struction and featured hand-carved wood
paneling and crystal chandeliers. The second
component of the scheme was the construc-
tion of the Victory of Socialism Boulevard.
This finely appointed ceremonial route was
intended to be longer and grander than the
Champs-Élysées in Paris and eventually
was adorned by a lavish fountain and lined
by Bucharest’s finest apartments. A rather
bizarre element of Ceauçescu’s modifica-
tions involved churches. He simply did not
like them; but rather than being accused
of ordering their destruction, he had many
moved behind other buildings.
For much of the 1990s, Bucharest suffered
the aftermath of Ceauçescu’s experimental
planning. The city was run-down and known
to visitors more for its stray dogs than as the
“Paris of the East.” The completed House of
the Republic became the seat of Romania’s
democratic parliament, symbolizing a com-
ing to terms with the past and a more forward
orientation for the country and its capital city.
More recently, as Romania has benefited eco-
nomically from its integration into Europe,
including accession to NATO and the Euro-
pean Union, Bucharest is again blossoming.
Wide boulevards that were once used to show-
case a regime’s hold on power are now monu-
ments to consumerism. Bucharest still has its
stray dogs—40,000 by recent estimates—but
the number is declining due to a controversial
municipal “killing law” that has resulted in the
extermination of 10,000 strays.
URbAN CHALLENGES
Compared with the problems faced by cities
in many other regions of the world, European
cities are fairly well off. They do, however,
230 CITIES OF EUROPE
face challenges similar to those in other more
developed parts of the world.
As the earliest place to industrialize, Europe
was also the first to suffer deindustrialization.
Rising long-term unemployment among
inner-city residents has concentrated poverty
and a wide range of social problems in some
neighborhoods of older industrial cities. These
neighborhoods also contain the city’s oldest
and most deteriorated housing and urban
infrastructure. Privatization of public hous-
ing by governments attempting to cut back on
expenditures has exacerbated the shortage of
decent affordable housing.
As private automobile ownership has risen,
traffic congestion and air pollution, especially
in the medieval cores, have reached critical lev-
els. Transportation policies in western Europe
typically shifted from investment in freeways
and central parking facilities to transportation
demand management involving ride shar-
ing and public transit. Many cities built or
extended their subway and light-rail systems.
The inadequate road system throughout
central and eastern parts of Europe, particu-
larly given the dramatic increase in car owner-
ship rates since 1990, has placed considerable
strain on roads and parking facilities. Before
the fall of Communism, most people could
not afford a car, waiting periods for car orders
were long, and restrictions on ownership
applied in some countries. A major challenge
continues to be to improve the transporta-
tion infrastructure as part of a European-wide
transportation network.
The presence of significant numbers of for-
eign workers and their families has generated
problems in some parts of Europe. Language
differences create difficulties for the educa-
tional system in countries with large numbers
of children born to foreign workers. These
students represent more than 10 percent of
the school population in some French, Ger-
man, and Swiss cities. During times of reces-
sion and rising unemployment, existing
prejudices can be intensified based on stereo-
typing associated with differences in religion,
language, culture, or race. Anti-foreigner sen-
timent (xenophobia) has contributed to some
governments, as in France, banning head-
scarves worn in public schools and universi-
ties. Vicious attacks on migrants by violent
elements such as skinheads have occurred,
especially in some German and French cities.
Discrimination against African immigrants,
as well as high unemployment and lack of
opportunities in France’s poorest immigrant
suburbs (banlieue), has sparked riots.
More recently, the considerable economic
and social changes in central and eastern
Europe have increased the opportunities for
criminal activities. The incidence of petty
crime, such as pickpocketing and graffiti, has
increased (Box 5.5). Organized crime has also
grown. Besides the more typical drugs, gam-
bling, and prostitution, “Mafia”-type crime
organizations are common in some cities.
Pollution is a problem in nearly every city
of the world, though many European cities
rate more favorably than most. Indeed, Swiss,
Austrian, and Scandinavian cities are practi-
cally sanitized daily and citizens are conscious
not to litter. Many street frontages in countries
such as France, Italy, and Spain are routinely
washed down by proprietors before they open
for business. Levels of pollution in most of the
former heavy industrial regions have fallen.
Indeed, air quality in the English Midlands
has improved since polluting industries have
closed or relocated, and even the Ruhr area
boasts clear skies and clean lakes.
Formerly Communist parts of Europe are
still tackling the legacy of weak Soviet-era
environmental standards, use of higher-risk
Urban Challenges 231
Box 5.5 urban Graffiti: is the Writing on the Wall?
Art or eyesore? Free expression or vandalism? European urban landscapes bear the marks of urban graffiti. on a stroll through just about any neighborhood in brussels, Paris, Prague, or Warsaw, you will see spray paint adorning buildings, signs, buses, and trains. An aesthetic issue for many, graffiti in European cities is also often a political issue tied up with ethnic, socioeconomic, or generational conflict.
Urban graffiti is nothing new. Ancient Greek and Roman cities had graffiti, including a caricature of a politician etched on an outdoor wall in the excavated Roman city of Pom- peii from around 79 ce. More recently, graffiti has played an important role in some of the ethno-political struggles in Europe. the basque separatist group EtA and sympathizers with their cause have used graffiti as a means of protesting the lack of autonomy within Spain and France. during Spain’s 40-year dictatorship under Francisco Franco, which lasted until 1975, graffiti was one of the few forms of protest that the EtA could get away with. Since then graffiti as political statement has continued alongside more publicized acts of violence. Similarly, irish Republican Army (iRA) markings are common in contested northern ireland cities, while politically motivated graffiti by bosnians and Serbians can be found in Sarajevo nearly two decades after the war that broke up yugoslavia.
in recent years, socially and politically conscious works of art have sprung up in Athens, Greece, a city whose middle class has been hit exceptionally hard by pressures brought about during the recent financial crisis. the city’s younger residents, many of whom are unemployed, have taken to the street and used graffiti to express disenchantment with eco- nomic uncertainty and ineffective government institutions. Some have suggested that the frustration has fueled the production of graffiti to such an extent that Athens has become a “contemporary mecca” for street art in Europe.
With a rise in graffiti, new forms of policing have emerged to combat it. Also, public offi- cials have commissioned street artists to paint murals in designated public spaces thereby giving street art an air of public approval. Such attempts by the city governments to combat unsanctioned graffiti while encouraging “official” murals are viewed by many street artists in Athens as an attempt by the authorities to control or neutralize the power of graffiti as a form of political expression.
An example of more drastic efforts taken against European street artists can be found in berlin, Germany. berlin’s cold war history and its numerous potential spaces for art have made it a blank canvas for street artists within the city and beyond. in 2013, the operator of the city’s commuter railway, deutsche bahn, proposed using drones to monitor trains in an effort to discourage graffiti—the company’s plans to use tiny remote-controlled helicopters equipped with infra-red cameras to patrol the company’s stations and train yards. While deutsche bahn claims that the drones will not target the traveling public in open spaces, the plan has met with much opposition. in a country still highly sensitive to the surveillance of law-abiding citi- zens, given a history of dictatorial nazi and Communist rule, such opposition is not surprising.
232 CITIES OF EUROPE
Sources: L. Alderman, Across Athens, Graffiti Worth a thousand Words of Malaise, New York Times, April 15, 2014; M. Eddy, Some Germans balk at Plan to Use drones to Fight Graffiti, New York Times, May 28, 2013; t. Moreau and d. Alderman, Graffiti hurts and the Eradication of Alternative Landscape Expression, Geographical Review, 2011, pp. 106–24; A. tzortzis, “bombing” berlin, the graffiti capital of Europe, New York Times, March 3, 2008.
Figure 5.20 Communism brought extensive industrial development (evident in the background) and isolation to Plovdiv, but post-Communist cell phone networks now connect a new generation of bulgarians to the world. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
industrial processes, and greater reliance on
aging Soviet-type nuclear reactors. The EU’s
stricter environmental regulations have closed
most of central and eastern Europe’s iconic
smoke-belching plants (Figure 5.20).
Since the end of the Communist era,
improved air, rail, and road transportation link-
ages connecting the major urban centers across
Europe have been laying the foundation for the
complete reintegration of the urban system.
Businesses and city governments in the eastern
European countries that joined the European
Union in the 2000s (Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech
Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithu-
ania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia)
have already developed stronger ties with their
counterparts in the preexisting member states.
Membership in the European Union has
enhanced the opportunities for former social-
ist cities to address their pressing social and
economic problems. Certainly, the future and
prosperity of Europe as a whole in the global
economy depend on creating a more econom-
ically and socially equitable situation for all
European urban residents.
As the common currency, the euro, is grad-
ually extended to more countries, the urban
system will undergo more profound changes
as governments, businesses, and people in cit-
ies across Europe and elsewhere reorient their
activities to take advantage of the changing
economic environment.
At some point in the future, serious con-
sideration will be given to moving some of
Suggested Readings 233
the administrative functions of the European
Union to cities farther east. While London,
Paris, Berlin, Frankfurt, Brussels, and Milan
will continue to dominate as major financial,
political, and cultural centers, Warsaw, Prague,
Budapest, and Sofia will surely shift the center
of gravity of the core-periphery model farther
east as the twenty-first century progresses.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Beatley, T., ed. 2012. Green Cities of Europe: Global
Lessons on Green Urbanism. Washington, DC:
Island Press. Examines some of the world’s best
examples of urban sustainability to show how
cities can be green and livable.
Hall, P., and R. Pain. 2009. The Polycentric Metropo-
lis: Learning from Mega-City Regions in Europe.
London: Routledge. Examines eight networked,
polycentric megacity regions in northwest
Europe.
Hamilton, F. E. I., K. D. Andrews, and N. Pichler-
Milanovic, eds. 2005. Transformation of Cities
in Central and Eastern Europe: Towards Globali-
zation. New York: United Nations University
Press. An overview with rich examples of major
cities on the road to globalization and European
integration.
Herrschel, T. 2014. Cities, State and Globalisation:
City-Regional Governance in Europe and North
America. New York: Routledge. Examines how
city-regions are governed by comparing Euro-
pean and North American examples.
Kazepov, Y., ed. 2005. Cities of Europe: Changing
Contexts, Local Arrangements, and the Challenge
to Urban Cohesion. Malden, MA: Wiley-Black-
well. Chapters focus on issues such as segrega-
tion, gentrification, and poverty.
Kresl, P. K. 2007. Planning Cities for the Future: The
Successes and Failures of Urban Economic Strate-
gies in Europe. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.
Examines the relationship between competi-
tiveness and economic strategic planning for 10
internationally networked cities.
Murphy, A. B., T. G. Joran-Bychkov, and B. Bychkova
Jordan. 2014. The European Culture Area: A Sys-
tematic Geography. 6th ed. Latham, MD: Row-
man and Littlefield. A major text with chapters
on cities, culture, the EU, and the environment.
Ostergren, R., and M. Le Bossé. 2011. The Euro-
peans: A Geography of People, Culture, and
Environment. 2nd ed. New York: Guildford. A
comprehensive view of Europe with two chap-
ters on towns and cities.
Penninx, R., K. Kraal, M. Martiniello, and S. Ver-
tovec, eds. 2004. Citizenship in European Cit-
ies: Immigrants, Local Politics, and Integration
Policies. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate. Examines
citizenship in European cities with a focus on
immigration policies and immigrant participa-
tion in civil society.
van den Berg, L., P. M. J. Pol, W. van Winden, and
P. Woets. 2005. European Cities in the Knowledge
Economy. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate. Examines
the knowledge economy using case studies of
Amsterdam, Dortmund, Eindhoven, Helsinki,
Manchester, Munich, Munster, Rotterdam, and
Zaragoza.
Fi gu
re 6
.1
M aj
or U
rb an
A gg
lo m
er at
io ns
o f
Ru ss
ia . So
ur ce
: Un
it ed
n at
io ns
, de
pa rt
m en
t of
E co
no m
ic a
nd S
oc ia
l A ff
ai rs
, Po
pu la
ti on
d iv
is io
n (2
01 4)
, W
or ld
U rb
an iz
at io
n Pr
os pe
ct s:
2 01
4 Re
vi si
on , ht
tp :/
/e sa
.u n.
or g/
un pd
/w up
/.
6
Cities of Russia JESSICA K. GRAYBILL AND MEGAN DIXON
KEy URbAN FACTS
Total Population 143 million
Percent Urban 74%
Total Urban Population 105 million
Annual Urban Growth Rate (2010–2015) 0.1%
Number of Megacities (> 5 million) 1
Number of Cities > 1 million
Populations of Megacities (> 5 million) Moscow (12 million)
Fastest Annual Urban Growth Rate (2010–2015) 0.1%
Largest Urban Agglomerations
World Cities Moscow
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. Russia’s urban development reflects the impact of three distinct eras in the country’s his-
tory: tsarist, Soviet (communist), and post-Soviet.
2. Russia’s cities experienced two reconstruction phases in the twentieth century, one after
the creation of the Soviet Union in 1917 and the other when the Soviet Union collapsed in
1991.
3. The main pattern of the urban system, with its strong reflections of European urban plan-
ning characteristics, was established in the tsarist era.
4. Russia’s rapid urbanization in the early twentieth century accelerated the country’s historic
patterns of urban growth and contraction over the last thousand years.
5. As a result of the disintegration of the Soviet-era socialist support system, crime and cor-
ruption have hindered the emergence of a democratic post-Soviet governance and civil
society, especially in cities with increasing in-migration.
6. Environmental issues in Russia’s urban centers are increasingly recognized as severe and
have become an important issue requiring attention from post-Soviet city leaders.
236 CITIES OF RUSSIA
7. The need to overhaul and redesign urban places and urban governance raises new ques-
tions about the roles of government and citizens in the post-Soviet era.
8. Changing demographics and shifting cultural and religious identities have reinvigorated
questions about tolerance and acceptance of multiculturalism in post-Soviet cities.
9. In the post-Soviet period, cities are no longer subsidized by the central government; many
have experienced economic recession, significant population loss and, at least, seasonal
deurbanization or ruralization.
10. Cities that are prospering are those with superior locations, strong historic roots, or attrac-
tive environments for foreign investment and economic growth.
The urban landscape of the Russian Federa-
tion, commonly known as Russia, is today
characterized by ornate tsarist-era buildings
and monuments (palaces, churches, muse-
ums) standing alongside utilitarian, concrete-
and-steel structures of the Soviet era (office
buildings, communal apartments, commu-
nity centers) and the newly erected European-
style, elite apartments and shopping centers of
the post-Soviet era. This landscape reflects the
impacts of urban development during three
distinct periods in the country’s history: tsa-
rist, Soviet (communist), and post-Soviet.
Diverse ethnic groups have inhabited this
region of Eurasia for at least a thousand years,
continually contributing to Russia’s diverse
population. A blending of many cultures,
religions and histories across the European
and Asian realms of Russia for several centu-
ries resulted in multicultural settlements that
eventually grew into towns and cities dur-
ing the Tsarist Russian Empire (1721–1917).
Under the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
(the USSR, or the Soviet Union) from 1917 to
1991, that multiculturalism was celebrated but
also tempered by communist universalism;
standardized Soviet urban forms spread across
a Eurasian territory, either rebuilding existing
cities or creating new ones (Box 6.1). Across
Russia, but especially in cities, the collapse of
the Soviet Union was symbolically marked on
December 25, 1991, as the Soviet hammer-and-
sickle flag lowered, replaced by the red, white,
and blue flag of the Russian Federation, now
one of 15 independent post-Soviet nations.
Russia began the twentieth century with
less than one-fifth of its population classified
as urban; by 1989, 74 percent of Russia’s pop-
ulation lived in urban places. The average per-
centage leveled off in the late 1990s at about
73 percent, a figure that remains stable today.
Although it has been two decades since the end
of the Soviet period, the imprint of Soviet-era
urban policy and form still profoundly affects
the larger territory—urban and rural—of the
Russian Federation (Figure 6.1) and other
post-Soviet states. The Soviet attempt to pro-
vide greater cultural, educational, employ-
ment, and housing opportunities in cities
produced specific urban landscapes; many of
these remain as Russia continues to undergo
a series of socioeconomic, political, and cul-
tural transformations, shaping urban trends
that contradict some expectations common in
the West. For example, the severity of the eco-
nomic collapse following the end of the Soviet
Union and Russia’s abrupt confrontation with
the global economy prompted many urban
workers to fall back on dacha settlements
(rural areas established in the Soviet era) to
practice subsistence farming, a process known
as ruralization.
Key Chapter Themes 237
Box 6.1 Where does Soviet influence Begin or end?
Cities evolving under post-socialist regimes are breaking away from the urban plans so strictly enforced by communist/socialist governments. Socialism’s largely compact, compre- hensively planned cities were structured internally and regionally to be self-sufficient, but this is changing today as individuals and businesses make their own decisions about where to locate residences and businesses in freer market economies. the rate of change in urban planning for the post-socialist city depends on many factors, including a city’s location and involvement in a regional or global economy, and the visions of individual city leaders.
three growth trends alter the urban form, function, and internal spatial structures of post-socialist cities, reforming socioeconomic and political processes in addition to the built environment. First, emerging land markets and commercial real estate spaces transform the urban fabric as new housing, shopping, and sometimes industrial developments are created within city limits and in suburban or exurban locations. Second, increased automobile and cargo truck ownership causes new kinds of movements in and around cities, causing conges- tion in the city but the possibility of movement into suburban locations by businesses and individuals. third, as suburban growth develops, there is a tendency for previously compact post-socialist cities, often radial or quadrangular in form, to become linear in form, as eco- nomic activities occur along arterial routes out of cities into the surrounding countryside.
While city centers, urban peripheries, and suburban locations are all foci for redevelop- ment and new growth, often-outward development is chronological. in early post-socialist city development, the most important growth region is the inner city, where densification of the urban fabric occurs as new residences and small entrepreneurs appear. in later post- socialist city development, inner city development continues but is joined by peripheral urban and suburban growth, where small-scale development is replaced by mega-shopping complexes and gated residential communities. As development continues, land outside cit- ies but along transportation routes is redeveloped first because it has the greatest access points to customers and infrastructure. thus, post-socialist city growth is both vertical and horizontal, integrating commercial and residential development in new ways in city centers and peripheries.
Not surprisingly, in a country nearly twice
the size of the United States, the effects of
“wild” capitalism and its visual imprint on
the landscape are unevenly distributed across
Russian cities. In some Russian cities, the
built environment has changed so dramati-
cally since 1991 that many cities are nearly
unrecognizable to those accustomed to quiet,
somber Soviet landscapes. Commercial retail-
ers, private transportation, and new housing
construction have altered Russian social and
cultural urban landscapes (Figure 6.2). For
example, Moscow’s Red Square is no longer
a nearly deserted public space awaiting mili-
tary parades; instead, this central-city land-
mark area abuts a bustling high-end retail and
238 CITIES OF RUSSIA
tourist space (Figure 6.3). This new socio-
economic landscape changes how people use
the built environment, creating new cultural
spaces and practices; luxury shopping and
café lifestyles have become daily activities for
Muscovites and tourists alike.
Construction of tsarist and Soviet cit-
ies emphasized urban planning principles
such as pedestrian walkways and mass tran-
sit, thus ignoring or minimizing the needs
of automobiles. Indeed, across the territory
of the former USSR, over 20 metros (subway
systems) were developed, far more than any
other country in the world. The Soviet vision
of accessible transportation for all urban
citizens thus predates many sustainability-
minded mass-transit projects now becoming
popular in the West. However, an exponential
increase in private and commercial vehicles
has occurred in post-Soviet Russia, and cities
were neither built nor have been redeveloped
to accommodate them. The concept of rush
hour has great meaning now, and for many
Russian cities, especially Moscow, rush hour
begins mid-afternoon and extends through
the evening (Figure 6.4).
The typical Soviet rings of monolithic
apartment complexes on city outskirts are
increasingly mixed: new elite apartment build-
ings are constructed alongside Western-style
suburban developments of “cottages” and
gated communities (Figure 6.5). Soviet neigh-
borhoods were often ethnically and socioeco-
nomically intermixed, but today, depending
Figure 6.2 new construction in cities around Russia (Vladivostok is pictured) relegates Soviet urban landscapes to the background as new commercial and residential buildings vie for valuable real estate locations. Source: Photo by Sergei domashenko.
Key Chapter Themes 239
on the city, stratification by socioeconomic
class and sometimes by ethnicity is beginning
to occur, as upwardly mobile residents choose
to live in newly constructed, high-security
apartments or McMansions in suburban or
exurban locations. Cultural and social change
is noted in the replacement of Communist
Party billboards (formerly present in every
city and town) with brilliant neon and ban-
ner-type commercial advertisements for con-
sumer goods and services along major urban
thoroughfares.
Post-Soviet Russia still grapples with the
legacy of the spatial framework created by
Soviet urban development. The Soviet plan-
ning regime often located settlements near
natural resources in isolated, inhospitable
environments, resulting in far-flung, poten-
tially unsustainable urban growth. In the
post-Soviet period, capitalist notions of effi-
ciency have made such cities’ locations and
industrial operations unprofitable, resulting
in economic decline and population outflow.
This type of development has been called
“archipelago urbanization,” because Soviet
cities arose like urban islands in a vast rural
Eurasian hinterland that remained—and
remains—seemingly unchanged culturally
or economically for centuries. Cities’ posi-
tion as islands within Russia’s vast territory
persists due to a lack of transportation infra-
structure connecting them or, today, the lack
of affordable transportation to any destina-
tion but Moscow. For example, the price of a
round-trip plane ticket from Petropavlovsk-
Kamchatsky to Magadan (a 1-hour flight) is
usually greater than a round-trip ticket from
either of these cities to Moscow (a 9-hour
flight), indicating the centralized power that
Moscow still wields over individual Russian
regions.
In both tsarist and Soviet Russia, many
cities owed their existence and location to
questions of national security, but military-
industrial complexes now play a lesser role in
determining the location of urban investment
and growth. Today, cities previously favored
by Soviet urban and economic policies are
undergoing economic restructuring processes
not dissimilar to the restructuring experienced
by major North American and European cities
during deindustrialization, beginning in the
1970s. For example, cities such as Ekaterin-
burg in western Siberia are becoming service-
based transportation and corporate centers for
European businesses, and other gateway cities
near the Chinese border (e.g., Vladivostok and
Khabarovsk in eastern Siberia) are transform-
ing Russian-Asian business relations.
Figure 6.3 Renovations in GUM shopping center on Red Square make it a top destination for tourists and Russia’s elite seeking high-end shopping experiences. Source: Photo by Jessica Graybill.
240 CITIES OF RUSSIA
Figure 6.4 Since the fall of communism, automobile ownership in Moscow has soared, and with it has come urban gridlock. Source: Photo by Alexei domashenko.
Figure 6.5 new microrayon developments, with varied architectural styles and imposing gates and fences, are rapidly changing the face of Russia’s suburbs. this picture is from balakovo. Source: Photo by Jessica Graybill.
Historical Evolution of the Russian Urban System 241
The early post-Soviet period exposed many
cities to increasing poverty, economic collapse,
and restructuring, with large inflows of refu-
gees from more troubled parts of the former
Soviet Union (Table 6.1). Many people from
Ukraine sought residence in Russia in 2015
due to conflict in and near Crimea. Today,
rather than buying subsidized goods and ser-
vices from the state, urban governments are
challenged to transform into self-sufficient
capitalist entities responsible for self-promo-
tion in an economic climate marked by rapid
and widespread changes in the distribution of
development both within cities and between
them. Urban in-migration and development
has led to increased growth of larger cities
(e.g., 100,000 or more) in western and south-
ern Russia (Figure 6.6). Just as throughout
Russian history, harsh climate, a poorly devel-
oped (and frequently impassable) network of
roads, and immense distances still exacerbate
the fragmentation of the Russian urban sys-
tem. Russian cities will continue seeking suc-
cessful solutions to these challenges well into
the twenty-first century.
HISTORICAL EVOLUTION OF THE RUSSIAN URbAN SySTEM
The Pre-Soviet Period: Birth
of the Urban System
Historical settlement patterns have depended
on access to water, transportation, and the
location of military and economic outposts.
The eastward spread of Russia’s urban popula-
tion dates to the first Slavic cities that appeared
in the Valdai Highlands of the Russian plain
at the end of the ninth century. A vast river
network provided connectivity through this
region, often called Rus, creating vital trade
routes between Scandinavia, Russia, and the
eastern Mediterranean regions. The Vikings
established a set of city-principalities, at once
both military outposts and trading centers,
where they collected tolls from merchants
traveling through the region. Kiev (or Kyiv, the
capital of independent Ukraine), Novgorod,
and Smolensk were among the earliest urban
settlements of this period.
The region gradually began to function
independently from the Viking settlers, and
Table 6.1 Percent Urban Population in Each Federal Okrug
Federal Okrug 1926 1939 1970 1989 2002 2010 Percent change,
1926–1989 Percent change,
1989–2010
Central 19 34.2 64.3 78 79.1 81.3 310.5 4.3
Northwest 29.2 48 73.3 82.2 81.9 83.5 181.5 1.6
Southern 19.2 31 52.1 60 57.3 62.4 212.5 4.1
North Caucasus – – – – – 49.1 – –
Privolzhskaya 12.1 23.8 56.1 70.8 70.8 70.8 485.1 0.0
Ural 21 45.4 71.3 80.2 80.2 79.9 281.9 −0.3
Siberia 13.3 32.6 62.5 72.9 70.5 72.0 448.1 −1.3
Far East 23.4 46.5 71.5 75.8 76 74.8 223.9 −1.4
Russian Federation Total 17.7 33.5 62.3 73.6 73 73.7 315.8 0.1
Sources: Percent urban population in each federal okrug. The North Caucasian Federal District was split from Southern Federal
District on January 19, 2010. Percent urban population in each federal okrug. The North Caucasian Federal District was split from
Southern Federal District on January 19, 2010. 2010 Census Data; www.perepis-2010.ru.
242 CITIES OF RUSSIA
Fi gu
re 6
.6
Po pu
la ti
on C
ha ng
e in
R us
si an
C it
ie s,
2 00
2– 20
10 . S
ou rc
e: M
ap b
y Je
ss ic
a Gr
ay bi
ll us
in g
Ru ss
ia n
Ce ns
us 2
01 0
da ta
; w w
w. pe
re pi
s. ru
.
Historical Evolution of the Russian Urban System 243
Kiev became the focal point for Slavic politi-
cal and economic development because of its
location on the navigable Dnieper River with
access to the Black Sea and Constantinople. In
988, Orthodox Christianity became the official
religion, constraining the open practice and
tolerance of other beliefs (e.g., Islam, Judaism,
paganism, and pantheism). Most cities in Kievan
Rus were located along rivers and were origi-
nally established as kremlins, or forts, because
of constant conflict among the settlements as
well as for protection against raids by Mongols
and, later, Mongolian Tatars. The importance
of hills for defense and rivers for communica-
tion lines during this period explains common
features of many city centers. Kremlins were
always located on high riverbanks and streets
were radially planned, to facilitate rapid dis-
patch of troops. Many of these cities have sur-
vived today with their kremlins still intact. The
famous Golden Ring cities around Moscow
(e.g., Yaroslavl, Suzdal, Vladimir) have origins
in Kievan Rus and remain important centers of
Russian Orthodox Christianity.
After an important victory against the Tatars
in 1480, a new polity called Muscovy arose and
aided in the development of a new type of urban
network that developed east of Rus. The grow-
ing city of Moscow dominated this new region
of settlement from its location at the center of
another river system, allowing cultural and eco-
nomic growth in new directions. Access to the
Volga and its tributaries aided eastward expan-
sion; the Western Dvina led to the Baltic; and
the Don and Dnieper rivers led to the Black Sea.
Theologians who envisioned Moscow as the
‘Third Rome’ provided Muscovy with a vision
and self-proclaimed mission to build a new
Russian empire firmly rooted in Christian mis-
sionary traditions with expansionist intentions.
Indeed, Russian settlements expanded east-
ward across the Ural Mountains into Siberia,
encountering little resistance after final defeat
of the Tatars at Kazan in the middle of the
sixteenth century by Tsar Ivan the Terrible.
New settlements, such as Tobolsk and Yakutsk,
began as military outposts; they remained iso-
lated frontier towns until Soviet expansion.
Trappers plundered Siberia for furs; explorers
and scientists who sought to map the territo-
ries to the East and South also brought back
tales of ethnic groups and raw resources in
Siberia, the Far East, and Central Asia.
As the seventeenth century ended, Russia’s
network of cities had become landlocked.
Seeking access to the sea, Tsar Peter the Great
founded St. Petersburg in 1703, touching off
spectacular urban transformations within
Russia. Consistent with Russian urban history,
St. Petersburg was built for cultural, economic,
and security reasons, to be a showcase naval
and commercial port with crucial access to
maritime routes (Figure 6.7). New to Russian
urban development, however, was the cultural
purpose of becoming the country’s “window
on the West”; the city was designed accord-
ing to European planning principles. Peter
the Great also expected adoption of western
cultural norms. For example, he required men
in cities to cut off their long beards or pay an
annual beard tax, thus hoping to shear away
old Muscovite customs and traditions in favor
of new styles and habits of living.
As the new national capital, St. Petersburg
quickly supplanted Moscow. The urban focus
moved westward physically and culturally.
Reforms undertaken by Tsar Peter revitalized
both local and long-distance trade, encourag-
ing growth in new market centers as well as
in more established ones. The creation of this
new, Western-oriented city fueled social and
spatial tension between those who believed
in modernizing the country and those who
emphasized Russia’s traditional Slavic origins.
Current debates about Russia’s direction of
development mirror these earlier ones; some
244 CITIES OF RUSSIA
look to the West or East for support, and some
look inward for purely Russian inspiration
and solutions. The development of St. Peters-
burg in originally inhospitable swampy land
was also a precursor to the Soviet belief that
humans can conquer nature in the name of
economic progress. By the end of the nine-
teenth century, about 16 percent of Russia’s
population lived in urban areas. Factories
in the region around Moscow and several
nearby centers (e.g., Tver, Vladimir, Ivanovo,
Kostroma) fueled economic and urban
development.
The Soviet Period: New Urban Patterns
After the Russian Revolution (1917) and
ensuing civil war, the Communist Party took
Figure 6.7 the Church of our Savior on the Spilled blood, in St. Petersburg, was built on the spot where Emperor Alexander ii was assassinated in March 1881. built from 1883 to 1907, the Romanov family provided funds for this glamorous cathedral. Source: Photo by Jared boone.
Historical Evolution of the Russian Urban System 245
steps to consolidate its political power and
reshape the economy, establishing a political-
economic and urban system unlike any other
worldwide. In 1918, the leadership moved the
capital from St. Petersburg (renamed Len-
ingrad in 1924) back to Moscow. The move
was both symbolic and strategic: the relatively
recent capital built by the tsars as a window
on the West was replaced by an older capital
(Moscow) in the country’s heartland, which
would be easier to defend. It also made a state-
ment that the country’s gaze was no longer to
the West but to the East and within empire.
Soviet doctrine privileged urban life over
rural as the proper environment for com-
munist man, drawing on British and French
models and experiments in worker housing.
Urbanization was seen as necessary to create
an industrialized working class that would
embrace communist ideals and thus became
synonymous with the construction of com-
munism. Russia rapidly urbanized after the
communist era began in 1917 and significant
levels of urbanization continued in every
region of Russia throughout the Soviet period,
bringing electricity and indoor plumbing to
many regions. Even in predominantly agricul-
tural regions, more than half of the popula-
tion lived in urban places by 1979.
The Communist Party established a new
economic system guided by communist and
socialist principles instead of market forces,
called the command economy because a
group of central planners located in Moscow
made all decisions. Central planners allocated
all investment resources and set standards for
urban development, privileging national over
local needs. This meant that cities had little
influence over local economic development,
urban growth, and internal city structure.
Private property was abolished. To pro-
vide immediate housing for the crush of
population moving into cities to supply indus-
trial labor, private apartments were appropri-
ated and subdivided to create kommunalka,
or communal apartments, which provided
immediate housing in the era of urban indus-
trialization. Multiple households had to share
spaces that formerly accommodated a single
family. At first, such lack of privacy was tol-
erated as part of the excitement of building a
new communist society. Later, however, kom-
munalka became slum-like dwellings for the
urban poor where sharing was largely prac-
ticed out of economic necessity, not out of
idealism about a better future.
Obeying another ideological principle,
Soviet planners attempted to distribute urban
settlements evenly across the Soviet expanse,
even into harsh, inhospitable regions, obeying
the injunction of Friedrich Engels to distribute
large-scale industry equally across the country.
Using algorithms based on European and North
American urbanization models, Soviet planners
chose so-called optimal locations for industrial
development and built cities around them. This
led to the construction of new cities with pre-
determined sizes (e.g., less than 50,000 people,
more than 100,000 people) in previously lesser
developed and less populated regions. This
approach created a seemingly irrational pattern
of economic flows between quite distant cities;
the locations of suppliers, intermediate pro-
ducers, markets, and managerial bureaucracies
were of little concern in a system where trans-
portation and energy costs were state subsidized
and therefore perceived to be virtually free.
The artificiality of this urban planning pol-
icy is especially visible in the rapid urbanization
and settlement of Siberia, the Far East, and the
Far North. Soviet planners regarded mastery
of these regions as an ideological necessity and
as a challenge to their technological ability to
tame harsh environments, such as permafrost
246 CITIES OF RUSSIA
or steppe regions. Prior to the Soviet period,
small, autonomous villages and indigenous
settlements dotted the vast territory of the
Russian Far North and East. Modernization
of lifestyles in these regions in the early Soviet
period was achieved by pushing people off
their native lands and into regional towns and
collective farms (kolkhozi). Ostensibly under- taken to ease central management and regional
planning for cities and towns, resettlement
of nomadic and semi-nomadic indigenous
peoples from small villages across the for-
mer Soviet territories ultimately enlarged the
Soviet industrial workforce but greatly altered
residential patterns and traditional ways of life.
High rates of urbanization in the Arctic
and Siberian regions existed as early as 1959
and persist today (Table 6.1). Even into the late
twentieth century, the population of the Far
North (the Arctic region) remained nearly 80
percent urban, well above the Russian average
of 73 percent. The ideologically based subsi-
dies that enabled this process included higher
salaries offered to persuade people to join the
social and physical construction of commu-
nism in the new industrial settlements. This
practice highlights a significant mismatch
between the location of labor resources, mar-
kets, and urban-industrial power in the west-
ern portion of the country, and the location
of natural resources, including energy, in the
eastern and northern portions of the country.
After World War II, national security needs
also prompted the creation of a vast urban
network connected to the military-industrial
complex (MIC). Closed to outside visitors,
these cities grew in economic importance and
population only because of their attachment
to the MIC. Decades of defense-related invest-
ment in these cities’ industrial bases, housing
stocks, roads, schools, and other urban infra-
structure influenced their urban geographies
in ways impossible in capitalist economies (in
Figure 6.20, note the enclave of Zelenograd
near Moscow but distinct from it).
Subsidization of transportation included
spectacular megaprojects that aimed to
increase connectivity in the urban system.
Joseph Stalin envisioned the construction of
a canal network across northern European
Russia to promote trade. While never com-
pleted, it is remembered for the use of pris-
oners to construct it, especially the White
Sea-Baltic Canal (Belomorkanal) portion. In
the 1970s, Soviet planners began construct-
ing a second Siberian rail route, the Baykal-
Amur Mainline (BAM), to supplement the
capacity of the Trans-Siberian Railroad. The
BAM facilitated new natural resource exploi-
tation and the transportation of goods across
Russia’s vast expanse, providing lifelines to
cities located thousands of miles from cen-
tral Russia. In the Far North, cities primarily
depended on boats using the Northern Sea
Route along the Arctic coastline or Siberian
rivers. Even today, frozen rivers are used as
winter roads until the ice breaks. Crucially,
however, the USSR never developed a net-
work of highways such as those in North
America or Europe, thus greatly hampering
circulation between cities.
To help carry out political and economic
agendas, as well as to reflect the new ideol-
ogy, the communist leadership established a
hierarchical urban administrative system that
located all power in Moscow. Administrative
centers in the oblasts (political units compa-
rable to states or provinces) were subordinate
to central planners in Moscow, who controlled
resource allocation and use in each region. Not
surprisingly, administrative centers benefited
disproportionately from central investment
decisions. Oblast centers became the loca-
tions for massive industrial investment and
Historical Evolution of the Russian Urban System 247
grew rapidly. Historic industrial centers such
as Moscow, Yaroslavl, and Kazan were joined
by administrative/industrial centers in Sibe-
ria and the Far East (e.g., Omsk, Novosibirsk,
Krasnoyarsk, Irkutsk, and Vladivostok). Many
oblast centers still function like primate cities
in other world regions, where investment, ser-
vices, and labor are concentrated in one city,
creating uneven regional development.
Planners also used investments to develop
a system of secondary industrial cities focused
on heavy industry (e.g., the automotive indus-
try in Tolliatti, aluminum production in
Bratsk) or natural resource exploitation (e.g.,
nickel in Norilsk, oil near Surgut). Thus, a
new system of large cities (i.e., cities of more
than 50,000 people) developed in Russia. In a
country where bigger was seen as better, plan-
ners and politicians spoke glowingly of cities
with more than 1 million inhabitants. Indeed,
many Russians have a cultural urban bias; they
consider it more prestigious and advantageous
to live in cities and, despite urban hardships,
prefer not to leave them for rural settings.
While planners directed investment
resources to specific cities, they simultane-
ously pursued a contradictory policy: limiting
population growth in many of the same cities
through formal control mechanisms such as
the propiska (legal permission to live in a spe-
cific city). Many individuals found legal ways
around the system, such as marrying someone
who had a propiska or finding employment
and having the employer secure a propiska.
Ultimately, pressure for ever-greater produc-
tion made investments in established sites
more economically rational. But additional
production created demand for increased
labor. This had the dual effect of increasing
city sizes beyond intended targets and inten-
sifying industrial production (and thus pollu-
tion and waste) inside city boundaries.
Urban and Regional Planning
in the Soviet Period
Central planners also influenced the internal
spatial structure of Soviet cities. To create cit-
ies consistent with socialist ideals, planners
adopted specific principles to guide urban
planning that included adopting urban growth
boundaries in order to constrain city sizes,
distributing consumer and cultural goods and
services equitably to the population, minimiz-
ing journeys to work and providing public
transportation for spatial mobility, and segre-
gating urban land uses. Interestingly, some of
these Soviet principles, such as urban growth
boundaries and reduced commuting, have
been abandoned in Russia today but are pro-
pounded in the West as “smart” growth.
The basic building block of Soviet cities
was the microrayon. Constructed near indus-
try and other places of work to minimize
journeys to work, microrayons housed 8,000–
12,000 people in living areas designed as inte-
grated units of high-rise apartment buildings,
stores, and schools, providing residents with
cultural and educational services required by
Soviet norms. In this urban planning scheme,
all daily life activities (e.g., education, shop-
ping, and the use of city services like post
offices and utilities payments) could be con-
ducted without leaving the microrayon, thus
influencing how children, workers, the elderly
and others moved through the city. People
living in close proximity in the same city, but
not in the same microrayon, might never meet
on the street because of the highly structured
nature of urban life in these neighborhoods.
Built using standardized plans irrespective
of local environmental conditions, microray-
ons are numbingly similar whether in Novo-
sibirsk, Vorkuta, or Moscow, and large tracts
of identical or similar multistory apartment
248 CITIES OF RUSSIA
buildings still ring all Russian cities. For
example, similar construction materials
and designs were used to build microrayons
located in diverse physical geographic regions
found across the former Soviet Union, such
as in earthquake hazard zones (e.g., Almaty
in Kazakhstan); in cold, damp climates (e.g.,
Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky); in flood hazard
regions (e.g., St. Petersburg); or on the semi-
arid steppe (e.g., Barnaul). Microrayon loca-
tions were set by the so-called General Plans,
which determined the location of microrayons within cities, as well as all other land uses. General plans were so detailed that a milk
store could not be built legally on a site des-
ignated for a bread store. General plans were
intended to complement the shorter-term
five-year economic plans, which determined
what would be made, how it would be made,
who would make it, who would receive the
final product, and at what price.
The Urban Environment in the Soviet Period
Absent from Soviet planning principles were
concerns about the impact of industrial or
urban development on the environment or
about ecosystem limits. Planners, and the
Soviet system in general, believed in and prac-
ticed technological control over nature. This
practice, combined with the zeal to reach eco-
nomic goals, resulted in almost complete disre-
gard for the ecology in and near Russia’s cities.
Teams of planners, geo-engineers, and eco-
nomic geographers choreographed large-scale
development projects to modernize society,
especially in large urban areas. For example,
dams, hydroelectric power stations, and indus-
trial complexes were constructed in and near
cities. “Progress” was narrowly conceptualized
as industrialization at all costs, and nature was
society’s tool to create the new socialist reality.
For example, near the city of Okha on
Sakhalin Island, onshore oil deposits have been
exploited since the early 1900s. Exploitation
increased in the Soviet period, and the evidence
of poor environmental standards for extrac-
tion remains today. On a road out of town,
adjacent to local residents’ summer homes
(dachas) and within sight of high-rise apart-
ment buildings, numerous rusting and leak-
ing oil pumps stand in pools of stagnant water
mixed with leaked oil. Although signs posted
in this suburban oil field warn pedestrians of
the toxins in the area, they are often illegible or
half buried in oil muck. This mixture runs into
local creeks, which in turn empties into the Sea
of Okhotsk, where discharge from runoff pipes
disrupts ecologies in nearshore bays and coast-
lines. This environmental and human-health
hazard was—and remains—less important
than the economic bottom line.
Examples like these abound in and around
Russian cities and can be understood as exam-
ples of environmental and social injustice.
Although many urban residents were and are
aware of urban environmental issues, Soviet
newspapers and scientific-engineering litera-
ture remained silent about the growing envi-
ronmental problems across most of Russia’s
industry-driven cities until the late Soviet
period, when the extent of environmental
degradation began to be publicized. Only
in the late 1980s did people openly begin to
express concern about environmental health
issues after nationwide reporting of air, water,
and land pollution; environmental degra-
dation with economic consequences (e.g.,
decreased fishing catches in lakes and rivers);
and human-health issues (e.g., asthma, kidney
diseases, lung diseases). Many urban dwellers
found a silver lining in the industrial decline
of the 1990s—the spiraling decline of urban
environments was temporarily halted until
Historical Evolution of the Russian Urban System 249
massive increases in automobile use caused air
pollution to rebound. Disregard for the impact
of economic development on ecology shaped
investment practices that continue today.
The Soviet history of urban and regional
planning has left an indelible mark on Rus-
sia’s built and natural environments, precisely
because buildings and industries were located
without reference to market forces and envi-
ronmental conditions. In the command econ-
omy, land was not bought and sold in Soviet
cities, but allocated roughly in accordance with
the socialist ideology and planning principles
outlined above. The absence of a free market
meant that land was not recycled for other
purposes, as would have been the case in mar-
ket economies. As a result, new construction
tended to continue moving outward from the
city center. Compare, for instance, the popula-
tion density of Paris and Moscow as it varies
with distance from the city center (Figure 6.8).
In Paris, market forces mean that valuable land
near the city center is more densely populated
than less valuable land on the city outskirts. In
Moscow, just the opposite was true. The most
densely populated parts of the city were on
land far from the city center, which was often
reserved for culture and political symbolism.
Clearly visible historic rings of develop-
ment remain. Beginning in the 1930s, huge
factories were erected outside tsarist-era city
cores as part of the industrialization drive.
In subsequent years, especially after the late
1950s, a near catastrophic housing short-
age and renewed determination to improve
people’s living conditions began decades of
construction of microrayons on city outskirts
while historic buildings crumbled in city cent-
ers (Figure 6.9). Instead of developing technol-
ogy to build skyscrapers on valuable land in the
city center, central planners focused on build-
ing high-rise apartment buildings on the out-
skirts, creating a characteristic “bowl” skyline
in many cities. Ironically, this undervaluing of
Figure 6.8 Comparative density Profiles in the built-up areas of Moscow and Paris. Source: beth Mitchneck and Ellen hamilton.
250 CITIES OF RUSSIA
centrally located land preserved many older
buildings up until the post-Soviet period.
Late Soviet Period: The Beginning of Change
Noticeable urban restructuring preceded the
final economic and political collapse of the
Soviet system in 1991. Starting in the 1980s, a
phenomenon of “disappearing cities” revealed
a pattern of manufacturing and industrial
decline. Towns in European Russia lost so
many people that they no longer appeared
in Soviet statistical accounts of urban places.
While distributed throughout Russia, more
than half of these towns were in the industrial
core regions around Moscow and St. Peters-
burg and in the Urals. By the mid-1990s,
however, Siberian cities accounted for a larger
proportion of shrinking urban areas. The
exodus of residents from shrinking towns,
combined with new migration patterns west-
ward, contributed to the worsening situation
of overburdened and decaying urban infra-
structure, including housing and utilities, as
Figure 6.9 historic buildings in Vladivostok’s urban core crumble today from neglect in the maritime climate of this port city. Source: Photo by Jessica Graybill.
Contemporary Russia: Reconfiguring the Urban System 251
population became concentrated in many
large Russian cities. Thus, despite natural pop-
ulation decline (a greater number of deaths
than births), many Russian cities—especially
in the south and west—are growing rapidly
even as others shrink (Figure 6.6).
Analysis of the profile of disappearing and
shrinking towns reveals the impact of eco-
nomic restructuring on the urban system.
Because of the boom-bust economies sur-
rounding mineral and other resource exploi-
tation, mining towns account for a large
proportion of declining towns (roughly a
quarter by 2000). Urban centers related to the
MIC comprise another large proportion of
declining cities. Previously, MIC cities received
special attention from the central government,
including better-than-average access to goods
and services as well as higher salaries. This
special treatment does not continue today. For
example, in the border zone of Kamchatka in
the Far East, MICs have become near ghost
towns due to a perceived end in the need for
border control in this region.
An interesting counterpoint to the disap-
pearance of many towns is the appearance
of previously unacknowledged cities, known
as secret cities or, in Soviet parlance, “closed
administrative-territorial formations.” Secret
cities never appeared on maps, and some esti-
mates place the number of secret cities around
40. Located throughout Russia, but with clus-
ters in Murmansk Oblast, the Far East, the
Urals and Moscow Oblast, employment was
focused on highly classified military produc-
tion including nuclear research and missile
production (Figure 6.10).
CONTEMPORARy RUSSIA: RECONFIGURING THE
URbAN SySTEM
In the post-Soviet period (1992–present),
heavy industry was especially hard hit by the
Figure 6.10 A submarine in Kaliningrad, a former secret military city in the former Soviet Union, is now used as a tourist attraction. Source: Photo by Annina Ala-outinen.
252 CITIES OF RUSSIA
reintroduction of market forces and the reori-
entation of the economy away from defense.
As Russia’s borders opened, it was flooded
with cheaper and better consumer goods, and
demand for locally produced goods—every-
thing from steel to planes—dried up. Cities
experienced economic restructuring processes
not dissimilar to those in major North Ameri-
can and European cities during deindus-
trialization in the 1970s. At the same time,
regions began scrambling for new investment
capital to replace the funds that used to flow
in from Moscow. Economic restructuring
away from manufacturing to increased raw
resource extraction and export means that cit-
ies dependent on manufacturing now struggle
to cope with high unemployment rates and
few opportunities for new development. It is
precisely these deindustrializing cities that are
losing population in the current period.
In the post-Soviet period, the places with
the highest rates of gross regional product
today are found in just a few natural resource-
rich regions in Siberia, the Far East, and in
Moscow. As a direct result of the change from
Soviet central planning to market-driven
processes, there has been significant move-
ment out of Siberian and Arctic cities (as
well as from cities in the newly independent
countries in Central Asia and the Caucasus)
back to European Russia. The introduction
of market forces in cities in harsh and inac-
cessible places, such as Norilsk and Surgut,
caused rapid increases in costs for energy and
transportation, food, housing, and industrial
production. As subsidies dropped sharply,
urban-industrial complexes closed and unem-
ployment surged. Many who could simply
pulled up stakes and moved. One unique
urban phenomenon in the former Soviet
nation of Kazakhstan, is the creation of a new
national capital (Astana), ostensibly to replace
the heavily Russified older capital (Almaty)
and renew economic growth and sociocultural
importance of this place by and for Kazakh
citizens (see Box 6.2).
The uneven spatial distribution of the ben-
efits of economic reform has created vast dif-
ferences among individual cities in Russia’s
urban network. Some cities are clearly thriv-
ing in the transition to a market economy,
but those whose geographic locations are not
conducive to taking part in transformation are
struggling. However, many people (including
the elderly and the poor) stay in these cities
because of strong social or kinship ties forged
in the urban archipelago, or a strong belief in
the Soviet system. For those who stay behind,
the “new” traditional economy depends on
activities like hunting, gathering, fishing, and
domestic agricultural production. For exam-
ple, people have intensified agricultural crops
and livestock husbandry on household plots
and at dachas (Figure 6.11). In some places,
foresters report increased gathering of com-
munal forest resources such as mushrooms,
berries, or herbs. In this way, traditional agri-
cultural activities are woven into everyday life
in shrinking urban places across Russia.
Cities in regions with growing econo-
mies and growing populations (like Moscow,
Yakutsk, Vladivostok, and Kazan) have become
attractive destinations for migrants from more
depressed areas of Russia and other parts of
the former Soviet Union. This phenomenon
has rearranged hierarchical relationships in
the urban system by increasing the population
and economic clout of previously minor cit-
ies. For example, migrants from other former
Soviet republics are attracted to economic
growth and jobs associated with natural
resource development in booming northern
locations such as Sakhalin Island and Norilsk
(Figure 6.12). Cities in the Southern Federal
Contemporary Russia: Reconfiguring the Urban System 253
Box 6.2 new Capital Cities in the Post-Soviet Sphere: astana’s amazing Growth
natalie Koch, Syracuse University
“the goal is to have people talk about Astana like dubai,” explained the Master Plan chief of Astana in 2011. Some years prior, Kazakhstan’s president nursultan nazarbayev tasked urban planners in the capital with using the capital city’s development to raise the inter- national prestige of this young, oil-rich Soviet successor state. this is a task that dubai is frequently understood to exemplify. but long before the city’s spectacular rise, capital cities have frequently been treated as the “face” of a nation, or a “shop-window” to broadcast its modernity and importance to the global community. nowhere is the continued salience of this practice better illustrated than in Astana, Kazakhstan.
Astana, which simply means “capital” in Kazakh, became Kazakhstan’s official capital in 1997. Astana has served many ideological agendas of the authoritarian nazarbayev regime, which has dominated Kazakhstan since the collapse of the Soviet Union. through the city’s fast-paced development, the leadership has promoted the idea that the entire country is rapidly modernizing. Explicitly treated as the “business card” of the developing country, Astana’s rise is used to advertise the country’s new market orientation and to entice foreign investors. What has this process looked like in Astana?
in their efforts to raise Kazakhstan’s international prestige, state and urban planners use many of the same urban development strategies that have helped to raise the international profile of dubai. Specifically, these have included developing Special Economic Zones and technology parks; hosting mega-events such as international conferences, festivals, sporting events; introducing state-of-the-art new educational facilities, and developing a hypermod- ern image for the built landscape, through prioritizing a pastiche of iconic architecture by internationally renowned architectural firms like Foster + Partners.
While Astana’s transformation has been remarkable (and remarkably costly), it is not based on popular demand. Rather, like numerous other boom cities in Asia, Astana’s explo- sive growth is justified on the basis of the “build it and they will come” cliché. that is, planners claim that building in itself will create the demand. As many scholars have shown, this logic of “urban boosterism” routinely fails to deliver on its promised benefits. indeed, many of the iconic new towers, stadia, and palaces that have redefined the urban landscapes across Eurasia stand largely empty and underused. but the development continues apace. Why?
in Kazakhstan, there are several reasons. First, construction contracts are an important way of distributing state oil revenue to political elites. Many are connected to companies headquartered abroad, which are typically overpaid for their work. Skimming money off the top, elites can thus transfer funds abroad—making the continued building boom quite attractive to top decision makers. Second, the authoritarian political system is such that
254 CITIES OF RUSSIA
Okrug, such as Krasnodar, Stavropol, Vladi-
kavkaz, and Novorossisk, are also growing, but
mostly as a result of large influxes of migrants
from conflict-ridden areas of the North Cau-
casus and the former Soviet republics. This
trend, also in the capital city of Moscow, has
also brought about high populations of non-
Russians and with them, a variety of languages
and other belief systems (e.g., Islam).
Significant population losses nationwide
and depopulation of many urbanized regions
in the post-Soviet period (Table 6.1) are
clear signs of the failure of the communist
approach to city planning. In the early twenty-
first century, Russia is experiencing a dramatic
restructuring of urban centers. Whereas the
centralized economic authorities used to des-
ignate the political and economic importance
of any particular city as well as the location
of residences, individual Russians can now
choose from a widening array of housing
options. A growing trend is suburbaniza-
tion and new housing developed outside city
limits (Figure 6.5). Many new housing devel-
opments are video monitored, guarded by
security officers, and approachable only by
ordinary people cannot hold their government accountable for using state funds in a more socially responsible manner. there are no free elections, opposition figures are systemically persecuted, and popular protests are put down with swift and severe action. but lastly, many ordinary people actually believe that a beautiful capital city is important and truly makes them feel proud—especially at a time when everyone in the world is laughing at borat’s imagined homeland.
Figure 6.11 Space around many Russian homes, such as this one near Moscow, and apartment buildings is devoted to subsistence agriculture during the short summer season. Source: Photo by nancy Ries.
Contemporary Russia: Reconfiguring the Urban System 255
automated private transportation; although
this contributes to increased traffic woes, it
satisfies a desire for private space for those
who can afford this lifestyle. While there are
no systematic data on suburbanization pro-
cesses across Russia, it is clear that this trend is
especially prevalent in the European portion
of the country. Yet like past urban processes, it
is spreading eastward.
Political Urban Transformation
Democratization and political decentraliza-
tion have also influenced post-Soviet urban
geographies. The first democratic elections
took place in cities throughout Russia shortly
before the end of the Soviet Union. For the
first time, local politicians, at least in theory,
became accountable to local populations
instead of to higher-level government offi-
cials. During the 1990s, this accountability
had important new implications for the spa-
tial structure of cities, as urban geographies
began to reflect local economic needs and
social desires instead of national ones. For
example, one result of local autonomy in the
1990s was the popularity of renaming cities
and streets; names associated with prominent
Soviet leaders have been replaced with historic
names of the tsarist past. For example, Len-
ingrad reverted to St. Petersburg and Sverd-
lovsk (named after a local communist leader)
reverted to Ekaterinburg (literally, Catherine’s
City, after Tsar Catherine the Great). Similarly,
streets were renamed: Moscow’s Gorky Street,
named after the Soviet writer, was renamed
Figure 6.12 opened in 2010, “City Mall” in yuzhno-Sakhalinsk is the largest shopping mall in the Russian Far East and boasts a microbrewery for beer and loudspeaker announcements in Russian and English. Source: Photo by Jessica Graybill.
256 CITIES OF RUSSIA
Tverskaya Street. The changes contributed to
a feeling among Russians of reclaiming their
cities and neighborhoods.
Following the Soviet era, it became increas-
ingly possible to express political visions for
cities and the state that departed from the offi-
cial line, and many groups chose public urban
space as a venue. For example, since the early
2000s, extremist nationalist groups whose
views were long kept quiet by Soviet mul-
ticulturalism have held gatherings and tar-
geted non-Slavic populations (e.g., Africans,
African-Russians, ethnic peoples of the for-
mer Soviet Union, especially from the south-
west), sometimes resulting in violence. Under
Putin, these possibilities in public space have
steadily decreased. Dissident political groups
strove to hold parades on Nevsky Avenue in
Petersburg and on Red Square in Moscow, but
have been increasingly diverted to less cen-
tral spaces in the city. While a series of visible
anti-Kremlin political demonstrations took
place throughout the 2000s, particularly from
2006 to 2013, the murder of prominent politi-
cian Boris Nemtsov in February 2015 just one
day before a planned demonstration against
Putin’s government chilled a climate already
hostile to alternate viewpoints. The arrest
of several members of Pussy Riot, a feminist
protest group, after a guerilla performance of
a song in Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the
Savior and the house arrest of Alexei Navalny,
candidate for mayor of Moscow and critic
of Putin, have both been taken as warnings
to political groups that criticize the Kremlin.
Groups seeking to hold a public meeting
must follow restrictive protocols and obtain
permission from city authorities. A gradual
return to a more open urban political scene
may come from the work of groups like Open
Russia—with branches in cities including
St. Petersburg, Kaliningrad, Voronezh, and
Ekaterinburg—organized by former oil oli-
garch and political prisoner Mikhail Khodor-
kovsky, released in late 2013.
Changing Urban Structure and Function
Notable changes to urban structure include
new kinds of infill within the city, subur-
banization, and “slumification.” Important
changes to urban function include increased
finance and retail commerce at multiple scales.
Processes absent during most of the twentieth
century govern these changes—market forces
and the active participation of municipal and
regional governments.
New infill appears in city cores as old facto-
ries on land surrounding historic city centers
are increasingly torn down and the land reused
for other purposes, such as housing (apartment
buildings) or retail. Existing buildings in poor
condition but in good locations are purchased,
upgraded, and converted into office space or
upscale, gated apartments (Figure 6.13). In
Moscow and some other Russian cities, this
has led to gentrification and displacement of
long-time residents from city cores.
Suburbanization is another visible change in urban form that results from the develop-
ment of real estate markets in cities where they
had been prohibited for most of the twenti-
eth century (Figure 6.5). Carefully guarded
single-family housing has appeared seemingly
overnight in what has become a new ring of
housing developments referred to as cottages
(kottedgi) surrounding the older Soviet and
new post-Soviet multifamily high-rises.
“Slumification” of parts of Russian cities
is a result of transition from a command to a
market economy. Run-down high-rise apart-
ment buildings far from the city center are
located on nearly worthless and often polluted
land near former industrial production sites.
Contemporary Russia: Reconfiguring the Urban System 257
These high-rises, and sometimes entire micro-
rayons, are deteriorating rapidly as better-off
tenants move to superior locations, leaving
only poorer residents behind in what will
likely become vertical slums.
Finance and banking—particularly inter-
national banking—is increasingly a feature
of larger post-Soviet Russian cities. Just as
in deindustrializing North American and
European cities, the economic function of
Russian cities and the new labor market are
more oriented toward services in general, and
toward financial and retail services in particu-
lar. Members of the international financial and
banking sector have added Russian locations
near manufacturing or natural resources. For
example, European and Japanese banks can
be found in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk today, which
marks a change in the function of this city
from a small regional capital to a globalizing
city involved in oil and other natural resource
exploitation. Other Russian cities actively seek
Figure 6.13 tsarist-era buildings in Vladivostok’s urban core are being revitalized in the post-Soviet era. Source: Photo by Sergei domashenko.
258 CITIES OF RUSSIA
foreign investment to restructure their cities
via partnerships among government and local
and international businesses.
Retail commerce, powered by market forces, has also visibly changed the economic
geography of Russian cities. Previously, retail
trade occurred in state-owned stores or in a
limited number of farmers’ markets. Now,
the spatial structure of urban retail has been
altered dramatically. Transportation hubs
(subways, rail stations) are multiscalar centers
of retail trade where peddlers vend wares and
where retail centers, such as malls, have been
built (Figure 6.14). Some prerevolutionary
shopping centers have regained their func-
tions; for example, Moscow’s famous GUM
department store was remodeled as a high-
end shopping mall. The urban periphery has
turned into a new retail environment; megas-
tores, such as IKEA, are opening outside of
traditional retail centers, extending urban
retail spaces.
Sociocultural Urban Transformation
Notable social transformations include
changing labor and leisure structures. There
is a growing class with extra money to spend,
resulting in increased consumerism and more
availability of goods. A revived entertain-
ment sector has also sparked a service indus-
try catering to 20- and 30-year-olds who have
cash to spend. However, goods, services, and
entertainment remain expensive; many people
cannot afford a high quality of life in the new
Russia, or cannot afford it after leaving home
or college, as the costs of buying and furnish-
ing apartments are out of reach for many.
Recent devaluation of the ruble and economic
sanctions against the Russian economy follow-
ing support for military aggression by Russian
separatists against (see Box 6.3), particularly,
the annexation of Crimea has also constrained
the growth of this new consumer sector.
Although the propiska no longer exists,
the current registration system exasperates
people moving around the country for jobs.
Nonpermanent residents working away from
their hometowns must purchase temporary
urban registration in a semi-legal system, thus
increasing their cost of living and jeopardiz-
ing their ability to succeed in Russia’s chang-
ing spatial economy. This type of registration
system relegates them to second-class citizen-
ship in their city of employment, often putting
them and their children last in line to receive
government services, such as socialized health
care, education, or employment services.
Transition from the Soviet to the post-
Soviet era was difficult for those who were
raised, trained, and already employed in the
Soviet system, as it led to the disappearance of
many jobs, the depletion of pension funds, and
an unknown future. Many turned to the coun-
tryside to survive (ruralization), but others
(considered “victims” of economic transition)
turned to alcohol, theft, and/or prostitution.
Because of Russia’s slow response to provid-
ing social services to people in need, a new and
growing class of the very poor, the homeless,
and the disenfranchised exists in cities today.
Urban governments have meager funds to
allocate for social services; in Moscow, only
1,600 beds in 2005 gave shelter to the entire
homeless population (with homeless popula-
tion estimates ranging from 30,000 to 1 mil-
lion). Official sources reported in 2006 up to
55,000 homeless children in Moscow alone and
16,000 in St. Petersburg, but the problem occurs
across Russia. These figures include children—
many teenagers but some younger—living
without parents on the streets in Russian cities.
Many of Russia’s homeless children are
escaping domestic situations that include
Contemporary Russia: Reconfiguring the Urban System 259
extreme poverty, alcoholism, domestic vio-
lence, and neglect. Research suggests that these
social ills result from the post-Soviet economic
restructuring and are experienced at the
household level. Other causes include forced
migration as a result of civil unrest in particu-
lar regions of Russia and a migration process
in the 1990s that brought people from former
Soviet republics to Russian cities, where they
often failed to find housing or employment.
These forms of displacement especially affect
children: street children often do not attend
school, experience harmful health impacts
(e.g., contraction of infectious diseases), and
Figure 6.14 Street peddlers hawk a variety of fresh goods along the railroad tracks across eastern Sakhalin island. Source: Photo by Jessica Graybill.
260 CITIES OF RUSSIA
Box 6.3 russia in ukraine: understanding the annexation of Crimea
Michael Gentile, University of helsinki
Crimea is a strategically located peninsula extending from the Ukrainian mainland into the black Sea. it has the legal status of Autonomous Republic within Ukraine, providing resi- dents with a degree of self-determination. on February 23, 2014, ”little green men” started appearing near strategic objects in Crimea; the Russian Federation had annexed the entire territory from Ukraine in a move for which the international community was unprepared. the official “reunification,” as the landgrab is known in Russia, took place on March 18, 2014, and Russian president Vladimir Putin’s declining popularity rebounded almost overnight to unprecedentedly high levels.
While annexation was unexpected, it transpired against a background of long-term, but mostly low-grade and decreasing, political unrest with ethnic undertones within Crimea. this unrest is related to the complex nature of Crimea’s cultural geographies, to the contested political status of the region, and to the peninsula’s role within the demised Soviet and, before that, tsarist empires. Crimea was under ottoman rule between 1475 and 1774, after which a short but turbulent period of independence, under the Crimean khanate, followed. in 1783, it was annexed by Russia under the rule of Catherine the Great. the territory was subject to rapid colonization, which particularly influenced the cities. With the advent of the Soviet Union, it was included in the Russian Republic, but was transferred to the Ukrainian Republic in 1954. When Ukraine became independent in 1991, Crimea became its constituent part, backed by the support of the majority of its population in the immediately preceding independence referendum.
despite Vladimir Putin’s recent attempt to “sacralize” Russia’s connection to Crimea, sug- gesting that the two are united by an unchallengeable historical affinity, the nature of this relation is debatable.
the territory retains an important regional identity, which relates, in part, to the region’s ethnic composition, characterized by a majority share of Russians (about 58 percent at the time of the 2001 census, but decreasing since then), followed by large minorities of Ukrainians (24 percent), Crimean tatars (12 percent), and smaller communities of Armeni- ans, bulgarians, Greeks, Germans, Jewish, and others. however, the relative shares of these groups have differed dramatically over the centuries, and the Crimean tatars generally view themselves as the peninsula’s true indigenous population. they were the majority ethnic group until 1783, but declined to about 35 percent in 1897—still the region’s largest ethnic population—and 26 percent in 1921. in 1944, the entire remaining Crimean tatar popula- tion was deported to Central Asia by decree of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, who suspected the group of collaborating with Germany’s nazi forces. in 1989, the Crimean tatars were allowed to return, and by 1993 they composed about 11 percent of the population, which has since stabilized at around this level.
Contemporary Russia: Reconfiguring the Urban System 261
become targets for illegal activities. Some
work in slave-like conditions, whereas others
engage in child prostitution or drug trading.
The post-Soviet period has also brought
new kinds of residents to Russia’s cities. For
example, the influx of Asian migrants into
Russia creates fairly large groups of Chinese,
Indian, and Japanese in cities across Rus-
sia, especially in border cities of the Far East
but also in Moscow, complete with their own
banks and social organizations. The Soviet-era
representative populations of Central Asians
and Caucasian Muslims—praised by the mul-
ticultural rhetoric—have been swelled by eco-
nomic migrants who do much of the unskilled
labor in urban construction and seek to
establish or expand their places of worship
(Box 6.4). These migrants bring new world-
views, cuisines, religions, and lifestyles to Rus-
sia, which is increasingly curious about these
people and their homelands, as noted in the
increasing interest and ability to travel abroad.
Twenty-first-Century Environmental Concerns
First raised openly in the late 1980s, envi-
ronmental concerns are now growing across
Russia. Ever-increasing publications relate
the harmful environmental legacy of Soviet
urban development, suggesting an energized
engagement with socio-environmental issues
today. For example, one prominent issue
plaguing urban areas is garbage. Soviet goods
were often wrapped only in paper and string;
larger amounts of waste in the post-Soviet
era from imported packaged goods have not
led to increased infrastructure to contain
or remove garbage from urban centers. This
results in garbage accumulating in public
spaces (Figure 6.15), increasing environmen-
tally hazardous conditions, and contention
between citizens and city governments.
Urban environmental concerns, such as
motor vehicle emissions and chemical poi-
soning (e.g., lead) from contaminated water
supplies, remain largely unaddressed in many
cities. Urban environmental problems are
largely understudied and misunderstood in
the post-Soviet era. Many people feel that
solving environmental woes is the govern-
ment’s responsibility and that they individu-
ally cannot respond because socioeconomic
and political issues are currently more press-
ing. In some cases, where urban and regional
growth infringes upon land valued by envi-
ronmentalists, conflict arises when citizens
join forces to criticize or block urban growth.
Protests around the development of a road
While fears that the region was a potential powder keg of ethnic strife have long existed, political forces on the peninsula never succeeded in fully mobilizing ethnic particularism to create strong divisions within the community, not least because the Russians and Ukrainians of Crimea consistently express similar political (including geopolitical) preferences. there- fore, the 2014 annexation by Russia had nothing to do with inter-ethnic tensions in the region and neither did the doctored 96.7 percent referendum vote in favor of reunification with Russia. Rather, many consider the “reunification” to be, instead, a landgrab by Russia that has created, rather than soothed, ethnic and cultural tensions in a region already strug- gling with socioeconomic and political rebuilding in the post-Soviet era.
262 CITIES OF RUSSIA
Box 6.4 islam, language, and Space in Moscow
Meagann todd, University of Colorado—boulder
Every Friday around 1 p.m., the Zamoskvorechnye neighborhood in central Moscow fills with men of differing nationalities—Russian, Kyrgyz, tatar, Kazakh, Chechen, and more. devout islamic practitioners, the men are heading to historical Mosque to attend Jum’uah, a weekly Muslim prayer service. Many wear tubeteikas, traditional caps made of velvet designed after the yurt. others wear t-shirts or business suits. this scene emerges every Friday and becomes part of the everyday landscape of this historically tatar neighborhood.
best known for onion domes and Stalin’s gothic spires, Moscow’s architectural iconography does not represent on-the-ground realities. A center of capital and business, Moscow attracts skilled and unskilled immigrants. officially its population is 11.5 million, but when undocu- mented workers are included, the population is estimated to be between 13 and 17 million. Many of these immigrants are from areas of the former Soviet Union with traditions of islam—primarily from Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. Without including the illegal migrant Muslim population, Mos- cow has an estimated two million Muslims, leading to overcrowding at the city’s four mosques.
tensions exist between the devout and city dwellers, and among Moscow’s diverse islamic communities. this is best illustrated by police presence at the historic Mosque. the riot police serve many purposes: they protect mosque attendees from violence, check documents of illegal migrants, and help conduct traffic. however, many attendees consider their pres- ence as a holdover of Soviet monitoring of religions, impeding their freedom to worship.
because Moscow has been a site of terrorist attacks by the Caucasian Emirate, many locals express conflicting values with migrants and often refer to them with the derogatory term chyorni, or black. While these workers are valued for their cheap labor, they often do not speak Russian and have difficulties communicating with other Muscovites or even among themselves, as they come from numerous other places and religious or cultural backgrounds that were formerly included in the Soviet melting pot. indeed, not all of them are islamic. Many live in enclaves or on the outskirts of the city.
despite recent unrest, Moscow is also a traditional homeland of some Muslim communities. For example, a tatar ethnic group has lived and practiced islam in Moscow for over 600 years. Members of this group dominate islamic religious clergy in Moscow’s mosques, where prayers are conducted in Arabic, tatar, and Russian. one solution enacted by mosque leaders to ease tensions between Moscow’s islamic migrants and Muscovites is language instruction. For example, free Rus- sian language classes for migrants are offered at mosques and many Russian orthodox churches. Mosques also offer tatar language lessons so that tatar attendees can learn their ethnic language.
After state-sponsored atheism, Russia’s islamic community is growing. one effect is the growing number of Russians and Muslims studying Arabic and the increase in Arabic language offerings at universities and mosques. Moscow is a global city where many nationalities, cultures and religions converge, providing places in the city where worshippers grow in faith and connect in this megacity.
Distinctive Cities 263
through the Khimki Forest near Moscow is an
example. Such instances, however, are not the
norm in today’s Russia, where most citizens
are not well versed in opposing the govern-
ment and instead see the state as responsible
for protecting its people and the environment.
Antidevelopment movements have succeeded
in a few cases where they have been linked
to protection of sites with a particular role
in local urban culture, such as the successful
effort to block the Gazprom/Okhta-Center
skyscraper in St. Petersburg.
At the federal and international levels,
however, environmental discussions since
the mid-1990s have included the concept of
sustainability. In creating new environmen-
tal policy directives, Russian policymakers
invoke tsarist-era Russian and Western ideas
about living in harmony with the biosphere
as a foundation for creating sustainable devel-
opment. Indeed, recent legislation that rec-
ognizes the need to address anthropogenic
climate change provides hope that achieving
economic growth while balancing social and
environmental goals is a real concern among
politicians and will increasingly become so
among citizens in Russia today.
DISTINCTIVE CITIES
Moscow: Russia’s Past Meets Russia’s Future
Perhaps no city captures Russia’s long his-
tory as vividly as Moscow. Modern Moscow
is a chaotic blend of brash and unfettered
capitalism, seen in its casino lights and chic
boutiques; monolithic apartment blocks from
the Soviet period (where most residents live);
Figure 6.15 increasing consumption and lagging public services are reflected in the garbage-strewn landscapes surrounding many Russian apartment buildings. Source: Photo by Sergei domashenko.
264 CITIES OF RUSSIA
new construction of glass skyscrapers and
gated communities; and buildings renovated
in the old Russian style. New Russian Ortho-
dox churches join places of worship of many
faiths (including other forms of Christianity
and Islam) on the urban landscape. Museums
and theaters have undergone much revitaliza-
tion and reconstruction in the post-Soviet era,
bringing new cultural capital to the city.
In Moscow, Russia’s past lives alongside its
future (Figure 6.16). Founded over 850 years
ago in the declining years of Kievan Rus, the
city grew rapidly in importance until Peter the
Great moved the capital to St. Petersburg. The
1917 Russian Revolution returned the seat of
power to Moscow. On December 25, 1991,
resignation of the last Soviet leader, Mikhail
Gorbachev, once again brought Moscow into
the international limelight and launched mas-
sive socioeconomic and cultural changes.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union,
Moscow exploded with the signs of capital-
ism. Foreign investment flooded the city, and
new foreign and Russian capital created busi-
ness centers, real estate companies, and a new
retail sector. Once-empty avenues filled with
cars—seemingly overnight. In the early 1990s,
kiosks appeared everywhere stocked with an
improbable mix of everything from candy
bars to vodka, socks, and toys. Now, more per-
manent stores selling food, liquor, clothing,
and toys, as well as every other possible con-
sumer good, largely replace kiosks. Mega-scale
shopping malls in the city outskirts also have
replaced hastily built and remodeled stores.
Historically the political, economic, media,
educational, and cultural center of the coun-
try, restructuring of Moscow’s new economy
has added importance for the city’s exist-
ing functions, especially as it rises to be the
nation’s banking and consumer capital.
Moscow is vastly richer than most other
parts of Russia, partially as a result of inher-
iting immensely valuable real estate from the
Soviet government and Communist Party. But
the introduction of capitalism has still resulted
in a highly fractured city. City residents expe-
rience life in vastly disparate ways. For the
expatriate community, continuously growing
as a result of foreign investment, Moscow is
Figure 6.16 iconic Moscow River and Kremlin view at night. Source: Photo by ian helfant.
Distinctive Cities 265
ranked as one of the most expensive cities in
the world depending on choices for housing,
dining, and other forms of consumption. For
“New Russians,” the city is a 24-hour shop-
ping, dining, and business extravaganza.
For the vast majority of Muscovites, how-
ever, life in the city is, as they say, normal’no
(normal). In addition to choking traffic jams,
overcrowded metro commutes during morn-
ing and evening rush hours, and a decrease in
environmental quality along major roadways
due to the explosion of automobile ownership
in the city, normal’no also includes a dizzying
array of consumer services, fulfilling every
desire, such as 24-hour gyms and sushi and
coffee bars, businesses offering extended edu-
cational opportunities (e.g., computer science,
foreign language training), rental agencies,
and much more. In Moscow, it is no longer a
question of seeking out something new to do
or become; rather the challenge is to choose
among the many options.
Along with growth in consumer options,
the city is slowly expanding beyond its urban
growth boundary, a road that rings the city
20 kilometers outside the city center. Deline-
ated by urban planners in the Soviet era, land
outside the boundary was meant to be a green
zone for leisure purposes (e.g., hiking, pic-
nicking, camping). With the development of
megashopping centers and the single-family
housing market, the green zone is slowly
diminishing as the city creeps outwards radi-
ally, especially along major transportation
routes.
Always a multiethnic city, Moscow is now
increasingly so because of a large, constant flow
of labor migrants from other parts of Russia
and former Soviet republics. While migrants
arrive from all regions of Russia—urban and
rural alike—perceived increasing numbers of
ethnic migrants from the south (e.g., Georgia,
Chechnya, Uzbekistan) causes inter-ethnic
conflict in Moscow and other major Russian
cities (see Box 6.1). While some ethnic migrants
are actually Russian citizens, some ethnically
Slavic portions of the population feel that
increased numbers of non-ethnically Russians
threaten the economic and cultural futures
of ethnic Russians in Russian cities. Largely,
however, Moscow’s long-standing tradition of
being a multicultural locale remains, and the
city is highly cosmopolitan and vibrant. In the
post-Soviet era, Moscow now also ranks as a
world city, the first in Russia.
St. Petersburg: Window on the West—Again?
Peter the Great founded St. Petersburg in
1703 as Russia’s “window on the West,” mak-
ing it Russia’s capital city; although thousands
of Russians lost their lives while building the
city, its ornate palaces and bridges over wind-
ing canals came to symbolize Russia’s effort
to join the European community. In 1917,
the battleship Aurora, now a museum, fired
shots at the tsars’ Winter Palace, thus signal-
ing the start of the Russian Revolution. When
victorious Soviet leaders centralized economic
and political resources in Moscow, again mak-
ing it the capital, St. Petersburg was freed of
its tsarist-era bureaucratic atmosphere and
was renamed Leningrad in 1924. Aggressive
neglect by Stalin ironically preserved the city’s
many parks and its architectural heritage.
While Leningrad did not grow as quickly as
Moscow, the population doubled from 1917
to reach a high of about 5 million in 1989. In
the post-Soviet period, its official population
size declined to about 4.6 million in 2006 but
the 2010 census reported it as 4.85 million.
It remains Russia’s second largest city. Well-
known worldwide as the home of a unique
cultural legacy, including the renowned
266 CITIES OF RUSSIA
Hermitage Museum, Leningrad gained its
prestige in Soviet times from its many prestig-
ious universities and research institutions. The
city’s economy depended on educational and
research activities, particularly defense-related
industries in the Soviet military-industrial
complex.
After 1991, the city’s original name was
restored and it moved to capitalize on its dis-
tinctive past. A deteriorating economic and
financial situation caused by the near col-
lapse of government support for education,
culture, and especially defense signaled a
need for significant restructuring. In the mid-
1990s, as a result of leadership from Mayor
Anatoly Sobchak, a former lawyer active in
the political transition, the city embarked on
a strategic planning process—the first city
in Russia to do so. In contrast to top-down
Soviet central planning, this plan aimed to
be participatory, building on a partnership
between local government, private busi-
nesses, and citizens to analyze possible sce-
narios for the city’s development. Extensive
discussions with private businesses, residents,
and local organizations in St. Petersburg pin-
pointed the city’s highly educated popula-
tion; its ranking as the largest-capacity port
in Russia; and its favorable location, not far
from Finland and the rest of Europe, with
excellent access to major railroads and high-
ways. An initial concept document laid the
foundation for the subsequent Master Plan
and new legislation to standardize the con-
struction and development process as well as
to modernize city zoning. Under City Gov-
ernor Valentina Matvienko (2003–2010), the
city embarked on numerous high-profile
projects to improve its appearance and infra-
structure, including a ring road to divert
industrial traffic away from the city center. It
remains to be seen whether the government
of St. Petersburg can improve living stand-
ards and promote long-term restructuring.
Halting attempts to increase hotel capacity
and urban amenities suggest that tourism
has not grown as expected. Meanwhile, road
congestion and air pollution have increased
dramatically because per-capita car owner-
ship has more than doubled recently; the city
struggles to provide adequate traffic flow and
parking throughout the historic area.
St. Petersburg touted its success at attract-
ing investment, including plants for General
Motors, Ford, Caterpillar, and Hewlett-Pack-
ard. However, due to lowered oil prices and
other economic factors, the car market, for
example, has contracted in Russia (according
to Fortune magazine, car sales fell 10 percent
in 2014 and are expected to fall further in
2015). General Motors closed a plant in early
2015 and Ford started to operate one in the
oblast on reduced shifts. In March 2015, the
CEO of Caterpillar, Inc., which has a plant
in Tosno outside St. Petersburg, even sug-
gested that regime change will be needed to
secure increased foreign investment. As long
as the Russian economy relies primarily on its
petroleum exports to generate capital, a slow-
down in foreign investment will probably slow
related developments in Petersburg.
The protection of St. Petersburg’s architec-
tural fabric has also weakened since the late
2000s. Although the city’s culture of partici-
patory urban development has produced vig-
orous public outcry over aggressive land-use
choices in the historic center, protests against
these have increasingly failed, aside from cer-
tain highly visible examples. For example,
from 2006 to 2010, a struggle took place over
plans by the state-owned natural gas corpora-
tion, Gazprom, to build a new skyscraper in
St. Petersburg called Okhta-Center. Fueled by
residents’ pride in the traditional low-rise city
Distinctive Cities 267
skyline punctuated by cathedral spires, resist-
ance to construction of a central skyscraper
became an international cause célèbre. Since
the entire historic city center is on the list of
World Heritage sites, UNESCO asked the city
of St. Petersburg to halt the project in order
to study potential impact on the city’s his-
torical monuments. Protest against the plan
was a central theme in a series of unprec-
edented street demonstrations in 2007 and
2008; several prominent cultural figures in
St. Petersburg and eventually Moscow joined
the opposition. While plans for Okhta-Center
were eventually scrapped, other less high-pro-
file buildings are evidence of the power that
business interests wield in the city administra-
tion and have quietly shaped a new skyline.
These include the Stock Exchange building
on Vasilievsky Island, erected in 2007, and the
new Stockmann shopping center behind his-
toric Ploshchad Vosstaniya.
Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk: The
International Power of Oil
Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, located on Sakhalin
Island in Russia’s Far East, is an oil boomtown
fueled by multinational investment. This city,
long a small urban hub for the military and
natural resource exports (coal, oil, fish, tim-
ber), is ushering in the era of globalization in
the Russian Far East because of its proximity
to offshore oil and gas reserves in the Sea of
Okhotsk. The oblast is a leading destination
for foreign direct investment—second only
to the city of Moscow—indicating the impor-
tance of natural resources and regional cent-
ers to Russia as a whole. Located 4,000 miles
(6,500 km) from Moscow and only 110 miles
(175 km) from Japan, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk
is sited on a tsarist-era settlement for exiled
prisoners (Vladimirovka) that later became a
Japanese village (Toyohara) during Japanese
rule of southern Sakhalin Island from 1905–
1945. After World War II, the USSR reclaimed
the entire island, and Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk was
created as the new oblast capital for Sakhalin
and the Kuril Islands.
Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk embodies the multi-
ethnic character of Soviet-era cities. Home to
about 175,000 people, the urban population
is comprised of ethnic Russians, Ukrainians,
and other Slavs; native peoples of Sakhalin
(Nivkh, Evenk, Orok); and ethnic Koreans.
Koreans, the last “newcomers,” were brought
to Sakhalin during World War II to work
the coal mines. Expatriates associated with
the hydrocarbon industry have arrived since
1995, and it is common to find workers from
Europe, North America, and Russia’s neigh-
boring states residing semi-permanently in
city hotels. The city’s multiethnic history is
noted in the mélange of architectural styles in
the city. The few remaining traditional Japa-
nese structures stand next to tsarist-era fron-
tier houses (turn-of-the-twentieth-century
wooden multifamily dwellings with rudimen-
tary utilities), Soviet-era five-story apartment
buildings, post-Soviet suburban kottedgi on
the city’s outskirts, and gleaming Western-
style offices and houses occupied by expatri-
ate executives. Previously a small urban center
connected to the MIC, the large and increasing
presence of foreigners in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk is
a big change for this formerly closed city. Off-
shore hydrocarbon sites lie further north than
Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, but smaller settlements
there lack the infrastructure and political
capital necessary to accommodate interna-
tional companies. Hence, as the oblast center,
Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk has become the bustling
urban hub for the hydrocarbon industry. New
service industries associated with hydrocar-
bons are changing the labor market for the
268 CITIES OF RUSSIA
city, but not for the entire island. Current spa-
tial patterns of economic growth mimic the
Soviet urban settlement pattern where large
urban centers were favored. The economic
boom occurring in this city provides hope
for future regional economic growth and is
a refreshing change from the Soviet period
when the government had to send people to
work on Sakhalin using the propiska system.
Today, it is a destination city both for younger
generations from the Russian Far East and for
international migrants associated with the
hydrocarbon industry, each seeking promis-
ing jobs.
While Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk enjoys inter-
national investment and a relatively high
standard of living, many residents wonder
when they will see benefits from oil extrac-
tion promised to them by the regional gov-
ernment and multinational companies. Many
fear that the promises made in the mid-1990s
to develop the island will remain unfulfilled.
For example, infrastructure projects (e.g.,
transportation, education, health facilities.)
promised in return for allowing hydrocarbon
extraction have not actualized, and residents
remain saddled with decrepit Soviet-era
dwellings, transportation systems, and ser-
vices. Gated and gleaming buildings for expa-
triate workers taunt neighboring buildings
lacking decently operating heat, hot water,
or electricity. This disparity raises questions
about the strength of Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk as
an emerging hub in Russia’s globalizing econ-
omy, as well as the preparedness of urban and
regional governance to secure even economic
growth for all citizens in the post-Soviet era.
Many residents of Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk strug-
gle to understand their rapidly changing
socioeconomic and cultural place in the post-
Soviet era.
Norilsk: The Legacy of Heavy Industry
Planned, developed, and federally subsidized
to house over 100,000 people above the Arctic
Circle, Norilsk is the northernmost large city in
the world (population 175,300; 2010 Census).
Temperatures in the city can reach –58°C, and
snow cover lasts 70 percent of the year. Gulag
laborers (prisoners in the Soviet penal system of forced labor camps) worked from the 1920s
until the mid-1950s to construct many of the
city’s buildings, mines, and smelting facili-
ties. Norilsk remains a closed city, ostensibly
maintaining security of nationally valued
metallurgic operations by restricting travel
and residency of nonresident Russians and
foreigners. It is the world’s largest producer of
nickel and palladium and one of the world’s
largest producers of platinum, rhodium, cop-
per, and cobalt.
The city was carved onto the tundra home-
land of the indigenous peoples of the Taimyr
Autonomous Okrug, bringing modernization
and traditionalism into close spatial contact;
it is not surprising to see native Evenk driv-
ing caribou-drawn sleighs through the city,
vividly juxtaposed with the city’s modern
transportation and high-rise buildings. As
a Soviet creation, Norilsk’s urban landscape
consists of high-rise, concrete-panel micro-
rayons intermixed with and surrounded by
mining and metallurgical industrial facilities
(see Figure 6.7). At 69º N, the city lies in the
continuous permafrost (soil at or below the
freezing point of water) zone. As a result of
the urban heat island effect and anthropo-
genic climate change, the permafrost warms
under the city’s foundations, compromising
the city’s transportation networks and build-
ing foundations.
Although Norilsk’s history as an “urban
gulag” is legendary, the longest lasting legacy of
Distinctive Cities 269
Norilsk may be as Russia’s most polluted city.
One percent of global emissions of sulfur diox-
ide are estimated to come from Norilsk. Air,
soil, and water pollution degrade the physical
environment and health of all living inhabit-
ants. For example, in the process of ore smelt-
ing, sulfur dioxide (SO 2 ) is emitted. Acid rain
forms and precipitates back on the city, releas-
ing contaminants (acid, heavy metals) into
the soil and water supply. The legacy of envi-
ronmental damage to vegetation and waters is
noticeable at a regional scale (Figure 6.17) but
is highlighted in the city, where the surfaces
of buildings and monuments decay where
Figure 6.17 False-color image of norilsk. Shades of pink and purple indicate bare ground (e.g., rock formations, cities, quarries) where vegetation is damaged from heavy pollution. brilliant greens show mostly healthy tundra-boreal forest. South and southwest of the city are moderately to severely damaged ecosystems, and ecosystems northeast of the river and away from the city and industrial centers are healthier. Source: nASA.
270 CITIES OF RUSSIA
acid rain eats away at the stone or cement.
Some businesses propose mining Norilsk’s
urban soils, because the proportion of met-
als in them is economically viable. As in many
industrial Russian cities, illnesses (e.g., lung
cancer, asthma,) affect the young and old
alike. Despite the risks, many residents remain
because of the importance of resource extrac-
tion and industry in Russia, noted in high
wages (up to four times the national average)
and because of the strong historical roots or
social networks linking people to place. Once
state owned but now in private hands, the
smelting operations of Norilsk Nickel, the pri-
mary regional employer, drive the continued
existence of the city. Ongoing urban pollution
problems remain largely unchecked by Norilsk
Nickel’s corporate headquarters in Moscow (a
remnant of command economic planning).
The combination of being situated physi-
cally in the environmentally sensitive far
north and economically as crucial to Russia’s
resource industry makes addressing Norilsk’s
environmental issues both timely and neces-
sary. As awareness of Norilsk’s power to alter
regional and possible global environments
(through global climate change) becomes
increasingly known in Russia and abroad,
industrial managers and the government are
beginning to implement environmental man-
agement systems, providing environmental
and social impact statements of urban-indus-
trial activity. Some industry leaders also desire
to streamline Russian environmental legis-
lation to meet international environmental
safety standards, hopefully reducing regional
and global pollution derived from Norilsk. In
this way, Norilsk is poised to become a leader
in addressing urban environmental concerns
of the north, especially regarding resource
extraction, industrial pollution, and local and
indigenous concerns.
Kazan: Volga Port in Tatarstan
Kazan, the capital of the Republic of Tatarstan,
is the seventh largest city in Russia (1.1 million)
and one of the largest outside of European
Russia. Kazan is distinctive for many reasons,
not least of which is the political struggle of
the 1990s that resulted in the establishment
of the republic as one of the leaders of the
independence movement within the Russian
Federation. Two recent events have drawn
worldwide attention to this city along the
Volga River. In 2000, UNESCO included the
historical city center on its World Heritage
List, which denotes places of universal value
to the world community. And in 2005, the city
celebrated its 1,000th anniversary.
While most cities in Russia are largely mul-
tiethnic, few have as large and powerful a non-
Russian population as this city and republic.
Tatars, whose origins are in the Central Asian
steppes, make up the largest ethnic group in
the republic. Russian settlement and domina-
tion of the city, however, goes back to the six-
teenth century when Ivan the Terrible invaded
the region. Even today, despite a plurality of the
Tatar population in the republic, the city has a
slight majority of Russians—about 50 percent
relative to about 42 percent Tatar. Other non-
Russian populations from the Volga region
also live in the city including the Chuvash, a
Turkic group, and the Maris. Migration in the
1990s brought new ethnic groups to the city,
namely those from the Caucasus and Central
Asia.
The Tatar population is traditionally
Islamic. Kazan’s history as a prominent Mus-
lim city extends back to the fourteenth cen-
tury. Today, the city is home to a new school
training Russians in the Islamic religion, the
Islamic University. Since the early 1990s, at
least 40 new mosques have been built in the
Distinctive Cities 271
city. The city government helped construct a
new mosque on the grounds of the historic
kremlin. The political and social significance
of both the site and the leading role of the city
government should be recognized as a symbol
of cultural as well as political independence
from Russia. The city’s cultural independ-
ence from Russia is also seen in the historic
forms of architecture that make up the urban
built environment. Buildings in the city com-
bine many architectural styles, ranging from
Baroque to Moorish. Bas-reliefs created by tra-
ditional Tatar stone workers embellish build-
ings in the city, and minarets dot the skyline.
Kazan and the region have major economic
significance to the Russian economy. The city
is a major port on the Volga River, the main
water route through European Russia. The
city and the region have been a transportation
gateway for centuries. Currently, the European
Union is helping to modernize its port facili-
ties, and in 2005, it became one of only a few
cities in Russia to receive a direct loan from
the World Bank. The city’s economy is also
strongly tied to the production of transpor-
tation equipment. It produces military trans-
port equipment, including helicopters, and is
home to KamAZ, still a gigantic automotive
production firm.
Vladivostok: Russia’s Pacific Capital?
Home to the Russian Navy’s Pacific Fleet,
Vladivostok from 1958 to 1991 was a closed
city where even Soviet citizens needed permis-
sion to enter. Before this time, Vladivostok had
been an international city. Valuable for its port
facilities and proximity to Asian markets, the
city drew a diverse international population,
including Chinese, Koreans, Japanese, and
Americans. Since 1991, these populations are
back, as the city is now a gateway into Russia,
largely for Asian tourists and businesses. Many
Pacific Rim nations operate consulates in
Vladivostok.
Founded in 1860, Vladivostok is the capital
of Primorsky Krai and is the Russian Far East’s
largest city, with nearly 600,000 residents. It is
the largest Russian port on the Pacific Ocean
and historically has been an important regional
industrial center for shipping and fishing.
Located 3,800 miles (6,430 km) from Moscow,
it is the eastern terminus of the Trans-Siberian
Railroad. The great distance to European Rus-
sia feeds the imagination of Vladivostok as a
gateway to exotic, Asian Russia. Historically, it
led Vladivostok residents to be self-reliant and
to expect little from Moscow; indeed, the first
Soviet leader to visit Vladivostok was Nikita
Khrushchev in 1954. Also headquarters of the
Far Eastern Division of the Russian Academy
of Sciences, the city hosts many academic
and research institutions. These factors have
fueled hopes that Vladivostok could become
an urban economic hub for a range of busi-
nesses. For example, entrepreneurs dream of
Vladivostok-based regional ecotourism, and
port facilities are a strong asset in rebuilding a
strong import-export city on the Pacific. The
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Sum-
mit was held here in 2012, for which the fed-
eral government provided funds for urban
improvements. Stunning views of the Golden
Horn Bay from the hilly city also provide
incentive for restoration of the historic center
and its tsarist-era buildings and monuments,
many of which could be refurbished to rival
those in St. Petersburg. As the intellectual cap-
ital of the Russian Far East, Vladivostok has
much to offer post-Soviet Russia, despite the
need for crackdowns on polluters and numer-
ous illegal activities.
Because much international trade with
Asia is funneled through this Russian city,
272 CITIES OF RUSSIA
organized crime in Vladivostok and Primor-
sky Krai since 1991 purportedly involves not
only Russian mafia but numerous mafia-like
groups from former Soviet republics in Cen-
tral Asia. It is unfortunate that, since the early
post-Soviet years, many elected government
officials work with, instead of against, organ-
ized crime. Illegal trade includes marine
resources from China, cars from Japan, heroin
from Central Asia, and timber exports from
Russia to China and the Republic of Korea.
The rise of informal and mafia-driven econo-
mies has hindered the growth of legitimate,
tax-paying businesses, which slows overall
development. The city is also an aviation
gateway to Asian cities, since its airport is one
of the few that handle international flights.
When Russians from across the Far Eastern
region return from destinations across Asia
via Vladivostok, they often bring commodi-
ties to sell in Russia.
In addition to economic difficulties, Vladi-
vostok suffers from severe air, water, and soil
pollution. Ecologists consider much of the
city to be hazardously polluted by heavy met-
als and industrial (cadmium, mercury, arse-
nic) and agricultural (nitrates, phosphates)
waste. Despite the city’s location adjacent to
the Pacific Ocean, local wind and water cir-
culation patterns in the Amursky Bay do not
remove pollutants from densely populated or
intra-urban-industrial areas. Unchecked, pol-
lutants have built up over time in the soil and
nearshore environments, and their detrimen-
tal effects on ecosystem and human health are
only slowly being recognized.
Despite its distance from European Russia
and from the federal center, Vladivostok (and
other Siberian and Far Eastern cities) remains
in the cultural, political, and economic orbit
of Moscow. While the rich economies of Japan
and the Republic of Korea and the rapidly
developing economy of China are far closer
neighbors than Western Russia, Vladivostok
is a city settled by ethnic Slavs (largely Rus-
sian and Ukrainian), who remain the largest
percent of the population today. Indeed, many
Ukrainian refugees moved to Vladivostok in
2014 because of unrest in Crimea, and long-
term Ukrainian heritage in the region creates
mixed emotions about Russia’s involvement
in Ukraine today. Generally, Russians are
suspicious of the Chinese and their interests
in Russia’s vast raw and land resources. The
facts that the Russia-Chinese border is largely
unmanned and many Chinese enter Russia
illegally to reap resource rewards are not
unnoticed by Russians; indeed, many in this
region deeply distrust the Chinese. Thus, cul-
tural allegiance to European Russia is stronger
than new Asian economic ties. The loyalty of
Vladivostok’s political elites to the center is
being rewarded by massive capital investment
in Vladivostok by the federal government.
Recent construction in this city, including
new infrastructure—sewage treatment plants,
underground freshwater reservoirs, highways,
bridges, dams, and airport terminals—are
positioning this city to become a center of
international cooperation in the Asian Pacific
region (Figure 6.18). This can only aid Russia
in stabilizing the population and growing the
economy in the Far Eastern region.
PROSPECTS FOR THE FUTURE
Cities in Russia today are the products of tsa-
rist, Soviet, and post-Soviet Russian societies,
as well as of the many different ethnic groups
and cultures that have inhabited the region
for at least 1,000 years. The blending of this
diverse set of cultures and histories results in
cities with varied built and social landscapes.
Prospects for the Future 273
The natural environment, however, has always
wielded an important influence over the loca-
tion of urban settlements, irrespective of the
time period or the dominant ethnic group.
The harsh Siberian landscape originally posed
barriers to Russian expansion and settlement,
but widespread urban settlement of Siberia
became a great accomplishment of Soviet
central planners—in spite of environmental
degradation wrought by settlement and the
immense social and cultural costs of strand-
ing people in isolated and inhospitable places
along with the immeasurable financial impli-
cations. Cities in the post-Soviet period con-
tinue to struggle with the consequences of
harnessing nature.
The federal and municipal governments
are attempting to integrate economically,
politically, and geographically disparate cit-
ies into a larger geopolitical and economic
framework, with implications for Russian
transportation and communications systems.
For example, should cities closer to Tokyo or
Beijing than to Moscow rely primarily upon
trade within Russia for economic direction,
or should they look to Asia for new markets
and influence? What will happen to cities
constructed within the Soviet system but now
functioning under another? How will existing
structures such as factories, housing, roads,
school, and other buildings be adapted for
new uses in a market economy? How (and
Figure 6.18 new urban infrastructure (bridges, roads) in Vladivostok, built for the 2012 Asia- Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit, revitalizes this regional capital and port city in the Far East. Source: Photo by Sergei domashenko.
274 CITIES OF RUSSIA
by whom) should pollution in urban envi-
ronments be addressed? How sustainable
are cities in extreme environments, such as
the Arctic and Siberia? How can cities quite
distant from one another remain connected
both economically and politically? Perhaps
most importantly, what will happen to the
people who live and work in Russian cities?
Should the Russian government promote
integration into the European Union? How
far down the path of destroying the Soviet
housing system should Russian cities go?
How best should Russian cities manage land-
use change, especially in the face of increas-
ing suburbanization (Figure 6.19)? Will the
nascent increase in birth rates stem the over-
all population decline in Russia? If not, what
will the national declining population mean
for the regeneration of many Russian cities?
Answers to these and many other questions
confront the people of Russia today as they
continue the process of reinventing their
cities.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Axenov, K, I. Brade, and E. Bondarchuk. 2006. The
Transformation of Urban Space in Post-Soviet
Russia. London, New York: Routledge. Focuses
on the transition from socialism and commu-
nism to democracy and capitalism in urban
areas of post-Soviet Russia and Eastern Europe.
Barnes, I. 2015. Restless Empire: A Historical Atlas
of Russia. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press. A
graphical explanation of the cultural, political,
economic, and military developments of Rus-
sia’s past including up-to-date coverage of cur-
rent land claims in Ukraine.
Bassin, M., and C. Kelly, eds. 2012. Soviet and Post-
Soviet Identities. Cambridge: Cambridge Uni-
versity Press. Provides an overview of issues of
identity and culture in post-Soviet Russia.
Blinnikov, M. 2010. A Geography of Russia and
Its Neighbors. New York: The Guilford Press.
Thorough coverage of Russia and cultural,
economic, and geographic relations to former
Soviet states.
Chernetsky, V. 2007. Mapping Postcommunist
Cultures: Russia and Ukraine in the Context of
Globalization. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s Uni-
versity Press. Focuses on post-Soviet cultural
developments, puts them in a global context,
and suggests that Russia and Ukraine form the
basis of post-Soviet culture.
Clowes, E. 2011. Russia on the Edge: Imagined Geog-
raphies and Post-Soviet Identity. Ithaca: Cornell
University. A discussion of what it means to be
Russian today using examples from popular
culture and literature.
Figure 6.19 Suburban development on the fringes of compact Soviet-era cities, such as balakovo, brings socioeconomic division and expansion into agricultural zones to previously mixed and compact urban settings across Russia. Source: Photo by Jessica Graybill.
Suggested Readings 275
Figes, O. Natasha’s Dance: A Cultural History of Rus-
sia. New York: Picador Press, 2002. A survey of
European Russian culture from the beginning
of the tsarist era through the Soviet era, espe-
cially focusing on the roles of multiculturalism,
Europe, peasant society, and expansionism in
the creation of the arts and lives of citizens in
the tsarist and Soviet empires.
Hill, F., and C. G. Gaddy. 2003. The Siberian Curse:
How Communist Planners Left Russia Out in
the Cold. Washington, DC: Brookings Institu-
tion Press. Traces the failed attempt to estab-
lish an industrial base in Siberia, and argues for
abandoning the eastern territories because of
their economic instability.
Hiro, D. 2009 Inside Central Asia: A Political and
Cultural History of Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkey, and
Iran. New York: Overlook Duckworth.
Oldfield, J., and Denis Shaw. 2015. The Develop-
ment of Russian Environmental Thought: Scien-
tific and Geographical Perspectives on the Natural
Environment. London: Routledge. A compre-
hensive overview of the rich thinking about
environmental issues that has grown up in Rus-
sia since the nineteenth century.
Fi gu
re 7
.1
M aj
or U
rb an
A gg
lo m
er at
io ns
o f
th e
Gr ea
te r
M id
dl e
Ea st
. So
ur ce
: Un
it ed
n at
io ns
, de
pa rt
m en
t of
E co
no m
ic a
nd S
oc ia
l A ff
ai rs
, Po
pu la
ti on
d iv
is io
n (2
01 4)
, W
or ld
U rb
an iz
at io
n Pr
os pe
ct s:
2 01
4 Re
vi si
on , ht
tp :/
/e sa
.u n.
or g/
un pd
/w up
/.
7
Cities of the Greater Middle East ZIA SALIM, DONALD J. ZEIGLER, AND AMAL K. ALI
KEy URbAN FACTS
Total Population 569 million
Percent Urban Population 62%
Total Urban Population 354 million
Most Urbanized Countries Qatar (99%)
Kuwait (98%)
Israel (92%)
Least Urbanized Countries Tajikistan (27%)
Yemen (34%)
Uzbekistan (36%)
Number of Megacities 2 cities
Number of Cities of More Than 1 Million 50 cities
Three Largest Cities Cairo (18 m), Istanbul (14 m), Teheran (8 m)
Number of World Cities (Highest Ranking) 8 (Dubai, Istanbul, Cairo, Tel Aviv, Beirut)
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. Urban landscapes of the Greater Middle East have been shaped by the natural environment
and religion (particularly Islam, but also Judaism and Christianity).
2. The world’s first cities grew up in the Fertile Crescent, along the Nile, and on the Anatolian
Plateau; the locations of all cities have been influenced by the availability of fresh water.
3. Traditional city cores are, or were, walled and dominated by a citadel or kasbah.
4. Urban economic geography has traditionally been shaped by the commerce that coursed
across the region, a result of its relative location at a tri-continental junction.
5. Some states have a primate city, some have two or more competing large cities, and a few
have fully developed urban hierarchies.
6. The “urban triangle” that defines the region’s core has a foothold on all three continents and
in three different culture realms (Arab, Turkic, Persian).
278 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
7. During the twentieth century, oil and gas revenues have turned some of the least urbanized
countries into some of the most urbanized.
8. The urban geography of the oil-rich states has been transformed by petrodollars and mil-
lions of “guest workers,” particularly from South and Southeast Asia.
9. The domino effects of the revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia stimulated democratic uprising
in Libya, Syria, and Yemen, with both positive and negative results.
10. Major urban problems range from assuring supplies of fresh water to coping with rapid
population growth and tending to the preservation of heritage resources.
Cities in the Middle East are uniquely posi-
tioned in time and space. The foundations of
urbanization as we know it can be traced to this
region’s ancient cities: the oldest continuously
inhabited settlements and two of the world’s
five urban hearths lie in this region. The dense
layering of history, seen in other cities around
the world, is especially prominent here. In the
Middle East, great cities have risen and fallen
over the centuries, and they have long served
as connection points between the region and
the rest of the world. From the cradles of civi-
lization, to dusty cities on the Silk Road, to
Roman cities in present-day Turkey, Lebanon,
and Jordan, to the megacities of Cairo, Tehran,
and Istanbul, to the spectacular cities of the
Gulf, the local and the global come together
in fascinating ways on the Middle East’s urban
landscapes (Figure 7.1).
As a vernacular term, the exact geographi-
cal delineation of the “Middle East” is difficult.
In this chapter, the term Middle East refers to
the “Greater Middle East,” a crescent stretch-
ing from Morocco, eastward across North
Africa through the lands of southwest Asia,
to the steppes of Kazakhstan. Although there
is great complexity and diversity within the
region, three shared geographic characteris-
tics and history connect this great swath of
territory (Figure 7.2). First, the Middle East’s
physical geography is predominantly arid and
semi-arid, though river systems and oases
mitigate the region’s dryness. Second, the
region’s cultural geography is marked by the
shared history experienced through successive
Islamic empires and their interaction with the
wider world. Third, in terms of relative loca-
tion, the Middle East is literally in the “mid-
dle”—the middle of the Eastern Hemisphere,
a land bridge between Europe, eastern Asia,
and Africa.
Although the expanse described in this
chapter includes a variety of climates, some
characteristics pervade the Middle East’s
physical geography as a whole: dry and sea-
sonally dry, arid and semi-arid, desert and
steppe. Available water comes from winter
showers, orographic precipitation, exotic
streams, rivers, natural springs, and shallow
aquifers. Most of the region suffers a fresh-
water deficiency; in arid areas, the location of
water has historically determined the location
and evolution of towns and cities. Further,
urban centers had to overcome a set of natural
obstacles presented by the dry environment:
scorching sun, high daytime temperatures,
desert winds, dusty air, and scarce water. The
same environment—the desert—offered
early cities a set of natural frontiers while
serving as a buffer that provided protection
from potential invaders. Generally, physical
geography (arid climate and rugged topogra-
phy) has affected the amount of space avail-
able for human settlement and habitation,
contributing to high population densities in
urban areas.
Key Chapter Themes 279
Contemporary Middle Eastern cities also
share a common element of cultural geogra-
phy, that of religion. This region is the birth-
place of the monotheistic faiths we know as
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. All three
have left their enduring stamp on the region;
but Islam is most widely associated with the
Middle East, having begun there in the early
seventh century. Within the region, cultural
geography varies from place to place—Arab,
Persian, Turk, Kurd—but the cultural matrix
is webbed together by past and present
impacts of Islam and the religious, social, and
political systems that it created. Christians
and Jews (and some smaller groups like the
Baha’i, Druze, and Zoroastrians) live within
the Islamic matrix; but they are the exception,
not the rule. Only in a few areas were urban
landscapes historically punctuated by any-
thing but the minarets of mosques (Figure
7.3). The Middle Eastern city has always been
a center of spiritual and intellectual life and
Figure 7.2 the traditional Middle Eastern City. Source: d. J. Zeigler.
280 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
a generator of new ideas about people’s rela-
tionships with God and each other. Indeed,
Islam itself first developed in urban centers
(Mecca and Medina); and Damascus, Bagh-
dad, and Cairo have all been centers of reli-
gious authority.
The relative location of the Middle East has
given its cities a third set of common charac-
teristics: they are centers of trade and com-
merce. Prior to the discovery of water routes
around Africa and around the world in the
fifteenth century, trade between the great
civilizations had to pass through the dry-
land crescent separating Europe from eastern
Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. Trade among
these three regions—by geographical neces-
sity—passed through the Middle East. The
configuration of land and water—the inter-
penetration of the seas (e.g., the Red Sea),
land bridges (e.g., Anatolia and Persia), and
peninsulas (e.g., Arabia)—provided a multi-
tude of routes through this dry-world barrier.
Trade in food and fabrics, gold and cop-
per, spices and perfumes, frankincense and
myrrh, helped build the cities of the Middle
East. In fact, new ideas about how to create
and expand wealth, perhaps even capitalism
itself, were born in these cities. Their mar-
ketplaces—called bazaars in the Persian lan-
guage, pazars in Turkish, souks in Arabic, and
shuks in Hebrew—are among the oldest in the
world (Figure 7.4).
In other words, the evolution of cities in the
Middle East has centered around water, the
house of worship, and the marketplace. Until
the late twentieth century and the genesis of
oil economies, relative city size was, in fact,
proportional to the above factors: larger cities
evolved in direct proportion to the availabil-
ity of freshwater, the abundance of “spiritual
capital,” and the bounty of trade.
It is easy to see how physical geography set
the stage for urban development by affording
defensibility, facilitating movement, or pro-
viding resources. For example, settlements on
hills and peninsulas were easily defended, and
riverbank settlements afforded safe crossing of
rivers. By paying attention to the locations of
hills, springs, oases, harbors, and headlands,
one can trace patterns of urban location. A
peninsula, for instance, set the stage for the
evolution of Istanbul, an oasis for Damascus,
a hilltop for Aleppo, a spring for Tehran, and a
harbor for Beirut.
While site, the local physical characteristics
of place, may be responsible for the founding
of a city, situation or location relative to wider
Figure 7.3 Rising above every Middle Eastern city are the minarets of mosques. one of the most famous is the Koutoubia, the largest mosque in Marrakech. by tradition, the muezzin issues the call to prayers five times a day from the minaret. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Key Chapter Themes 281
contexts (such as routes of commerce or seats
of power) more often determines whether
a settlement prospers or withers and dies.
Some cities have the potential to be trading
hubs or imperial capitals, while others do not.
Furthermore, relative location is dynamic,
as a good location in one era may be a bad
location in another. The seat of the Islamic
caliphate moved over time from Medina
to Damascus to Baghdad. The Suez Canal’s
opening in 1869 drew trade away from the
cities of the Fertile Crescent. During Leba-
non’s civil war (1975–1990), much of Beirut’s
economic activity, especially insurance and
banking, relocated to Manama in Bahrain,
and then to Dubai in the United Arab Emir-
ates. All across the Middle East, “dead cities”
and archaeological tells (hills created as one
city was built on top of its predecessors) illus-
trate how changing relative location influ-
ences urban geography.
A final point to make is that the “Mid-
dle East” moniker subsumes great cultural
diversity. An array of national, ethnic, reli-
gious, and linguistic differences marks the
social landscape, and these differences often
set the stage for contemporary events that
hit the news. For example, understanding the
size, spatial distribution, and relationships
of ethnic groups in Iraq explains why, after
the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 and the depo-
sition of Saddam Hussein, the country has
been unable to find national unity. Similarly,
some aspects of current political conflicts in
Yemen, Bahrain, Lebanon, and Syria can be
traced to sectarian divides between Sunni and
Shiite Muslims. Finally, the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict can be understood as an inter-group
conflict, although it is more of a conflict over
territory and political power than it is a faith-
based conflict between adherents of two dif-
ferent religious traditions.
Figure 7.4 the traditional markets of Marrakech, Morocco, are some of the most well-known in the world. in Arabic-speaking countries they are known as souks or suqs. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
282 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
FOUNDATIONS OF THE URbAN SySTEM
What is past is prologue: Understanding the
past helps to explain how present-day urban
patterns came to be. Perhaps no other geo-
graphical region in the world presents such a
long-standing connection with urbanism as
the region commonly referred to as the Mid-
dle East. Solidly anchored in the tri-continen-
tal junction known as the Fertile Crescent are
the roots of the Western city. Our word urban
still carries the name of the world’s first truly
urban places, Ur and Uruk, in southern Meso-
potamia. These early settlements, dating from
at least five millennia bce, offered protection,
security, and the ability to trade and control
resources. Ideas about urban development
and planning originated here and spread as
byproducts of commerce and conquest, along
with other innovations, such as writing and
record-keeping systems. The second oldest
urban hearth, the Nile River Valley, also lies in
this region.
As small settlements in the Fertile Cres-
cent and the Nile Valley grew into city-states
that served production, worship, defense, and
trade functions, their growth was stimulated
by social stratification and the production,
storage, and distribution of agricultural sur-
pluses. Cities were distinguished from the
countryside by offering the best that life had
to offer, at least for powerful elites and their
clients. The oldest cities in the world, though
most often classified as proto-urban, were
born during the Neolithic period. They are all
associated with the beginnings of agriculture.
Their locations form a triangle with one ver-
tex in Iraq, one in Palestine, and one in Tur-
key. In lower Mesopotamia (the “land between
the rivers”) were the cities of Ur, Uruk, Eridu,
Kish, and others. As truly urban places, they
emerged in the fourth millennium bce. They
were the largest cities in the world until the
rise of Babylon. Only archaeological tells
remain, but these forerunners of the modern
Middle Eastern city set off a chain reaction in
urban innovation that continues to this day.
Earlier than this, however, in Palestine, on
the other side of the Fertile Crescent, ancient
Jericho (now in the West Bank) boasted a wall
and watchtower as early as nine millennia
bce. Deep within an arid rift valley, this “city
of palms” is located next to a gushing spring,
and not far from the wadi (riverbed), which
brings runoff from the Judean Hills into the
sun-drenched Jordan River valley. On the
Anatolian plateau, just to the north of the Fer-
tile Crescent, stands the recently discovered
prototypical city, Çatal Höyük, which dates
to about 6500 bce. It was located on a small
river in the Konya Plain, today a rather deso-
late area in Turkey. It had an estimated 50,000
inhabitants, and it was probably one of the
largest and most sophisticated settlements in
the world in its day because of the successful
domestication of wheat and other staples. Just
as its size proved the viability of largeness, its
form proved to be a pacesetter in the devel-
opment of urban landscapes. Çatal Höyük,
Jericho, and Ur all illustrate the principle that
civilization and urbanization evolve hand in
hand.
The Iranian plateau and the Mediterranean
basin gave birth to indigenous empires that
were some of the world’s earliest. The Sumer-
ians developed advanced irrigation systems
and the first forms of writing. The exqui-
site art and monumental architecture of the
Egyptians is unparalleled. The Babylonians
codified laws and governed large parts of Mes-
opotamia from their capital of Babylon, one
of the ancient world’s great cities. The Assyr-
ians ruled large areas and developed modern
Foundations of the Urban System 283
banking and accounting systems; their capi-
tal was Nineveh. The Phoenicians, with a
sea-faring empire focused on the Mediterra-
nean, traded from a series of port cities. The
Persians ruled from the Aegean to India and
founded the great city of Persepolis. Each con-
quest opened a new chapter in urban history
as the culture of the conqueror transformed
the cities of the conquered.
Foreign empires also played a critical
part in the development of the Middle East.
Greek culture, under Alexander and his suc-
cessor generals, blended with various “east-
ern” elements to create a new Hellenistic city.
Later, Roman culture transformed Phoe-
nician trading posts and gave rise to a new
set of cities in northern Africa and south-
west Asia, some built on their Hellenistic
predecessors. Empires built by the Persians,
Greeks, and Romans succeeded because they
were successfully (but sometimes brutally)
administered and promoted trade in both
goods and ideas. Innovations in urban form
and function rolled across the region’s urban
landscapes, converging around the institu-
tions of government, commerce, and reli-
gion. In the Roman city, for instance, forums,
basilicas, coliseums, amphitheaters, public
baths, and temples provided many elements
that linger in the landscapes of the Middle
East today. Istanbul, Turkey, for instance, still
has its hippodrome, a racetrack for chari-
ots, dating from 330 ce. That same century,
the Roman Empire became officially Chris-
tian (Figure 7.5). Thereafter, the followers
of Jesus transformed the cultural landscapes
and social geography of its cities. Later, its
successor, the Byzantine Empire, became
the guardian of Christianity in the eastern
Mediterranean.
Figure 7.5 the Armenians pre-dated the Roman Empire in becoming the world’s first officially Christian nation in 301 ce. to commemorate that event’s 1700th anniversary, the Republic of Armenia built a new cathedral in yerevan, here seen on Palm Sunday. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
284 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
Nevertheless, a new religion, born on the
Arabian Peninsula, was to conquer the Byz-
antine lands of southwest Asia and North
Africa. Between the seventh and tenth cen-
turies, Islam created the unique urban land-
scape we know today as “the Islamic city.” It
was a city of mosques, madrassahs (religious
schools), and universities, a city built on free
thinking and scientific progress, a city of
honest trade, tolerance, and justice. Its daily
routines, seasonal rhythms, architectural
appearance, and governing system were all
heavily influenced by Islam. These Islamic
cities were characterized by several common
elements: mosques, markets, forts, palaces,
and city walls. Numerous Islamic empires
and dynasties have risen and fallen over the
centuries, including the Umayyids, Abbasids,
and Fatimids. The most recent one, the Otto-
man Empire, continued expanding for about
five hundred years; the Ottoman city contin-
ued to be an Islamic city.
After the Ottoman Empire was defeated
in World War I, much of the Middle East
came under the control of European powers.
In European style, the colonizers added new
sections onto traditional cities. Independence
came to the region after World War II, and new
governments built skyscrapers in the global
style. Today, the “Middle Eastern” city often
has a historic core composed of the original
Islamic city, and new sectors reflecting Euro-
pean and global architectural influences. And
yet, the essence of the distinct Islamic matrix
continues to characterize cities throughout
the region.
Many countries of the Middle East have an
urban tradition that transcends not just cen-
turies but millennia: Iraq, greater Syria, Tur-
key, Egypt, Iran, and Uzbekistan. Yet, some
countries of the region entered the twentieth
century without an urban tradition at all. The
emirates (principalities) of the Persian Gulf
(known as the Arabian Gulf in Arab lands and
referred to as the Gulf in the remainder of this
chapter for simplicity) knew nothing of city
life—until recently. The Gulf was punctuated
by small fishing and pearling ports. Arabia’s
urban population was almost entirely hajj-
related, with Mecca, Medina, and Jeddah sur-
facing at the top of the urban pyramid. The
ancient cities of the frankincense trade, cities
like Ubar, had been reclaimed by the desert,
and the few large seaports, Aden and Musqat,
served offshore interests more than their
hinterlands.
Today, whether a country’s cities date back
to antiquity or to the recent past, the Mid-
dle Eastern population tends to be decidedly
urban, a response to the declining viability
of nomadism, the rapidly growing numbers
of people, the restricted range of arable land,
the rise of prosperous fossil fuel economies,
increased educational opportunities, acces-
sibility to international economic networks,
and the political decisions of powerful elites.
CONTEMPORARy URbAN PATTERNS
According to the United Nations, 177 cities in
the region had populations over 300,000 in
2015, and the average percentage of the popu-
lation that lived in cities had soared from 29
percent in 1950 to 62 percent in 2015. That
same year, global urbanization stood at 54
percent. By subregion: In North Africa, the
level of urbanization rate is 52 percent; in
Southwest Asia it is 70 percent; and in Central
Asia it is 41 percent. Urbanization rates vary
at the country scale, as well. The most urban-
ized countries are Israel and the small states
of the Gulf, with rates in excess of 90 percent.
Lebanon and Jordan are not far behind, at 88
Contemporary Urban Patterns 285
percent and 85 percent urban, respectively
(Box 7.1). The most urbanized countries
generally have high levels of economic devel-
opment. Conversely, the least urbanized coun-
tries are the least economically developed: less
than 3 out of 10 inhabitants in Tajikistan, for
example, live in cities. Finally, the dynamism
of urbanization varies. Over the past four
decades, the ratio between rural and urban
dwellers in the Central Asian republics and
Egypt has been very stable; in the same period,
urbanization rates in countries like Saudi
Arabia, Oman, Iran, Turkey, and Lebanon
have skyrocketed. Several factors under-
lie these spatial differences in stability and
transformation. Countries with high levels of
agricultural productivity (such as Egypt) can
support and maintain rural populations; oil
wealth, and economic development underlie
high urbanization rates in the Gulf; and rural-
to-urban migration has driven urbanization
rates in Turkey.
The core of the Middle East is defined by
a decagon formed by the five seas (Mediter-
ranean, Black, Caspian, Gulf, Red Sea) and five
land bridges (Anatolia, Caucasus, Iran, Arabia,
Suez). On the perimeter of this core, lie three
of the world’s 20 most populous metropolises.
These large cities are important parts of the
global urban system; they anchor an inter-
continental, international, and intercultural
urban triangle (Figure 7.6):
• Cairo, Egypt, on the continent of Africa,
has 18 million people. It is the largest
city in the Arab realm.
• Istanbul, Turkey, on the continent of
Europe, has 14 million people. It is the
largest in the Turkic realm.
• Tehran, Iran, on the continent of Asia,
has 8 million people. It is the largest in
the Persian realm.
Yet, in 1900, no city in the entire Middle East
had more than a million inhabitants. By 1950,
only Cairo had grown to exceed 1 million.
Today, 50 cities have exceeded the million
mark. Except for their historical centers, all are
products of the late twentieth century—these
are new cities, not old. Yet, the countries that
anchor the Middle East’s triangular urban
core, all have a less developed frontier side,
too. Eastern Iran, eastern Turkey, and most of
upper (southern) Egypt remind us that urban-
ization has not entirely transformed even the
most urbanized countries in the region.
A variety of urban systems is found in the
Middle East. Some states are anchored by
a single primate city (e.g., many Gulf States
and all of Central Asia), while others have
two rival urban cores. Prior to its decline into
chaos, Syria provided a clear example of the
latter case: Aleppo (the larger) and Damas-
cus (the capital) were quiet rivals. Other
countries with dual anchors and intercity
rivalries include: Yemen (Sana’a and Aden),
mostly as a result of its colonial history, Libya
(Tripoli and Benghazi), as it was cobbled
together by the Italians, and Israel (Tel Aviv
and Jerusalem), split by its secular and reli-
gious axes. Iraq, on the other hand, has one
clearly dominant city, Baghdad; two smaller
anchors, Mosul in the north and Basra in the
south, have different cultural geographies that
reflect the country’s divisions. Finally, some
states have complex urban hierarchies. Both
Turkey and Iran are punctuated by booming
metropolises, regional centers, small towns,
and villages. Similarly, Morocco is a coun-
try of cities large and small, many of which
have assumed highly specialized roles in the
Moroccan urban system. Rabat is Morocco’s
political capital, but three other cities—Mar-
rakesh, Fès, and Meknes—have historically
served in that role. In addition, Casablanca is
286 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
Box 7.1 Green Space in Beirut
Rana boukarim, Cofounder, beirut Green Project
beirut: A once beautiful green city, now choking on exhaust fumes of cars. A city where free land is quickly converted into a parking lot awaiting its eventual fate as yet another luxury mall. A city with only one large public green space, which is closed off to most citizens but not to foreigners or Lebanese with official permission (which is impossible to get if you are under 30) because our mayor fears that the presence of locals will destroy it. Each of beirut’s citizens enjoys 0.8 m² of green space—barely larger than the chair you’re sitting on. the World health organization maintains that a healthy city should have at least 9 m² of green space per person. While cars roam free in ever-expanding spaces, beirut’s second-class citi- zens (us humans) suffocate on their 0.8 m².
beirut wasn’t always like this. it was green. Sadly, it is now gray. the beirut Green Project (bGP) was born of this frustration. A few like-minded individuals made official-looking signs and placed little 0.8 m² patches of grass all over town with ironic signs: “Enjoy your green space!” People were soon noticing bGP installations, agreeing, chuckling, taking pictures. the media and blogosphere quickly joined in. it made quite a stir, so bGP decided to make a bigger splash to attract more like-minded people to join the cause. they took over a busy roundabout for a day, covered it in real grass, and invited everyone they knew. More than 400 people showed up. they brought books, guitars, kites, and kids, and had a lovely day on the grass. their presence sent a message: We need more public green spaces in beirut.
nevertheless, bGP faced resistance not only from politicians but also from the people themselves: “We don’t need parks; we can sit on our balconies, or at Starbucks,” and “Just go up to the mountains if you want to be in nature,” and “We don’t have continuous electric- ity, people are dying of hunger, war, and abuse, our whole system is plagued by corruption . . . And you’re worrying about your right to green spaces?!” So, bGP’s scope expanded to actively raising awareness of the importance of green spaces through efforts like mapping all beirut’s parks and encouraging people to picnic in a park. Parks are needed in ALL large, stressful cities like beirut, and are not a superfluous luxury of rich cities. they are necessary for our mental and physical health. Are clean air, a place to exercise, and a place for our children to play, a luxury?
if people haven’t lived in a city where green spaces are treasured, if they haven’t had pol- iticians who grant them their rights instead of judging if they deserve them, if they haven’t been trusted with public goods in any real way, then it is natural that their interest in (and right to) green spaces has been marginalized. Almost everyone is dumbfounded to learn that beirut has 24 public green spaces; most guess that there are between one to four. bGP’s mission for now is to start using the green spaces we do have and eventually demand more.
Contemporary Urban Patterns 287
Morocco’s unofficial economic capital. Its for-
mer diplomatic capital (as far as ambassadors
were permitted to venture into the country),
Tangier, now serves as a bridgehead to Europe.
The city of Ourzazate in southern Morocco
has even become one of the movie-making
capitals of the world, starring in films such as
Star Wars and Lawrence of Arabia, and provid-
ing a location for several seasons of Game of
Thrones.
Not only have cities in the region increased
in population and territorial extent, they have
also begun to coalesce in a fashion reminis-
cent of Jean Gottmann’s Megalopolis. In these
urban mega-regions, life is at its most intense,
a characteristic symbolized by the pace and
volume of traffic along connecting thorough-
fares. There are perhaps seven megalopolises
developing on the Middle Eastern map in the
twenty-first century (Table 7.1). The most
populous is in Egypt. The only international
megalopolis is the one stretching from coastal
Saudi Arabia, beginning with the oil-engorged
cities of Dhahran (headquarters of Saudi
Aramco, the world’s largest oil company)
and Dammam, and then across the four-lane
causeway to Bahrain and its capital, Manama.
An intertwined pair of demographic and
economic factors underlies Middle East-
ern urbanization patterns. Rates of natural
Figure 7.6 the Urban triangle of the Middle East shows the relative locations of major cities. these cities are in their correct geographical locations, but shown without the base map underneath. Source: d. J. Zeigler.
288 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
population increase and migration are the
main drivers of urbanization in the Mid-
dle East. Natural increase is related to sev-
eral factors: as health and dietary conditions
have improved, death rates have fallen, while
birth rates have remained high, leading to a
net growth in population. Persistently high
birth rates can be attributed to a number of
factors, including preference for male chil-
dren and the relatively lower status of women.
There are many ways to categorize migra-
tion: internal versus international, voluntary
versus involuntary. With respect to internal
voluntary migration, rural-to-urban migra-
tion in some countries and the ending of
nomadic ways of life in others, have contrib-
uted to urban growth. As economic policies
aimed at improving urban conditions have
been implemented, increased access to a
number of urban amenities (e.g., education,
health, employment) has acted as a magnet
that draws individuals from the surround-
ing countryside. International voluntary
migration, driven by a demand for labor, has
spurred urbanization, most notably in the oil-
rich Gulf States, where labor migration has
transformed cities into global immigrant des-
tinations. Foreign-born individuals make up
approximately 60 percent of the population in
Kuwait, 74 percent in Qatar, and 84 percent in
the United Arab Emirates. Foreign-born indi-
viduals comprise even larger proportions of
the labor force in the Gulf States—in Bahrain
54 percent of the population is foreign born,
but 75 percent of the labor force is foreign
born. Because a portion of international
migration in the Middle East is intra-regional
(e.g., Egypt and Jordan send migrants to
other countries in the region), transnational
ties also connect sending and receiving coun-
tries. Voluntary international migration also
affects other countries. For example, Israel
received a million Russian Jews between the
mid-1980s and the end of the century; it has
also received major immigrant streams from
Ethiopia, Argentina, France, the United King-
dom, and the United States, and today more
than a quarter of the Israeli population is for-
eign born.
Conflict and political instability have
spurred forced or involuntary migration. Ref-
ugees, individuals who have been displaced
beyond their country’s borders, have signifi-
cantly impacted urbanization in some cases.
For example, Amman, Jordan, grew from a
village of 2,000 people in 1950 to a metropolis
of 1.1 million people by 2014. Much of this
growth is due to waves of refugees: the first
Table 7.1 Megalopolises of the Greater Middle East
Name Range
Egyptian Megalopolis Alexandria to Cairo to the Suez Canal
Marmara Megalopolis Istanbul to Bursa and around the Sea of Marmara
Iranian Megalopolis Tehran to Karaj to Eslamshahr and Nazarabad
Mid-Mesopotamian Megalopolis Baghdad to Fallujah
Moroccan Megalopolis Casablanca to Rabat to Kenitra
Israeli Megalopolis Haifa and Akko to Tel Aviv to Jerusalem
Arabian Megalopolis Jubayl to Dammam and Dhahran to Manama
Source: Donald Zeigler
Models of Urban Structure 289
wave of refugees moved into Jordan from
neighboring Palestine in the wake of the Arab-
Israeli conflict; a second wave of refugees fled
violence in Iraq, and refugees from the conflict
in Syria make up a third wave. Today, Jordan is
home to more than 2.5 million refugees. The
Syrian conflict has set sizable refugee flows in
motion: since the outbreak of the civil war in
Syria, more than 4 million Syrians have fled
the country to refugee camps in Turkey, Leba-
non, Jordan, and Iraq (Figure 7.7). Within
Syria itself, 6.5 million people have been dis-
placed as a result of the crisis.
Within the context of protracted conflict,
camps and communities for those affected
by involuntary migration can acquire semi-
permanent status. Although informal econo-
mies and social networks provide some social
order, the lack of long-term financial support
means that the residents of these camps lead
precarious lives and face numerous challenges:
temporary housing, limited infrastructure,
overcrowding, anxiety and depression, and
lack of opportunity. Refugees place pressure
on existing infrastructure, housing, and ser-
vices, exacerbating issues of resource scarcity;
as a result, relations with host communities
may not always be positive.
MODELS OF URbAN STRUCTURE
An analysis of elements such as land use, street
layout, and building structure helps to explain
the form, and function of the Middle Eastern
city (Figure 7.8). It is important to point out
that these patterns and models are not static,
and that they do not claim to represent the
urban diversity of the entire region. However,
as they provide useful generalizations, models
simplify the task of analyzing and comparing
different cities. At the heart of every tradi-
tional Islamic city was a fortress: the citadel,
al-qalat, or (in the Maghreb) the Kasbah. It
Figure 7.7 As of 2015, there were 4 million refugees from Syria. turkey has taken in almost 2 million, with many housed in camps like this one near Karkamish on the border with the self-proclaimed islamic State, now in control of northern Syria. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
290 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
usually covered only a few acres and occupied
the most defensible site, often on a hilltop and
typically surrounded by a wall. In the past, it
would have served as the administrative heart
of the city, the site of the palace. Today, the
citadel is most likely to be a preserve of his-
tory, a valuable visual reminder of the past,
important in building national identity, and
part of the historic core within the modern
city (Figure 7.9).
Surrounding the citadel is the old city itself.
In the old city’s heyday, the most coveted space
was at the center, close to the seats of economic
power and social interaction. Palaces and mer-
chants’ houses were central elements of the old
city’s landscape, as were the central souks. Like
the fortress, the old city was usually walled,
and its often-ornate gates gave access to the
world beyond. In the Maghreb, the old Islamic
city is called the medina (Arabic for “city”). It
is the city of antiquity, at least as it has sur-
vived conquest, disasters, and well-meaning
modernization attempts. The residential pop-
ulation of cities, in the traditional city model,
tended to be concentrated in “quarters”: sec-
tions for Jews, Europeans, different Christian
sects, different ethnic groups, and people of
different village or regional origin. In the past,
many of these quarters had gates of their own.
Residential space was highly segregated, yet it
also mimicked the security and social cohe-
siveness of the village by providing a scale of
life to which people were accustomed and a
set of community institutions which people of
like mind could control. Both rich and poor
lived within each quarter.
The inclusion of courtyards in homes,
mosques, khans, and palaces creates a
Figure 7.8 internal Structure of the Middle Eastern Metropolis. Source: d. J. Zeigler.
Models of Urban Structure 291
“cellular” pattern. For most people in the
world, the landscape of the old city—intro-
verted, compact, congested, cellular, and forti-
fied—provides the stereotype for the region’s
cities. Walls, along with their watchtowers,
differentiated quite sharply between city and
country until the twentieth century. Outside
the walls were olive groves, grazing lands,
cemeteries, quarries, and periodic markets,
not to mention potential enemies. Noxious
enterprises like tanneries were located at the
old city’s periphery. The medinas of mod-
ern Middle Eastern cities contain, at most, 4
percent of the urban population; residents of
modern neighborhoods rarely patronize the
old city cores.
In addition to the ravages of age, the old
cities (e.g., in Yemen, Egypt, and Morocco)
face pressure from rapid urban development.
As they have survived, the narrow streets of
old residential and commercial quarters tend
to be penetrable only by foot traffic and don-
key carts. Still, this does not stop the occa-
sional taxi or service vehicle from squeezing
through. The cramped feeling is heightened
by second and third stories jutting out over-
head, sometimes joining and creating above-
ground “tunnels.” The largest streets lead
into the city from gates in the walls, but a
large public square dominating the center
of town is a rarity (except in Iran). A grid
pattern loosely manifests itself in towns
with a Roman heritage, and it is common
for elements of the pre-Islamic landscape
to become parts of the working city, usually
unrecognized for their historic value. Roman
pavements may lie deep underneath the con-
temporary street, and what was a wide Byz-
antine thoroughfare may now be subdivided
into three or four narrow, parallel alleys,
Figure 7.9 the citadel, or cale, of Gaziantep, turkey, occupies a strategically located hilltop that dominates the fertile agricultural region near the turkish- Syrian border. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
292 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
each serving as a souk of its own. Periodically
spaced along the most well-traversed routes,
are richly decorated drinking fountains (or
their remnants), often given to the public by
wealthy merchants.
Beginning with the colonial era (British,
French, Italian, or Soviet), a new city typi-
cally developed outside the old city walls. In
the Maghreb, it was called, in fact, la nouvelle
ville (“the new city”). It was a city between two
worlds, traditional and modern. The tradi-
tional elements of urban form, from mosques
to bakeries to public baths, were incorporated
into the new city, but they were supplemented
by modern amenities and architectural styles,
including larger stores and hotels, traffic cir-
cles and wide boulevards, European-style
churches, new government buildings, and cor-
porate offices, all plastered with the language
of the colonizers.
The new city was gradually enveloped by
the modern, postcolonial city. Courtyard
homes all but disappeared from the land-
scape, replaced by extroverted buildings and
apartment blocks, with high-income flats
and single-family units becoming increas-
ingly common. The postcolonial city became
the zone of international hotels, corporate
headquarters, and modern universities. It
also became the zone of squatter settlements
(which can invade even the inner zones if
there is any unoccupied space) where recent
in-migrants from the villages find lodging
while they work their way up the urban social
pyramid.
Beyond the modern city is the urban
expansion zone. Here, small villages find
themselves undergoing urbanization in situ.
Here, also, may be new industrial estates,
modest new housing tracts, or, in the case of
Egypt and Saudi Arabia, new cities, were built
from scratch. For the richest countries, those
able to afford automobiles and the gasoline to
fuel them, it can also be a zone of raging urban
sprawl. Most often, the international airport is
located here as well.
Urban Transects
The Middle Eastern city today, therefore,
can be seen as an interlocking set of con-
centric zones, patterned in time: citadel, old
city (Islamic), new city (European), modern
city, and urban expansion zone. As such, the
most traditional and often most distinctive
part of the city is at the center; when com-
paring cities, the centers will be the most
different and the peripheries will be the
most similar. The following transects illus-
trate the variety of visible changes as one
moves from the innermost zone of a city to
the outermost.
• A transect along the social axis: The
old city is becoming increasingly mar-
ginalized by society, particularly as the
well-to-do move out. The modern city
is attracting the lion’s share of new
neighborhood investment and the best
of social services. Even tourists typically
stay in the modern city and depend on
air-conditioned buses to drop them off
at a city gate for a brief sojourn into the
past.
• A transect along the housing axis: The
old city (except in Turkey and Yemen)
is a zone of traditional two- or three-
story courtyard houses. The modern
city is a zone of mid-rise and high-
rise apartments. In fact, the multistory
apartment block is now the most typical
component of the Middle Eastern city’s
residential landscape (and a reminder of
how architecture has pulled away from
Models of Urban Structure 293
the physical environment and its indig-
enous roots).
• A transect along the commercial axis:
The old city still displays fully func-
tional commercial districts that house
traditional industries and small-scale,
family-owned artisanal enterprises.
The modern city displays its logo-laden
landscape of chain stores, international
(and national) franchises, shopping
malls, and ever more snippets of English
signage (Figure 7.10).
• A transect along the transportation axis:
The old city’s narrow streets are clogged
with pedestrians, taxis, and even donkey
carts. The new city is marked by the pro-
liferation of privately owned automo-
biles, gas stations, and parking spaces.
Arab Cities on the Gulf
The preceding generalizations about urban
form and function apply to the old cities of
the Middle East. An entirely new set of cities
that has grown up on the twentieth century’s
oil and natural gas fields has followed its own
dramatic urban trajectory. These cities are
best exemplified by the cities of Kuwait, Saudi
Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, and the UAE (though
oil revenues have also transformed cities in
Iran, Iraq, Libya, and Algeria). Urban land-
scapes from Kuwait to Dubai have been built,
largely since the 1960s, on revenues from the
world’s largest oil fields. While lacking the his-
torical depth of a city like Aleppo, they offer
a glimpse of what a modern Middle Eastern
city can be.
Although the historical cores of Middle
Eastern cities are small, they serve as the
source of local identity, particularly in lay-
out and architectural styles. Their function
is different from the surrounding postindus-
trial city, with its high-rise office buildings,
shopping malls, gardens and golf courses,
apartment complexes, sprawling low-rise
suburbs, and mosques. The automobile’s
dominance in the postindustrial city is
clearly visible in the wide boulevards, mod-
ern highways, bridges, and ring roads, and
single-use zoning. It is also visible in the
Figure 7.10 the landscape of Amman, Jordan, shows the signs of global commercialization in the form of this bilingual advertisement for Subway. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
294 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
empty sidewalks and underdeveloped public
transit options.
It is oil wealth that has built many of the
Middle East’s postindustrial cities. With
the ability to afford the world’s most crea-
tive architects, cities have been able to blend
modern structures with traditional themes.
One of the surprising elements of these new
urban landscapes is how green they are.
Turning itself into a Garden City, in fact, has
been one of Dubai’s urban planning objec-
tives. Figuratively, oil is turned into water,
and water into green space. Oil is also turned
into new human geographies. Petro-econo-
mies have, by governmental design as well as
economic magnetism, virtually eliminated
nomadism as a way of life. The rural popula-
tion has become urbanized. In addition, the
faces of the oil-engorged boomtowns have
also changed. The economic magnetism of
Kuwait City, Dammam, Doha, Abu Dhabi,
and others, draws unskilled workers from as
far away as India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and the
Philippines, and skilled workers from Europe
and the United States, as well as other parts of
the Arab world.
The Gulf ’s Arab cities are centers of con-
sumption rather than centers of production;
the industrial era is missing from the land-
scapes of Arab cities on the Gulf. Manufac-
turing is limited to local craft industries and
manufacturing-in-transit at the region’s free
ports, most notably those in the emirate of
Dubai. As banking and trading centers of
the Middle East, however, some of these cit-
ies—Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Manama—have been
thriving as increasingly important transac-
tional nodes in the economic systems reshap-
ing the region. The center of Arab world
banking has shifted (in part) from Beirut to
Manama and Dubai. Doha, Qatar, is now the
headquarters of Al Jazeera, the most popu-
lar satellite television channel in the Middle
East; Qatar is currently slated to host the FIFA
World Cup in 2022 (Figure 7.11). Since the
1990s, the port cities of the Persian Gulf have
been entrepôts supplying Central Asia with
cars, electronics, and other high-end goods.
While built on petrodollars, the cities of the
Gulf are likely to continue thriving only if they
diversify and lay the groundwork for post-
petroleum economies.
Figure 7.11 the skyline of doha seems out of proportion to its role as capital city of a country, Qatar, with only 2 million inhabitants. Source: Photo by Zia Salim.
Form and Function on the Urban Landscape 295
FORM AND FUNCTION ON THE URbAN LANDSCAPE
What factors have shaped the morphology
and landscape in the Middle Eastern city? The
most prominent influences on the form and
shape of the contemporary Middle Eastern
city include the physical environment, reli-
gion, economic activity, culture, and politics.
These factors do not operate independently.
Rather, they interact and overlap with each
other. The passing down of architectural and
design know-how, often over generations, has
guided the development of the Middle Eastern
city. But, new technologies and international
trends have also influenced the form and
function of cities.
Albeit principally affected by their location
in an arid climate, cities of the Middle East
are spread across a variety of climatic zones,
including desert, steppe, and Mediterranean.
Dry environments influenced the location of
cities near oases or wells and along coastlines.
Additionally, the traditional city’s morphology
was profoundly influenced by temperatures.
Examples of design elements, at various scales,
that promote cooling and minimize heat
absorption include the use of open-air central
courtyards that interact with the microclimate
to facilitate cooling. Air is chilled by wells or
fountains located in courtyards, and shade is
provided by the use of vines, arbors, and trees.
Partially covered, narrow and winding streets
also maximize shade and walkability. Other
attempts to moderate temperatures include
the attachment of multiple homes together (to
reduce exposed wall surface and heat absorp-
tion), the selection of high-albedo building
materials (to increase reflectivity), the mini-
mization of the size and number of outside
openings, and the use of wood lattice screens
to reduce direct sunlight.
In much of the Middle East, Islam’s imprint
on urban morphology can be seen in numer-
ous ways. Minarets mark the skyline, and
mosques and religious buildings (such as
Koranic schools, traditional universities,
shrines, and mausoleums) are key features of
the landscape. At the heart of the city is a main
mosque, known as Al-Masjid Al-Jami, where
the weekly Friday noon prayers are held. The
city is typically divided into quarters, each
with a local mosque. Guided by the religious
duty of zakat (alms), the surrounding busi-
nesses and residents help support the mosques
and the social services that they provide. An
examination of Islamic law and neighborhood
building guidelines identifies 12 religious
principles and 5 behavioral guidelines that
were used to guide urban development. The
religious principles range from interdepend-
ence, privacy, and respect for the property of
others, to more concrete aspects such as the
minimum width of streets. Behavioral guide-
lines include cleanliness, public awareness and
responsibility, and trust, respect, and mutual
obligation among neighbors. Numerous ele-
ments of urban structure, design, and use in
the built environment highlight the influence
of religion. The prioritization of privacy influ-
ences the placement of small windows above
eye level, staggered doors on opposite sides of
streets (so that doors that are open simulta-
neously do not allow for others to see inside
one’s home), walled homes and quarters (in
which the entrances to individual homes are
often doors in walls and not distinguishable
individual units), and the use of wooden lat-
ticework to screen windows.
Trade dominated the region long before
Muhammad, himself a merchant, revealed a
new religion, so it is little wonder that souks
(markets) are another typical part of the tra-
ditional city landscape. Central souks usually
296 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
evolved around the city’s “grand mosque”;
smaller souks enveloped the neighborhood
mosques. Souks display functional specializa-
tion: shoes in one area, copperware in another,
produce in another, and traditional fast food
available throughout. Merchants dealing in
the same product compete with each other,
complementary trades are located near each
other, and the concept of fixed prices does not
exist. Shoppers know the techniques of hard
bargaining and expect low prices. In today’s
city, specialized outdoor souks (e.g., vegeta-
bles, fruits, fish, and clothes) are spread across
central areas and traditional neighborhoods.
However, mass-produced goods are as com-
mon as locally produced products. In other
realms of the traditional (albeit disappearing)
city: bread tends to be purchased daily at the
bakery itself; most public baths (hammams)
have become historical sites since houses are
served by water pipes; modern beauty salons
are located in almost every neighborhood;
cafes and coffee houses take the place of bars
for men (while alcohol is not permitted by the
Koran, coffee, tea, and the water pipes known
as nargileh in the Levant and sheesha in Egypt
and the Gulf are a popular custom); and pri-
vate life takes place in very private places, like
the home (Box 7.2). The informal economy is
an important sector, providing employment
and livelihoods to large numbers of urban
residents.
With the growth of the global internet
and the rapid adoption of social media, par-
ticularly among the region’s large youth
populations, all cities in the Middle East are
developing into cyber cities. The region’s uni-
versities, manufacturing establishments, and
traders are increasingly tied to constant flows
of information that arrives by waves, wires, and
fiber optic cables. Every computer becomes its
own harbor in the informational landscape,
and the public is demanding frontage on these
“harbors.” Today, there are thousands of inter-
net cafes throughout the Middle East, and the
percentage of people with mobile internet
connections (on phones and other devices) is
very high. Home internet connections are still
rare. For example, 3.3 percent of Egyptians
have fixed internet access at home, but 10
times as many Egyptians have internet access
using a cell phone. Similarly, Bahrain has an
impressive 110 active mobile-broadband
subscriptions for every 100 inhabitants. The
implications of increased connectivity are var-
ied. On one hand, cyberactivism is popularly
understood as being crucial to the protests
that swept cities in the Arab world in 2011,
but it is too simplistic to attribute the move-
ment solely to cyberactivism. The long-term
outcomes of these protests illustrate some
of the limits of internet connectivity. On the
other hand, the increasing numbers of tech-
savvy young people in the Middle East can
lead to new social and economic formations.
For example, Iranian e-commerce firm Digi-
kala, the brainchild of two brothers who were
frustrated because they could not find camera
reviews online in their own language, employs
more than 700 people and ships thousands of
orders a day in several Iranian cities. In less
than a year, Digikala’s value has soared to over
$300 million.
The Middle Eastern city’s landscape has
been marked by imperial, colonial, and
nationalist, royalist, and autocratic politics.
The earliest Middle Eastern cities were con-
trolled by various empires (e.g., Ummayyid,
Ottoman), and cities were purposely built as
symbolic centers of power and control. Later,
Western colonial powers left their mark on the
Middle Eastern city. Today, zones of colonial
architecture, characterized by modernist plan-
ning and layout as well as individual design
Form and Function on the Urban Landscape 297
Box 7.2 Home Space in tehran
Farhang Rouhani, University of Mary Washington
Since 1979, the islamic Republic of iran’s efforts to quell modernization along Western lines have imposed strict policies on iranian citizens. in urban centers, most notably tehran, these include the state policing of public spaces such as parks and commercial streets. What is particularly striking, however, is how these politics invade even the most private of spaces: the home.
home spaces in tehran were significantly rearranged over the course of the twentieth cen- tury. the traditional home was divided into separate male (birun, outer, public) and female (andarun, inner, private) sections. A lack of street-facing windows accentuated the sense of privacy; indeed, internal courtyards served as the home’s central focus. Modernization under the Pahlavi Shahs (1920s–1979) and the demands of rapid population growth ushered in Western high-rise apartment-style living, without the physically gendered division of space, and more public street-facing windows. the importance placed on familial privacy, though, has been maintained in different ways, including the prevalence of walls around the com- plexes and buzzers to screen visitors.
on top of this urban transformation, the politics of satellite television viewing has brought the middle-class tehran household to the forefront of iranian state politics. the clerical government first instituted a ban on the sale, import, and use of satellite dishes in 1994 because of the proclaimed polluting effect of Western media products on iranian society and particularly the youth.
Under iran’s more liberal-democratic government, the late 1990s witnessed a relaxing of the ban, including the requiring of a warrant for home searches. the current, more conserv- ative-theocratic government, however, has recommenced the policing of public and private morality. While the ban on satellite dishes still exists and periodic raids to confiscate them are made by the morals police, a majority of the population of tehran has access to the air waves, whether directly in their homes or through family and friends. Ultimately, police regulation and infiltration of people’s homes have intensified fears in an already politically insecure society.
the practice of policing the home has led to dynamic conflicts in iranian state and society over the role of privacy in a democracy, the importance of the home as a space of refuge, and the moral and social effects of the global media. it is within this context that The Simpsons, American Idol, and the living room furniture are transformed into a realm of resistance.
elements, can be found outside the older
walled cities across the region. The French
colonization of most of North Africa, for
instance, strongly influenced city cultures and
built environments in Morocco, Tunisia, and
Algeria. After World War II, the end of colo-
nialism and the rise of Arab nationalism con-
tributed new symbolic elements to Arab cities
298 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
in the Middle East. A parallel trend is seen in
countries ruled by monarchies and autocratic
regimes. Monumental squares and public art,
statues or other monuments to leaders, and
renamed public streets and buildings all reflect
nationalist, royalist, and autocratic influences
on the Middle Eastern city.
To varying degrees, cities in the Middle
East are integrated into international circuits
of tourism. Activity in the tourism sector
includes heritage and cultural tourism (draw-
ing on a rich inventory of districts, archaeo-
logical sites, monuments, and museums) and
recreation and nature-based tourism. The first
wave of construction of large hotels and other
visitor-serving infrastructure was supported
by oil revenues in the 1970s; since then, tour-
ism has spread across the region and down
the urban hierarchy. In 2014, 50 million inter-
national tourists visited the Middle East. In a
direct manner, tourism provides significant
portions of national GDP in some countries
(Egypt, Turkey, Morocco, and Lebanon) and
employs tens of thousands of people (more
than 1.4 million in Egypt alone). Obviously,
the indirect benefits of tourism in terms of
GDP contribution and employment are sev-
eral times greater than the direct benefits.
While recent political instability has impacted
tourist flows, tourism in the Middle East as
a whole is increasing at one of the highest
rates in the world. Tourism is an important
part of the economic and social landscapes
of many cities in the region. A range of cul-
tural events, festivals, and sporting events are
used to market cities and attract visitors and
capital. Some Middle Eastern cities have dual-
istic landscapes—tourists see and experience
one portion of the city, while residents see
and experience another. Tourism also relates
to questions of urban preservation and rede-
velopment. Exactly how architectural heritage
and historic buildings should be preserved,
within larger socioeconomic and cultural
contexts, is often contentious. Further, gov-
ernments often use the redevelopment of old
cities as an economic development strategy,
but this can result in islands of gentrification
and the creation of romanticized versions of
the past.
FROM ARAb SPRING TO ARAb WINTER
On December 10, 2010, a wave of democratic
uprisings was born. It began in the small Tuni-
sian town of Sidi Bouzid and quickly spread
to the capital, Tunis, then to the cities of other
Middle Eastern countries including Egypt,
Libya, Syria, and Yemen. These revolts aimed
to engender political and economic reform
by overthrowing dictatorial leaders who had
been in power for decades. They began as
affirmations of people’s struggles for freedom,
democracy, and social justice. Because they
took place as the winter of 2010–2011 gave
way to spring in the Arab world, the move-
ment was quickly dubbed the Arab Spring.
Only time will tell what the long-term demo-
cratic and social impacts will be. At present, it
is difficult to see anything but an Arab winter.
Often called youth revolutions, these move-
ments showed how peaceful protests could
oust dictators, as in Egypt and Tunisia, how
powerful presidents might lead their countries
to civil wars to stay in power, as in Libya and
Syria, and how external interventions could
complicate the processes of democratization
everywhere in the Middle East, with Yemen as
just one example.
Tunisians call the overthrow of President
Zine El-Abidin Ben Ali the Jasmine Revolu-
tion. It began when street vendor Mohamed
Bouazizi decided to commit suicide—by
From Arab Spring to Arab Winter 299
setting himself on fire—after he had been
harassed and humiliated by local police and
municipal officials. Supporters spontaneously
took to the streets and the uprising quickly
spread to other cities. Less than a month later,
Ben Ali, in power for more than 23 years, fled
the country. The next year, Tunisia held its
first democratic parliamentary elections and
set about drafting a new, democratic constitu-
tion. In 2014, multiparty elections took place
under the newly approved constitution. Islam-
ist parties vied with secular parties for power.
Although secular parties won both parlia-
ment and the presidency, a variety of violent
reverberations ensued. In early 2015, extrem-
ists killed 21 tourists at the Bardo National
Museum in Tunis. World leaders and tens
of thousands of Tunisians marched through
the streets of Tunis to condemn terrorism.
Later that year, 38 vacationers were killed
near Sousse. Islamic extremists were respon-
sible for both attacks. The first revolution
of the Arab Spring, however, seems to have
pointed Tunisia toward democratization. In
other countries where revolutions have taken
place, progress has been more tortuous and,
in some, the groups which have taken over are
worse than the overthrown dictators.
Egypt’s January 25 Revolution, in 2011, was
sparked by the protests in Tunisia and fueled
by youth, and others, demanding “bread,
freedom, and social justice.” At first, as Presi-
dent Hosni Mubarak resigned and elections
followed, it looked as if success was at hand.
However, it took a second wave of protests in
Cairo and around the country to put Egypt
on a path to full democracy. In the first mul-
tiparty elections, the Muslim Brotherhood
won parliamentary and then presidential con-
trol. As they tightened their grip on power
through often-debatable means, including
the adoption of a controversial constitution,
Tahrir (“Liberation”) Square once again
came alive with mass protests that culmi-
nated in the military’s ouster of democrati-
cally elected president Mohamed Morsi of the
Muslim Brotherhood (Figure 7.12). Following
a period of military rule and the adoption of
yet another constitution, new elections were
held, and secular-party candidate Abdel Fat-
tah el-Sisi was elected president (as chief of
the Egyptian Armed Forces, el-Sisi deposed
Morsi; he then resigned to run for president).
The Muslim Brotherhood was outlawed, but
as in Tunisia, this led to a violent reaction in
the form of extremist terrorism that has hit
the government, the Coptic Christian minor-
ity, and the Sinai especially hard. Nevertheless,
in Egypt, the revolution seems to be making
progress.
In other Arab countries where popular
uprisings were inspired by Tunisia’s Jasmine
Revolution, there has been no progress toward
democracy and social justice. Libya has
become a failed state, a state without a gov-
ernment in control. Although the world wel-
comed the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi
after his 42 years of absolute repression, there
were no institutions in Libya ready to assume
the reins of power. In the subsequent power
vacuum, old regional and tribal rivalries sur-
faced, outside powers supplied arms, and the
conflict was quickly joined by violent extrem-
ists, including the self-proclaimed Islamic
State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). The failure of
the Libyan spring has placed a potentially
destabilizing failed state in the middle of
North Africa.
In Syria, antigovernment protests started
in 2011 in the city of Dera’a and quickly
spread to Damascus, the capital, and other
major cities. Protesters eventually demanded
the resignation of President Bashar al-Assad.
His response was to use police and military
300 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
forces to suppress the rebellion. Within a
few months, Syria’s Arab Spring had given
birth to a brutal civil war between anti-Assad
forces (which were highly fragmented inter-
nally) and the Syrian state. The complex
conflict soon gained international dimen-
sions: other countries in the Middle East
intervened, major powers picked sides, and
terrorists from across the region and beyond
entered the conflict. Most dangerous to the
region has been the ISIS, a violent extrem-
ist group that grew out of al-Qaeda in Iraq.
ISIS’s self-proclaimed caliphate now con-
trols, from its capital at Raqqa, large amounts
of territory in Syria and Iraq. The ensuing
strife has caused a massive humanitarian cri-
sis, as millions of Syrian civilians have been
displaced.
Protests against the rule of Yemen’s dic-
tatorial president Saleh also took place in
2011 in the capital of Sana’a and other major
cities including Aden and Taiz. Eventually,
President Saleh stepped down, a rebel group
called the Houthis took over the capital, and
a proxy war between Shiite Iran and Sunni
Saudi Arabia, backing the Houthis and the
government, respectively, ensued. The pro-
tests that took place in these four countries,
plus others, beginning in 2011, have left some
countries a step closer to democracy, while
others have become horrifyingly violent kill-
ing fields beyond the control of any recog-
nized government.
DISTINCTIVE CITIES
Cairo: The Victorious
Al Qahirah means “victorious,” and Cairo has
emerged victorious as the most populous city
in the Arab World, in the Middle East, and on
the continent of Africa. Greater Cairo, with
Figure 7.12 demonstrations to oust President Mohamed Morsi from power took place in cities around the world as expat Egyptians took to the streets of cities like Amsterdam, shown here on July 7, 2013. Although he was democratically elected, Morsi’s abuse of power enraged the public and the Egyptian military. Source: Photo by Amal Ali.
Distinctive Cities 301
about 19 million people, is well on its way to
metacity status. It is known as “the City of
1000 Minarets” since mosques spread across
all city neighborhoods. With its movie indus-
try and annual International Film Festival,
Cairo is known as the “Hollywood” of the
Middle East, as well. The Arabic-language cin-
ema and popular Arab music have made Cairo
one of the cultural epicenters of the Arab
universe. Al-Ahram, a government-owned
Cairo daily newspaper with an online English
edition, has the largest readership in the Arab
world. Several private newspapers such as Al-
Wafed, Al Masry Al-Youm, and Al-Shorouk are
also published in Cairo to represent critical
views of governmental policies. As the capital
of Egypt and the headquarters of the League
of Arab States, Cairo is also the head city of
pan-Arab politics, a role facilitated by both its
size and its relative location. It hosts foreign
embassies and cultural centers and a major
educational complex where Cairo University,
Ain Shams University, and other public and
private universities are located. Cairo’s Al-
Azhar University is the world’s oldest Islamic
university and a major center of Sunni Islamic
education; students from around the globe
come to Al-Azhar to study Islam and other
subjects. Cairo is uniquely positioned between
the western Arab world of North Africa and
the eastern Arab world of Asia.
Over a thousand years old, Cairo is a multi-
layered city; its buildings and neighborhoods
reflect the impact of various historical periods.
At its dense core lies the “Islamic” city. To the
east of the Nile River the city began as a mili-
tary encampment and grew to include a cita-
del, mosque, and city walls. Today most walls
are gone, torn down as the city’s boundaries
expanded. However, three of the original gates
remain to draw tourists, who mingle with the
area’s residents. In medieval times, Cairo was
an epicenter of world trade; caravans brought
luxuries and necessities to the city’s famed
markets. Today, tourists crowd the Khan al-
Khalili market to buy souvenirs, most often
trinkets reflecting Egypt’s pharaonic history,
or to sip tea in traditional coffee shops.
As dams tamed the Nile floods in the nine-
teenth century, the city expanded onto the
river’s shores. At the same time, Europe was
establishing overseas colonies in Asia and
Africa, new neighborhoods in Cairo were
being constructed in European design. Houses
were built that looked like Italianate villas,
parks were constructed to open up the city,
and a “new” downtown was created to mimic
the design of Paris. Upper-class Egyptians
even enjoyed performances in the new opera
house, where, in 1871, an opera premiered
that has become one of the most popular:
Aida by Giuseppe Verdi.
Cairo’s explosive population growth
occurred in the era after World War II, when
Egypt became an independent republic.
Migrants from the rural areas flooded the
capital in search of jobs and opportunities;
they created enormous economic challenges
for the young government. Massive high-
density apartment blocks, with bleak architec-
tural designs and poor quality construction,
were built to accommodate the influx. At the
same time, the government became concerned
about Cairo’s massive size, and its military
vulnerability.
In an effort to stem the tide of urban
expansion onto valuable farmland, the Egyp-
tian government began to redirect growth into
the desert. The result was government-built,
industry-based cities distant from Cairo. The
10th of Ramadan City, for instance, located on
the way to the Suez Canal, was built to have an
industrial base anchored by several thousand
factories. Since the 1970s, it has offered jobs,
302 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
housing, and some services. The new towns,
however, never met their target population
goals and did little to relieve the population
pressure on Cairo. Also, new settlements were
built along the ring road surrounding Cairo
to redistribute the population. Many of these
settlements became homes for the middle and
upper classes.
Since the 1990s, Cairo’s landscape has
increasingly reflected the impact of globali-
zation. Chili’s, TGIF, Hardee’s and other fast-
food chains with global reach are ubiquitous.
Massive malls, office towers, and new hotels
now line the Nile. In addition to the Ameri-
can University in Cairo (AUC), founded in
1919, new international universities such as
the German University in Cairo (GUC) have
been established to internationalize the city’s
educational opportunities. The presence of
foreign banks (e.g., CitiBank, HSBC, and Sco-
tia Bank) illustrates Cairo’s integration into
the global economy.
As a megacity, Cairo is really a product of
the twentieth century. As it has expanded,
however, it has engulfed dozens of predecessor
settlements and unique historical landscapes
(Figure 7.13). These visual reminders of the
past, numbering in the hundreds, make Cairo
a vast open-air museum. Large tracts of twen-
tieth-century blandness separate such histori-
cal nucleations as the following:
• The great pyramids (and the sphinx) of
Giza, on the west bank of the Nile, date
back to the Old Kingdom, but they have
been encroached upon by an expanding
city, deflating some of the excitement
of first-time visitors who may be disap-
pointed to find a Pizza Hut practically at
the pyramids’ base.
• Heliopolis (on the way to the airport)
was one of the ancient world’s cult cent-
ers, but only a single obelisk remains—
now in the middle of an urban park.
Figure 7.13 Coptic Cairo, now the city’s Christian “quarter,” is one of the historical nucleations that has survived from medieval times. here communal urns provide the neighborhood with water while political posters try to attract attention. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Distinctive Cities 303
• Babylon-in-Egypt, now known as Cop-
tic Cairo (because of its Coptic Christian
inhabitants), has a history associated
with the world’s most famous refugee
family—Mary, Joseph, and Jesus. It is
now engulfed by the modern suburb of
Ma’adi.
• Cairo’s Citadel was built by Saladin in
the twelfth century; it was transformed
by the Mamluks and then the Ottomans.
Recently, Tahrir Square has become a major
landmark in Cairo. It was the focal point of the
Egyptian Revolution that started on January
25, 2011, to demand freedom, social justice,
and economic reforms. With the success of the
revolution, Tahrir Square has become a place
where Egyptians go to demand ever more
reforms. It has become the equivalent of Lon-
don’s “Hyde Park Speakers’ Corner” in which
people openly voice their opinions and debate
political issues.
Whether counting people or cars, the
growth of Cairo has been meteoric. Today, the
city’s traffic snarls are of world renown. Since
Cairo’s metro rail system opened in the 1980s,
it has expanded to include a subway line tun-
neling under the Nile to the west bank. The
new metro stations are conveniently sited,
brilliantly lighted, and immaculately clean.
The metro links some outer suburbs (but not
yet the satellite cities) with the center of the
metropolis, and at least one car on every train
is reserved for women. Trips that at one time
took three hours by car, now can take as lit-
tle as half an hour. As the city’s transportation
system continues to become more efficient, so
will its economy. In early 2015, the Egyptian
government announced plans to construct a
new capital city on undeveloped land to the
east of Cairo. The proposed city would serve
administrative and financial functions, and
would be planned and developed by the pri-
vate sector. While the future of this new city
remains to be seen, it illustrates the long-
standing tensions of managing urban growth
while balancing the traditional and the
modern.
Jerusalem: City of Three Faiths
Jerusalem occupies neither an attractive site
nor a strategic location. It is not central in a
geographical sense and lies astride no major
trade routes. It is a city that should have been
bypassed by time. Instead, Jerusalem has
become an epicenter of religious veneration
and conflict. Three religions regard it as a holy
city: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Mus-
lims rank it behind only Mecca and Medina
in importance. For them, it is the place from
which Mohammed made his “night jour-
ney” to heaven to talk personally with God.
To mark the place of his ascension, Muslims
built the Dome of the Rock in 691 ce (Figure
7.14). To Jews, Jerusalem is the city of David’s
kingship and Solomon’s Temple. The wall of
the platform on which the Temple stood is
all that remains; it is called the Western Wall
and is the focal point of Jewish prayers. To
Christians, Jerusalem is the city where Jesus
of Nazareth revealed himself to be the Mes-
siah. Since Byzantine times, the Church of the
Holy Sepulchre has sheltered the place of the
crucifixion, entombment, and resurrection of
Jesus.
One always speaks of “going up” to Jeru-
salem. It began as a hill town at the very
southern tip of the western Fertile Crescent.
The only feature of the physical environment
that commended the site was a spring, now
known as the Gihon. The Jebusite village at
the spring was destined for prominence, how-
ever, largely because its relative location made
304 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
a difference 3,000 years ago. The village was
conquered by the Hebrew king, David, who
needed a centrally located capital between the
northern and southern tribes of the Hebrew
people. Jerusalem fit the bill. With the decision
to move the Arc of the Covenant (containing
Moses’ tablets of stone) to Jerusalem, the city
began to acquire the religious capital needed
to sustain its spiritual centrality for three mil-
lennia. Jerusalem became the place where the
God of Moses and Abraham permanently
resided; and, before the first Muslims prayed
facing Mecca, they prayed facing Jerusalem.
Religion endowed Jerusalem with elements of
centrality that geography could not.
The current walls of the old city of Jerusa-
lem date back to the Ottoman period. Within
the walls, Jerusalem is divided into four so-
called quarters: Muslim, Jewish, Christian,
and Armenian (Figure 7.15). The mental map
conjured up by such a description, however,
belies the reality of the city’s cultural geog-
raphy. In fact, almost the entire old city has
an Arab feel to it, save for the Jewish quarter.
Furthermore, the boundaries of the quarters
no longer (probably never did) define the cul-
tural divisions of the city. Residential patterns
and movement into and out of the four quar-
ters challenge the idea that they are homoge-
nous neighborhood groupings of like-minded
souls. In the “old city,” Muslims and Jews are
the primary actors, Christians are diminish-
ing in numbers, and Armenians are doing
what they have done best for over 1,500 years,
Figure 7.14 the dome of the Rock (venerated by Muslims) and the Western Wall (venerated by Jews) are symbols of a religiously divided Jerusalem. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Distinctive Cities 305
surviving as a culturally distinct Christian
minority. Muslim Arabs are expanding into
the Christian quarter, the traditional niche of
Christian Arabs. Jews are solidly in control of
the Jewish quarter; but they are also acquir-
ing property in the other three quarters, which
they conspicuously mark with signs, syna-
gogues, and Israeli flags. Jews moving into the
old city are more likely to be extremely reli-
gious, and those leaving it are more likely to
be secular. Armenians, especially seminarians,
flow through the Armenian quarter from all
over the world, their identity bolstered since
1991 when Armenia reappeared on the map
of sovereign states.
The “old city” is only one of two Jerusalems.
The other is the sprawling modern metropolis.
While the walled city is no larger than a col-
lege campus, metropolitan Jerusalem covers
at least 50 square miles (129 sq km). Despite
being governed as a single municipality, the
metropolitan area is bisected by a cultural
fault line. West Jerusalem is thoroughly Jewish
and provides the site for Israel’s parliament,
the Knesset. East Jerusalem is primarily Arab
(including both Muslim and Christian Arabs),
a collection of Arab villages, one of which may
someday become the capital of the Palestinian
state. “Occupied” East Jerusalem, however, is
not as homogeneous as West Jerusalem. In the
east, Jewish settlements occupy a dozen hill-
top sites, all of them new (post-1967), wealthy,
and strategically positioned to maintain con-
trol of greater Jerusalem for the Israelis. To
the north, south, and east of Jerusalem, where
border crossings are patrolled by Israeli sol-
diers, the Palestinian West Bank begins. The
city’s relative location between Israel proper
and Palestine gives it a frontier feel.
The future of Jerusalem will be determined
by the ability of the Israelis and the Pales-
tinians to negotiate a peaceful resolution to
Figure 7.15 in the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem, enough archaeological excavation has gone on to bring back the Cardo, or main street, of the ancient Roman city. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
306 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
their conflicting ambitions. In the meantime,
repeated conflict between the Israelis and
the Arabs has destroyed the infrastructure of
many West Bank cities, such as Ramallah and
Jenin. The construction of a separation barrier
(also known as the separation wall or fence)
by the Israelis further complicates efforts to
resolve the conflict. Fifty-six miles (90 km) of
the barrier is in Jerusalem, much of it thrust-
ing deep inside the pre-1967 border. The bar-
rier separates Jerusalem from the West Bank.
Although it was constructed to increase Israeli
security, the barrier also restricts the ability of
thousands of Palestinians to reach their jobs,
fields, and medical services.
Dubai: Gulf Showplace
A newcomer to the roster of Middle Eastern
cities, Dubai’s recent and rapid growth now
attracts attention on a global scale. Origi-
nally a sleepy town on the shores of the Gulf,
Dubai was historically focused on pearling
and seaborne trade. The town’s location was
originally dictated by site; it was at the junc-
ture of the Dubai Creek and the Gulf. The
Bastakiya neighborhood and the Fahidi fort
were located on one side of the creek, and the
Deira area, with its markets and wharves, was
located on the other. The old city’s area is rela-
tively small, giving the rest of Dubai a blank
slate upon which to grow. The pace and scale
of its growth have been nothing short of stag-
gering. The city’s population exploded from
20,000 in 1950 to 2.4 million in 2015. By some
measures, its area quadrupled in the space of
six years, becoming the Gulf ’s leading city in
terms of business, entertainment, and con-
sumer services.
When the seven emirates that make up
the United Arab Emirates joined together to
become an independent state in 1971, Dubai
was not the largest, the wealthiest, or the
most oil-rich. Government strategies have
worked to grow Dubai by using funds from its
relatively small petroleum deposits to imple-
ment diversified development strategies and
emphasize non-oil economic activities that
put it at the center of the global marketplace.
The Jebel Ali port and free-trade zone were
established in the 1980s; today, Jebel Ali hosts
6,000 companies and is the eighth busiest
container port in the world. Emirates Airlines,
owned by the government of Dubai’s invest-
ment corporation, flies to 140 global destina-
tions, and Dubai’s airport has become one of
the world’s busiest passenger hubs. It ranked
13th in the world in 2010 and has risen to
third place today.
Within the city, enclaves have been created
to focus on specific activities: the Dubai Inter-
national Financial Center emphasizes banking
and financial services; Media City is a hub for
media outlets and internet-based companies;
and Knowledge Village houses international
educational institutions. This diversification
strategy has given Dubai a relatively stable
economic base from which to grow. To cre-
ate an urban identity, a Dubai “brand,” the
city’s entrepreneurial government has actively
developed megaprojects, commissioned iconic
architecture, and constructed shopping malls,
resorts, and other spaces of conspicuous con-
sumption that cater to visitors (Figure 7.16).
In addition to the creation of image, these
projects help to attract foreign capital and
investment.
The highly speculative nature of real estate
development in Dubai was made clear by the
rapid boom and subsequent bubble econ-
omy that was eventually burst by the global
recession. A degree of notoriety has accom-
panied Dubai’s success. Some aspects of the
city’s growth, while impressive, seem more
Distinctive Cities 307
connected to spectacle than substance: an
indoor ski slope is located in a shopping mall;
man-made islands in the shape of palm trees
jut into the Gulf ’s blue waters (Figure 7.17)
while an archipelago in the shape of a world
takes shape offshore; and the tallest building
in the world, Burj Khalifa, towers over a city
whose skyline already boasted clusters of sky-
scrapers. Burj Khalifa was finished in 2010 and
meant to anchor the new mixed-use down-
town. The tower itself has hotel, residential,
commercial, and office space, plus an observa-
tion deck, all stratified by floor.
Beyond the global and the exceptional, eve-
ryday Dubai is a fascinating place. Traditional
covered souks specializing in gold and spices
anchor older neighborhoods adjoining the
Dubai Creek. Traditional wooden ships, called
dhows, are tied up at the wharves, loaded with
all sorts of goods for trips across the Gulf, the
Arabian Sea, or the Indian Ocean. Although
the skyscrapers are iconic, the largest land use
in the city comprises the residential neighbor-
hoods that house Dubai’s middle-class popu-
lation. Dubai has an exceptionally unique
social fabric. Estimates suggest that the local
Emirati population makes up only about 10
percent of Dubai’s population, while South
Asian migrants comprise the largest propor-
tion. Although some South Asians are the
third and fourth generation to live in Dubai,
they cannot gain Emirati citizenship. English
is Dubai’s lingua franca. Given the fact that
upwards of 90 percent of residents are foreign
born and that Dubai acts as a global immi-
gration magnet, everyday Dubai is a uniquely
diverse place.
A consideration of Dubai’s urban future
must take into account a number of ques-
tions related to economic, environmental,
and social sustainability. The city’s horizon-
tal sprawl places demands on infrastructure
and creates congestion and pollution. Dubai
is multinuclear, with several centers that are
Figure 7.16 Elements of traditional and modern Arab culture seem to blend harmoniously in the world’s largest themed shopping mall, which was named after the medieval Arab geographer ibn battuta. it is located in dubai. Source: Photo by Zia Salim.
308 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
separated by multilane highways. Although a
new metro rail system has been in place since
2009, public transit and pedestrian movement
are both subordinate to the automobile. Water
is supplied by desalination, which is currently
fueled by abundant and cheap energy. The
social dimensions associated with having a
large nonnational population, particularly
migrant workers living in stark conditions,
deserve consideration. Urban space is strati-
fied, as prominent spaces of consumption,
including gleaming shopping malls, modern
supermarkets, and an annual shopping fes-
tival, segregate those who can afford to con-
sume them from those who cannot.
All in all, Dubai abounds in contrasts. Its
urbanization exemplifies, albeit at a magni-
fied scale, other cities in the Gulf. Although
the relative wealth, urban entrepreneurialism,
and unique demographics of Dubai and other
Gulf cities (Doha, Abu Dhabi, Manama) make
them outliers in the overall roster of Middle
Eastern cities, they are a significant group in
and of themselves.
Mecca: City of the Hajj
Mecca is the city at the heart of the Islamic
world. It has singular religious significance in
the lives of the world’s billion-plus Muslims—
devout Muslims face Mecca five times a day
in prayer, and a pilgrimage (hajj) to Mecca
once in a lifetime is a pillar of Islam. Mecca is
located in the Hijaz mountain range along the
Arabian Peninsula’s western extent. Site con-
trols the city’s form: mountainous topography
channels the city’s growth and pushes devel-
opment away from the core through valleys
into the surrounding desert plains.
Besides its innate religious importance,
numerous locations in and around Mecca are
associated with Islam’s beginnings: the place
where Mohammad was born, the mountain
where he received his first revelation of the
Figure 7.17 Palm Jumeirah is one of three palm-tree shaped islands that are being built as a reclamation project in the Gulf. dubai specializes in landscapes of spectacle that attract the attention of the world. Source: Photo by Zia Salim.
Distinctive Cities 309
Koran, and the hill from which he made his
final sermon. However, while Mecca has spir-
itual importance, it was never Islam’s politi-
cal capital. Within a few dozen years after the
death of Mohammad, the political center suc-
cessively shifted from Medina to Damascus
and later Baghdad. As a succession of caliphs
assumed both spiritual and secular roles, Mecca
never acted independently of the new centers
of power. But urbanism and Mecca’s religious
and historical importance are intertwined. The
Great Mosque and the hajj impacted the city’s
morphology and functions; at a regional scale,
pilgrim traffic to Mecca was one of the reasons
for the relatively high degree of urbanization
in this part of the Middle East during the late
Arab and Ottoman eras.
Mecca’s current population is about 1.7
million. While the city is a year-round religious
destination, it experiences extreme seasonal
swells as the pilgrimage brings an annual influx
of the devout (both internal and foreign). In
2014, 2 million pilgrims visited Mecca. The
city’s non-pilgrim population is ethnically
diverse, as there is a history of people from
many nationalities completing the pilgrimage
and remaining in Mecca. This migration has
created a cosmopolitan city, and the Mecca’s
non-pilgrim immigrant population is large
enough to rank it as one of the largest in the
world. Finally, a politics of exclusion operates
in Mecca, as non-Muslims are not allowed to
enter the city. While the creation of sacred space
through exclusion occurs in other religious tra-
ditions, its application at the scale of an entire
city is a singular example of how exclusion is
used to create space and community.
Mecca’s core is dominated by the mosque
(instead of a fortress, as in the Middle East-
ern city model). The monumental mosque
that is Mecca’s spiritual and physical heart has
grown as several cycles of development have
expanded the structure and provided more
modern amenities. Most recently, the Saudi
government has made impressive efforts to
serve visitors to Mecca. An ongoing expan-
sion project will, at the expense of surround-
ing neighborhoods, increase the area of the
mosque and associated external courtyards.
At this project’s completion, the mosque com-
plex alone will be able to accommodate a stag-
gering 1,500,000 visitors at a time.
The mosque is similar to a Central Busi-
ness District (CBD)—it can be thought of as
a Central Religious District. In the core-frame
model, the CBD continually grows in dif-
ferent directions, alternately absorbing and
discarding the surrounding building stock.
In Mecca, there is no zone of discard, only a
zone of accumulation. Commercial proper-
ties near the mosque are almost exclusively
geared toward religious visitors; consequently,
land values at the core are extremely high,
regardless of the age, size, and condition of
the property. The mosque’s immediate envi-
rons are increasingly dominated by large
capitalistic developments. International hotel
chains such as Sheraton, Intercontinental,
and Hilton are located in mega-developments
that integrate shopping and restaurants to
create high-end consumer spaces. Given the
guaranteed draw of religious mobility, Mecca
has been relatively insulated from the booms
and busts of the global economic slowdown.
In fact, the pace of development has recently
increased. In the past 30 years, local and inter-
national construction firms, such as Dubai’s
Emaar, have worked in tandem with the state
to develop increasingly ambitious projects
in Mecca, some of which seem out of place.
Other cities with structures of special signifi-
cance have enacted height restrictions to pre-
vent significant buildings from being eclipsed,
but Mecca has been less fortunate. The new
310 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
towers mentioned above loom figuratively
and literally over the mosque. These mega-
developments are framed as visitor-serving
nahda umranniah or “urban progress,” but the
question about whether this is really progress
(and who it serves) is pertinent.
The older parts of Mecca extend away from
the mosque, nestled in the valleys and hang-
ing onto the less accessible lower portions of
the mountain slopes, safe (for now) from the
bulldozers and cranes. Still visible in parts
of the core, older parts of the city are tightly
organized into residential zones or quarters
with small, densely packed houses, narrow,
winding lanes, and an organic plan. However,
the creative destruction associated with the
mosque’s expansion and associated develop-
ment has eroded the old city’s imprint in suc-
cessive waves of demolition. The area north of
the mosque is a massive construction site, with
no traces remaining of the dense urban neigh-
borhood that existed there only five years ago;
in other places, older neighborhoods have
had wide streets cut through them. In gen-
eral, neighborhoods in the older part of the
city have filtered down and are of lower qual-
ity. The rest of Mecca has grown to dwarf the
remaining old city area.
The historic preservation seen in other
world regions is lacking in Mecca. The city’s
old gate is a remnant exception and a reminder
of the time when the city was enclosed by
walls. In addition, some buildings in older
neighborhoods are still utilized as they were in
the past. However, in a city with great historic
significance, relatively few historically signifi-
cant structures remain.
Moving outward from the core, the mod-
ern city, the everyday Mecca that nobody
hears about, is where the city’s 1.7 million
residents live, work, and play. The modern city
sprawls into the valleys away from the core
in all directions. It has single-family homes,
apartment blocks, small parks, schools, offices
buildings, and suburban shopping malls, on a
planned street pattern. Residential structures
here are a combination of single-family, two- to
three-floor, walled villas and mid-rise apart-
ment buildings. The Saudi government’s Real
Estate Development Fund provides long-term,
interest-free loans to private-sector builders,
and most residential structures are individu-
ally financed and built by construction firms
and contractors. To varying degrees, the urban
impacts of Islam can be seen throughout
Mecca; to accommodate the annual influx of
hundreds of thousands of pilgrims, hundreds
of hotels have been built in the modern city,
typically along major transportation corridors.
However, because of the seasonality of demand,
these blocks of contemporary towers are occu-
pied for only two months a year at most.
Mecca’s outskirts contain large areas of new
government-built housing tracts, in master-
planned developments with regular street lay-
out and integrated park and recreational space.
Istanbul: Transcontinental Hinge
Istanbul has existed for almost 27 centuries
(since 657 bce), for 16 of them as an imperial
capital. Its original name was Byzantium, but
it was rechristened the New Rome in 330 ce.
Almost immediately the people began calling it
Constantinopolis, Emperor Constantine’s city.
Today, it appears on the map as Istanbul. It has
been the dominant city of the eastern Mediter-
ranean realm for more than a millennium, hav-
ing surpassed a million inhabitants by 1000 ce.
Today, the population of the urban agglomera-
tion is 14 million and growing (Box 7.3).
Istanbul’s location makes it a hinge between
continents. From its situation on the European
side of the Bosporus, it is positioned to control
Distinctive Cities 311
Box 7.3 istanbul’s Double-edged Crisis of urban ecology and Democracy
A critical perspective on what is happening in cities requires us to understand that urban development is seen differently by different parts of the community. For every narrative that helps us to understand a city like istanbul, there are many counter-narratives. Captured from the blogosphere, the assessment below paints the unbridled destruction and reconstruction of istanbul as a threat rather than an achievement. the Reclaim istanbul blog is written by yaşar Adnan Adanalı; his original post had the provocative title “blood Architecture” to highlight the construction worker lives lost in turning istanbul into a world city. Adanali sees istanbul as:
(1) An economy dominated by the construction sector: the present government came to power in 2002 in the aftermath of one of turkey’s worst financial crises. Since then, the government has initiated and supported urban and rural interventions at a grand scale to resolve the country’s capital surplus absorption problem. today, after more than a decade, economic growth in turkey is heavily dependent upon the construction sector.
(2) Massive-scale urban transformation: turkey is currently experiencing an urban trans- formation at a massive scale. the expected number of housing units in turkey to be demol- ished and redeveloped is around 7 million, a substantial part of which is located in istanbul.
(3) Rapid and unlimited access to urban and rural land: Rapid and unlimited access to urban and rural land is at the center of this economic model. in 2013, 60 percent of all deci- sions made by the Council of Ministers were related to real estate development and construc- tion. the dispossession of the urban poor, the loss of public spaces, and the threat to urban ecology are unavoidable repercussions of the search for further urban land to be developed.
(4) istanbul becoming global: being at the center of this economic policy, istanbul, in the last ten years, has rapidly become a mega construction site where around 30 percent of the national GdP is produced. it is a Global City in the making. the fact that istanbul was ranked first for real estate investment and development in Europe in 2012 underscores this assessment.
(5) Uneven social development: the construction boom that the city has been undergoing is accompanied by a highly uneven social development. on the one hand, istanbul is now number five on the list of world cities with the highest number of dollar billionaires, yet on the other hand, turkey is ranked last among the 31 oECd countries in terms of social justice.
the construction frenzy not only dispossesses the urban poor, encloses public spaces, or endangers fragile urban ecology, but also claims the lives of the workers. in 2013, at least 1,235 workers lost their lives in turkey, with most of these deaths taking place in the con- struction sector.
Sources: Reclaim istanbul (http://reclaimistanbul.com); Mutlu Kent (http://mutlukent.wordpress.com)
312 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
Figure 7.18 Ataturk, the revered father of modern turkey, continues to be memorialized on the urban landscape. in this case, his visage is positioned to welcome those approaching izmir from the airport. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
overland trade between Europe and Asia, and
the shipping lanes between the Mediterra-
nean and Black Seas. The huge empires that
Istanbul commanded—Roman, Byzantine,
Ottoman—also gave it the ability to control
overland access to Arabia, the Indian Ocean,
and eastern Asia. Until the sea route around
Africa was fully opened in the sixteenth
century, Istanbul was able to control trade
between north and south, east and west. As the
imperial capital of the Ottoman realm since
1453, it reached its peak in the 1500s when
the emperor, Suleyman, commanded so much
wealth that he was known to the world as “The
Magnificent.” His city was at that time larger
in population than London, Paris, Vienna, or
Cairo. Later that century, however, the power
of Constantinople began to wane. No longer
did Ottoman subjects hold a monopoly on the
ancient silk routes across Asia or on the Fertile
Crescent caravan trade from the eastern Medi-
terranean to the Persian Gulf. As technology
enabled mastery of the sea, caravels replaced
camels as the most reliable and economical
modes of transport. Well before the end of
the nineteenth century, the Ottoman Empire
was the “sick man of Europe,” and “Stamboul”
was a city in decline. Modern Turkey was born
out of the Ottoman Empire, thanks chiefly to
the secular nationalism inspired by Mustafa
Kemal Atatürk (Figure 7.18).
The core of Istanbul, the historical city, occu-
pies a peninsular site with deep water on three
sides. Crowning the peninsula, and visually
dominant from the sea, are seven hills, just like
Rome. The peninsula is bordered on the south
by the Sea of Marmara, on the east by the Bos-
porus, and on the north by the Golden Horn,
the large, sheltered harbor that enabled the city
to dominate the shipping trade. The Bosporus
and its companion strait, the Dardanelles, ena-
bled oceangoing vessels to penetrate central
Eurasia. On the Black Sea’s northern shore, the
ancient Greeks implanted colonies. The fertile
Urban Problems and Prospects 313
hinterlands of these colonies became a bread-
basket, producing wheat for the Aegean core of
the Hellenic world, wheat that went to market
via the Bosporus. The first “world-class” city to
dominate these straits goes back to the Bronze
Age. Its name was Troy, and it was located at
the southern end of the Dardanelles. Troy was
the Istanbul of its day.
In the twentieth century, the Bosporus pro-
vided one of the Soviet Union’s few outlets to
the world ocean and was consequently a point
of strategic significance during the Cold War.
By controlling the strait at Istanbul, NATO
could deprive Moscow of dominating one
of the world’s most strategic locations. Even
now, the Bosporus continues to be important
to Ukraine and the Russian Federation. It has
also taken on a new strategic significance in
ensuring the steady flow of crude oil from
the landlocked Caspian Basin fields, much of
which transits the Bosporus, already one of
the world’s busiest straits.
Oil is not the only commodity important to
Istanbul’s economy, however. During most of
the twentieth century, Istanbul’s European hin-
terland was all but severed by the Iron Curtain
and the animosity of neighboring Greece. Now,
however, Eastern European nations have opened
their borders. The routes of commerce between
Europe and Asia are once again funneling traf-
fic across the Bosporus. The growth of trade
is nowhere more powerfully symbolized than
by the growing volume of truck traffic navi-
gating the transcontinental Bosporus bridges,
completed in 1974 and 1988. Now, a new rail
line designed to carry passengers and freight
has begun operating through an immersed
tube under the Bosporus. The Eurasia Tunnel
is under construction and will be yet another
intercontinental crossing, this one designed to
link Europe and Asia by a highway tunnel under
the strait. Istanbul also aspires to be a more
important gateway to Central Asia, where the
Turkish people originated and where most of
the languages spoken are Turkic in origin.
URbAN PRObLEMS AND PROSPECTS
Urban issues in the Middle East (and else-
where, of course) are interconnected. For
example, residents in Cairo’s informal settle-
ments have limited access to freshwater and
sanitation systems and their living condi-
tions often cause environmental degradation,
which can, in turn, lead to negative social and
political outcomes. Similarly, high land costs
and the lack of affordable housing can be a
flashpoint for other grievances that ultimately
result in political instability. In this section, we
profile some of the more acute issues faced by
cities in the Middle East. The issues and pro-
cesses discussed here operate at a variety of
scales, from the region to the nation to the city
to the neighborhood. Further, these issues are
related to larger structural issues. For exam-
ple, social inequality is a structural factor that
exacerbates the impacts of some of the indi-
vidual issues discussed below.
Water
Urbanization in the Middle East is critically
affected by questions of water security, which
also affects growing populations, agricultural
demand, and climate change. Urban expan-
sion depends on the development of water
resources for new homes, businesses, and
industries. Also, given that upwards of 80
percent of water use is in the agricultural sec-
tor, questions of food security for burgeoning
urban populations have to be balanced against
water security; policies aimed at achieving
an assured source of water have significant
314 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
implications in terms of food self-sufficiency
and employment in the agricultural sector. All
in all, the balance between supply of water and
demand on it is extremely tenuous.
Stress on freshwater supplies is espe-
cially critical in arid environments where
water resources are scarce and new sources
are expensive. Thirteen of the world’s most
water-scarce countries are in the Middle East.
Groundwater and surface water resources are
being utilized to the maximum throughout
most of the region. Sana’a in Yemen threatens
to become the world’s first capital city to go
dry, as groundwater extraction, primarily for
agricultural purposes, has seriously depleted
the basin’s aquifer. Other aquifers, in Syria and
Jordan, are also being used beyond their rates
of recharge. Renewable aquifers, while easy to
use, are far too easy to damage if a balanced,
regulated approach is not used. The Gulf
States and Israel are pursuing desalination
to provide freshwater supplies (Figure 7.19),
but desalination has significant energy costs.
Further, effluent from desalination discharges
hot, high-salinity brine and trace metals,
which can harm marine life and biodiver-
sity in coastal zones. Jordan, with one of the
world’s lowest levels of water-resource avail-
ability per capita, is making significant invest-
ments in costly infrastructure in an attempt to
provide freshwater.
On the other hand, issues relating to water
are exacerbated by poor management and
infrastructure; these are further magnified
by larger structural factors such as urban
growth and socioeconomic inequality. One
key point is that most cities do not use their
water resources efficiently. High subsidies and
Figure 7.19 the Sorek seawater desalination plant, one of the largest in the world and one of five in israel, became operational in 2013. israel is a world leader in the field despite the drawbacks: the immense amount of energy needed for desalination and the environmental costs of disposing of the brine. Source: Photo by ben Sales/JtA.
Urban Problems and Prospects 315
low water tariffs have created a fiscally unsus-
tainable water supply network. What water
exists could go further if leaky pipes were
repaired, if demand was managed more effi-
ciently, if water-conserving technologies were
used, and if irrigation systems made do with
less. Plus, water problems are not simply a
matter of quantity; they are also problems of
quality. Virtually every city must concentrate
on upgrading its water treatment operations
so that tap water is safe to drink. Although
some countries have shifted from focusing on
water infrastructure to improving manage-
ment of water resources, results are mixed due
to the overall complexity of the water sector.
The implementation of demand management
(rationing) and increased tariffs are impor-
tant parts of a balanced solution to water
scarcity, but they are politically complicated.
Finally, as with the question of the environ-
mental disamenities discussed below, the poor
lack access to efficient water services.
Environmental Degradation
Environmental degradation in Middle Eastern
cities is uneven, reflecting the varying levels
of infrastructure quality and socioeconomic
status. Environmental degradation spans a
gamut of issues, including waste disposal, air
pollution, water purity, pests, noise levels, and
chemical pollution. Environmental degrada-
tion and urbanization are connected in a cir-
cular relationship: environmental degradation
can detrimentally affect urban residents, and
urbanization can cause or exacerbate environ-
mental challenges. Further, these factors can
be compounded by population concentration,
density, and growth. Poverty and environ-
mental justice are also factors, as the poorest
residents tend to live in the most polluted or
hazardous areas.
Urban pollution is a significant chal-
lenge in the Middle East. Air quality has been
impacted by increases in the number of cars,
underinvestment in public transportation and
infrastructure, and the region’s increasingly
sprawling cities. When increasing numbers
of cars enter the medinas on ancient narrow
streets that were never designed to accommo-
date them, they cause congestion and pollu-
tion. Water pollution occurs when unregulated
industrial activities, especially small-scale
enterprises, such as tanning, and agriculture’s
chemical inputs add contaminants to water
sources. Inadequate or nonexistent urban san-
itation infrastructure causes solid and liquid
waste to be disposed of improperly: Waste may
be dumped in water channels that are used for
household uses, solid waste may be dumped in
neighborhood dumps, or, in the case of some
municipal dumps, simply incinerated.
The Middle East has particular vulner-
abilities to climate change. The IPCC’s 4th
Assessment Report indicates that the region
is projected to gradually become hotter and
drier. Results will include a greater risk of
drought, increased water stress, desertifica-
tion, reduced agricultural productivity, loss
of hydropower, and the unsustainability of
some existing crops. Sea-level rise is particu-
larly worrisome for cities in low-lying areas.
More than $30 million has already been spent
to install sea walls along the Egyptian coast.
Similarly, sea-level rise will increase salt water
intrusion into the coastal aquifers that cities in
the eastern Mediterranean and North Africa
rely on. Climate change also carries attendant
political, economic, and social impacts. For
example, the UN has estimated that in Egypt
alone, a 0.5m rise in sea levels would affect
nearly 4 million people and cause $35 bil-
lion in losses. Other socioeconomic impacts
include resource-based migration, increased
316 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
tension between the countries that share water
resources, and heightened stress on natural
resources, all of which can cause or exacerbate
political instability.
Environmental degradation has a variety
of other impacts. Car exhaust and noxious
industrial effluents pose public health haz-
ards; the prevalence of respiratory illnesses
due to air pollution is a troubling phenome-
non; and uncollected solid waste and informal
dumps shelter a wide range of disease vectors.
Significant economic costs are associated with
environmental degradation, including use of
high levels of energy in the transport sector as
a result of gridlocked traffic, loss of productive
agricultural land as a result of urban sprawl,
and higher mortality and health-care costs
as a result of low air quality. For example, in
Cairo and Alexandria, the damage caused by
urban air pollution has been estimated at 2
percent of GDP, and 20,000 people a year die
due to air pollution–related causes.
The urban poor often bear the brunt of
environmental disamenities (e.g., industrial air
and water pollution) and hazards (e.g., risks
from natural disasters, such as rockslides and
landslides). Similarly, the public health impacts
of environmental change disproportionately
impact the poor because of their lack of access
to resources and public health infrastructure.
Housing
Given that residential space typically forms the
largest single land use within a city, housing is a
dimension of urbanization that directly affects
the daily life of urban residents. The growth
of informal housing, primarily on urban
peripheries, is a modern trend that is driven
by rural-to-urban migration, growing popu-
lations, and economic conditions at a range of
scales. For example, gecekondus, “houses built
(without permission) overnight,” have been
estimated to house half of Istanbul’s popu-
lation. Informal housing in Turkey started
appearing in the 1950s as economic oppor-
tunities associated with urban industrializa-
tion attracted migrants from Turkish villages.
This, coupled with real estate speculation that
drove the cost of formal housing in the cities
out of reach of the average middle-income
household, started the first wave of gecekondu
construction. Similarly, about 25–30 percent
of Cairo’s population (perhaps 4 million peo-
ple) live in ashwaiyyat or “informal zones” in
and around the city. Conditions in these zones
can be very poor, as inadequate infrastructure
for water, electricity, and sewage, combined
with crowded conditions and reduced access
to education, health care, and other important
governmental services lead to negative social
and environmental consequences.
Another issue related to housing is that of
socioeconomic polarization and the subur-
banization of some types of housing. Urban
residents are faced with limited property
availability, limited access to credit, and lack
of affordability; further, government policies
have encouraged planned residential devel-
opments on urban peripheries. The resultant
suburbanization of metropolitan popula-
tions has implications in terms of sprawl and
infrastructure provision. Suburbanization
also intersects with the question of socioeco-
nomic polarization: The contemporary flight
of the middle and upper classes from cities has
new implications in terms of urban inclusive-
ness as exclusive housing developments and
gated communities have sprouted up in cities
in Egypt, Turkey, Lebanon, and Saudi Ara-
bia, among others. As higher-income groups
move away from density and crowding into
gated communities, additional polarization is
added to the city’s social geography. In Cairo,
Conclusion 317
the large suburban gated communities have
names like “Beverly Hills” and “Dreamland.”
Planning responses to housing-related
issues have been uneven. In some countries,
such as Egypt, squatter settlements have
remained poor, underserved by urban infra-
structure, and socially marginalized. In other
countries, such as Turkey, squatter settlements
were quickly legitimized by the government,
and upgrading was implemented. Some afford-
able housing and social housing programs have
been developed across the Middle East and, as
a legacy of socialist planning, are prominent in
Central Asia. However, limited public-sector
budgets and rapid urban growth have meant
that housing demand outweighs supply. For
example, in Egypt, the average home price is
18 times the typical annual salary and in Israel
the average home price is 16 times the typical
annual salary (the comparable figure for the
United States is 3.3 times). In many countries,
planning authorities or government officials
are increasingly looking to the corporate real
estate sector as a model for urban planning
and development, as evinced by reliance on
modern makeover plans and megaprojects.
However, questions remain about the long-
term economic sustainability of this model
and the types of outcomes that it produces.
CONCLUSION
Urban life in the Middle East is not utopian,
but it is not dystopian, either. Cities in this
region have their problems, some seemingly
intractable, just as in other world regions.
Authoritarian regimes and political violence
at a variety of scales are problems that have
real impacts on cities. Geopolitical tensions
simmer. The ecological sustainability of cities
is impacted by environmental degradation,
climate change, and water security. However,
to characterize the entire region as trou-
bled, unwelcoming, or uniformly “violent”
would be a broad generalization and a gross
mischaracterization. Middle Eastern cities
do many things well. First, they reflect the
hospitality of their inhabitants, people who
easily talk to visitors, who are eager to com-
municate despite linguistic barriers, and who
have (and take) time to spend in casual con-
versation on the street. Arabs, Turks, and Ira-
nians are among the friendliest people in the
world, and their cities make you feel at home.
Second, Middle Eastern cities, with few
exceptions, are safe day and night. Social net-
works are strong. There are “eyes upon the
street” all the time, whether you can see them
or not; and family networks, undergirded by
strict codes of conduct, hold family mem-
bers accountable. Third, the generations mix
freely. Neither the old nor the young are ware-
housed; parents are seen with children; teen-
agers use the same streets as the elderly; and
young apprentices are common in the city’s
businesses. Households are often multigen-
erational, and the extended family is more
prominent, socially, than the nuclear family.
Fourth, homelessness, although it does exist, is
less common than in Western cities. It is taken
for granted that some people will not be able
to live self-sufficient lives, so families com-
pensate for personal inadequacies, and many
social needs are taken care of by the Islamic
emphasis on required almsgiving and charity.
Fifth, food is central, and sharing a meal with
friends and family is a leisurely and enjoyable
event. Almost every city takes pride in its food,
whether served in sit-down restaurants or on
the street (Figure 7.20). Middle Eastern cui-
sine reflects and helps to define both national
cultures and urban life. It often is healthy food,
not overprocessed, and rarely fried. Sixth,
318 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
cities are generally well served by a variety of
transportation. Cars are not required; and in
the old cities they may be a hindrance. City
buses, taxis, service taxis (often 12-passen-
ger vans), and fixed-rail lines (in a few cities)
always make it possible to get around at very
low cost. The cores of cities are often com-
pactly organized, so walking is a possibility.
Over the centuries, Middle Eastern cit-
ies have produced many of humanity’s most
enduring achievements and legacies. These
flourishing cities anchored empires and gave
rise to religions. Today, cities in the Middle
East are complex, bustling, and vibrant places.
A strong sense of community characterizes
life in Middle Eastern cities. The human ele-
ment of place, seen in food, art, music, culture,
and literature, adds the important element of
culture to studies of cities across the region.
Grassroots advocacy on real issues, from
politics to the lack of greenspace, illustrates
the productive power of the city (Box 7.4).
Combining these bottom-up approaches with
top-down approaches such as proactive urban
planning can make cities in the Middle East
even more inclusive and sustainable places.
Figure 7.20 When you have a business that is mobile, you can move with the market, which is exactly what this street vendor of qanafeh (a sweet pastry always made in round pans) does in Amman. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Box 7.4 a Hopeful Vignette: Cairo’s al-azhar Park
While the Middle East’s problems may seem intractable, there are many reasons to remain optimistic about cities in the region. one example comes from Cairo. over the span of 500 years, generations of Cairenes had dumped their debris and household garbage on a 30-hec- tare site originally located just outside the Fatimid city walls. in some places, the debris and trash were 130 feet (40 m) “deep.” today, several dense neighborhoods surround the site. both Al-Azhar Mosque and Al-Azhar University are minutes away, and the ancient Citadel is directly to the south.
After a 1984 conference on urban growth in Cairo, Aga Khan decided to finance and cre- ate a park as a gift to Cairo’s residents. Cairo was severely park-poor: one analysis indicated that every resident of Cairo had 54 in2 (350 cm2) of green space, approximately the area of
Suggested Readings 319
two adult footprints. Given the difficulty of locating open space in such a densely populated city, the dump was suggested as a potential park location. After the site’s selection, years of extensive geotechnical surveys, excavation (80,000 truckloads of material, equivalent to more than half the Great Pyramid’s volume, were removed), soil remediation, landscaping (experiments were conducted for five years to determine the most suitable plants), and con- struction followed. Finally, Al-Azhar Park opened to widespread acclaim in 2004. the New York Times’ architecture critic argued that it reversed “a trend in which unchecked develop- ment has virtually eradicated the city’s once-famous parks.” the park’s design is inspired by islamic gardens from the Persian and Mughal Empires, its landscape architecture optimizes irrigation and includes plants adapted to arid climates, and it includes one of Cairo’s few public children’s playgrounds. but Al-Azhar Park’s story does not end with the vital green space or the impressive vistas it has provided.
during construction, a completely buried section of Cairo’s Ayyubid-era defensive wall was uncovered, complete with gates, towers, passageways, and galleries. this 5,000-foot section (1,500 m) has been preserved and now serves as a connection between the park and the Ayy- ubid city. Following the islamic endowment system, income from the park’s tickets, parking, and restaurants are used for park maintenance. Al-Azhar Park’s development purposely called for urban upgrading in the surrounding neighborhood. the local community prioritized a list of neighborhood rehabilitation efforts, and income from the park provided funds for a com- munity center, training programs, micro-loans for small business owners, and the renovation of mosques, schools, and homes. the park’s construction and operation created jobs. Local artisans were employed to do stonework, in a revival of ancient craft techniques that had been in danger of dying out. today, residents of the adjacent neighborhood are given prefer- ential hiring for jobs at the park. Al-Azhar Park also provides infrastructure: three giant res- ervoirs that had been slated to be sited in the dump to provide drinking water for Cairo have been placed below ground in the park and landscaped to minimize their visual impact. Cairo may have turned the corner in restoring some open space to one of the world’s largest cities.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Abu Lughod, J. L. 1971. Cairo: 1001 Years of the
City Victorious. Princeton, NJ: Princeton Uni-
versity Press. A chronicle of Cairo from 969 to
1970, and a glimpse of how to make sense of any
urban landscape.
Benvenisti, M. 1996. City of Stone: The Hidden
History of Jerusalem. Berkeley: University of
California Press. Offers a balanced view of
Jerusalem’s urban landscapes, boundaries, and
demographics.
Dumper, M. 2014. Jerusalem Unbound: Geogra-
phy, History, and the Future of the Holy City.
New York: Columbia University Press. Presents
Jerusalem as a city of enclaves that undermine
Israeli control of the city.
Elsheshtawy, Y. 2004. Planning Middle Eastern Cit-
ies: An Urban Kaleidoscope. London and New
York: Routledge. Presents urban planning in the
context of globalization, with separate chapters
on Cairo, Dubai, and Algiers.
Hitti, P. K. 1973. Capital Cities of Arab Islam.
Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
320 CITIES OF THE GREATER MIDDLE EAST
Thoughtful profiles of historical capitals:
Mecca, Medina, Damascus, Baghdad, Cairo, and
Cordova.
Hourani, A. H., and S. M. Stern. 1970. The Islamic
City. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania
Press. Delves into the question of whether there
is an “Islamic” city, with specific reference to
Damascus, Samarra, and Baghdad.
Kheirabadi, M. 2001. Iranian Cities: Form and
Development. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University
Press. A thorough treatment of the spatial struc-
ture and physical form of Iranian cities.
Salamandra, C. 2004. A New Old Damascus. Bloom-
ington, IN: Indiana University Press. Presents a
portrait of Damascus’ cultural anthropology,
with considerable attention focused on the
problems of historical preservation.
Saliba, R. 2015. Urban Design in the Arab World:
Reconceptualizaing Boundaries. Farnham, UK:
Ashgate. Draws on case studies to articulate a
regional geography of urban design, which is
conceptualized as discourse, discipline, research,
and practice.
Serageldim, I., and S. El-Sadek, eds. 1982. The Arab
City: Its Character and Islamic Cultural Herit-
age. Riyadh, Saudi Arabia: Arab Urban Devel-
opment Institute. Photographs, drawings, and
readable text on city form and urban planning.
Figure 8.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of Sub-Saharan Africa. Source: United nations, department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population division (2014), World Urbanization Prospects: 2014 Revision, http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/.
8
Cities of Sub-Saharan Africa GARTH MYERS, FRANCIS OWUSU, AND ANGELA GRAY SUBULWA
KEy URbAN FACTS
Total Population 963 million
Percent Urban Population 37%
Total Urban Population 359 million
Most Urbanized Countries Gabon (87%)
Djibouti (77%)
South Africa (64%)
Least Urbanized Countries Burundi (12%)
Uganda (16%)
Malawi (16%)
Number of Megacities 2 cities
Number of Cities of More Than 1 Million 43 cities
Three Largest Cities Lagos (13 m), Kinshasa (11 m), Luanda (5 m)
Number of World Cities (Highest Ranking) 2 (Johannesburg, Cape Town)
Emerging World Cities Nairobi, Lagos, Durban
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is among the least urbanized of the world’s regions, but it has
some of the world’s most rapidly urbanizing countries.
2. A rich urban tradition preceded the arrival of colonialism in several parts of Sub-Saharan
Africa.
3. Colonialism had profound impacts on urban development, particularly in the creation of
what would become primate cities along the coast.
4. Rates of urban primacy are generally high across the region, with a few exceptions, and
economic production and political power are concentrated in the primate cities.
5. Many, though not all, primate cities are also capital cities.
324 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
6. Many SSA cities have experienced major impacts from cultural globalization, as in chang-
ing patterns of consumption and personal security, but minimum impacts from economic
globalization, in terms of production and investment.
7. Most SSA urban land-use patterns and urban economies develop outside of formal regula-
tion, but with significant overlap of the “formal” and the “informal” urban structures and
economies, both of which are highly gendered spaces.
8. Many Sub-Saharan African cities are characterized by spatial, socioeconomic, and gender
inequalities and high rates of urban poverty.
9. Water is a major concern in Sub-Saharan cities, as urban growth and climate change impact
water availability and quality.
10. Great cultural diversity and creativity help shape very dynamic urban life experiences for
residents of the region’s cities.
SSA’s interlocking urban environmental prob-
lems are magnified by shortcomings in man-
agement and oversight by both governments
and the private sector. Patrick lives in Dar es
Salaam, Tanzania, where he works as a chef at
a Chinese restaurant. Patrick is a mixed-race
South African, born in Cape Town. He worked
for many years as a cook on oil tankers, where
many of the crew members were Bangladeshi,
Filipino, or Tanzanian, the latter often from
the Zanzibar islands or from Dar es Salaam.
After a stint cooking for an offshore oil rig in
Cabinda, Angola, he took up an offer from a
Tanzanian friend to come start a new high-
end restaurant in the rapidly gentrifying inner
city Kariokoo neighborhood in Dar es Salaam.
Patrick has found it exciting to learn KiSwa-
hili, which will be his sixth language once he
conquers it, but he posts messages on Face-
book and tweets for his South African friends
around the world in Afrikaans or English. He
loves the mix of foods and cuisines available in
Dar es Salaam, but favors Chinese food, which
gained a foothold in Tanzania and much of
Africa along with Chinese investments in the
region’s cities in the early twenty-first century.
He hopes that the restaurant will take off, with
an eclectic mix of Tanzanian African, Asian,
and European customers.
Meanwhile, across the world in Houston,
Jamila, a Nigerian-born software engineer,
receives a text message from her father in Cal-
abar asking her to call home. She knows what
this means, but hesitates because she wants to
have good news for him before she calls. She
sends an email to the secretary of the local
hometown association for southeastern Nige-
rians in Texas, and asks for an update on her
plea for help in raising funds—because her
father will be telling her, she knows, to come
home for her mother’s funeral. Jamila has
the money for her own plane ticket, but she
knows the family will expect her to pay all of
the funeral costs and to bring her twin daugh-
ters with her. She is conflicted, since she knows
that the whole extended family feels that they
have invested in her education and emigra-
tion with the expectation that she will pro-
vide support through remunerations. She has
succeeded for many years in sending enough
money home to build her parents the nicest
house in their neighborhood in Calabar; but
her husband’s recent death has put a major
strain on her household financially, to say
nothing of her sadness. The hometown associ-
ation secretary tells her the news she has been
waiting for: in just two days, the large south-
eastern Nigerian community in Texas has
African Urbanization 325
raised more than $10,000 on her behalf. She
does not know how she will ever thank these
people, many of whom she does not know and
only a handful of whom would ever have met
her mother. She would do the same for them,
she tells herself because “all of us in what we
call The Remote Lands have to stick together
to help our Motherland.” She calls her father
in Calabar, Skype-to-Skype since it is free,
with the good news, and on her laptop video
camera box, through the Skype software, she
sees tears on her father’s face, for the first time
in her life.
AFRICAN URbANIzATION
SSA has long been among the least urbanized
world regions. But many Sub-Saharan coun-
tries have been urbanizing rapidly since the
1960s (Figure 8.1). This rapid urban growth
has come with limited opportunities for
employment in the formal economy or for
effective governance. African cities also suffer
from a lack of decent and affordable housing,
failing infrastructure and basic urban services,
alongside increasing inequalities (Figure 8.2).
But negative views of contemporary cities are
overly simplistic and pervasive. African cities
are also creative engines of cultural change
and dynamic centers of political and associa-
tional life (Figure 8.3). Many accounts of cities
in SSA miss the resourcefulness, inventiveness,
and determination of millions of ordinary
people who manage to negotiate the perils of
everyday life, to make something out of noth-
ing (Box 8.1).
Cities in Sub-Saharan Africa are diverse
and heterogeneous. Scholarly efforts to con-
struct an ideal model of a generic “African
Figure 8.2 Chronic flooding necessitates near-constant, major efforts to drain residential areas of Pikine, an informal city on the outskirts of dakar, Senegal. Many of SSA’s informal settlements are flood-prone, yet their residents often experience the deprivation of limited access to clean drinking water. Source: Photo by Garth Myers.
326 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
Figure 8.3 bustling markets, such as this one in Monrovia, Liberia, are common features of Sub-Saharan cities. Source: Photo by Robert Zeigler.
city” in terms of urban structure have failed to
find a single profile that fits all cases. Anthony
O’Connor, for example, tried to fashion such
a general scheme more than 25 years ago,
but his effort led him toward not one but six
possible types. O’Connor identified and dia-
grammed city morphologies that he classified
as the indigenous city, the Islamic city, the
European city, the colonial city, and the dual
city with examples across the continent. His
sixth category—what he termed the hybrid
city—actually functions as a kind of catch-all
for cities with multiple morphological charac-
teristics. Over time, more cities in Africa seem
to have become hybrid cities.
The paths to such African hybrid cities
are complex and sometimes contradictory.
While many cities came into existence as over-
seas extensions of European colonial powers
seeking to establish beachheads on the Afri-
can continent, their subsequent growth and
development did not conform to one pattern.
City-building processes that took place under
the dominance of European colonialism often
left an indelible imprint on the original spa-
tial layout, built environment, and architec-
tural styles of cities in Africa. Yet with time,
these features have sometimes been modified
beyond recognition. Thus cities that were
built specifically for Europeans, such as Cape
Town or Nairobi, still have clear European
influences, but these have been overwhelmed
by African urbanism. The colonial urbanisms,
too, have been dramatically transformed by
what amounts to 50 years of independence for
most cities. Likewise, indigenous, Islamic, and
dual cities have in nearly all cases witnessed
the steady overlay and erasure of their origi-
nal forms through colonial and postcolonial
impacts (Figure 8.4).
In SSA cities, previous patterns of govern-
ment dominance in urban centers have been
replaced by more reliance on the private sec-
tor and/or nongovernmental institutions.
African Urbanization 327
Box 8.1 Water, Water, everywhere
Water is one of the most complicated aspects of urban Africa. half of all large SSA cities are within 50 miles of the coast, and many of them are on river mouths, estuaries, or deltas. Many others (including some of the region’s largest urban areas, such as Kinshasa, Khartoum, and brazzaville) are located in low-lying riverine settings. this means that a great many cities in SSA face significant flood risks, which are often most severe in poor settlements. Even in cities at relatively high average elevations, poorer areas and informal settlements are typically at lower elevations in zones subject to seasonal flooding. Khartoum, dar es Salaam, dakar, and many other major urban areas have experienced severe flooding in the last few years alone. Moreover, the Climate Change Vulnerability index points toward high or severe risk from rising sea levels along Africa’s urban coastline. Urban flooding has also increased water-borne disease threats, including the spread of malaria into East African highland cit- ies, such as Addis Ababa and Kigali, that were previously malaria-free.
in a bitter irony, many SSA cities face potential water shortages caused by climate change and rapid growth. the most severe threats of freshwater shortages, unsurprisingly, appear to be in cities in arid and semi-arid areas such as the Sahel. but, even cities with plentiful precipita- tion have failed to keep pace with the rise of consumer water demand under conditions of rapid urbanization. Most everywhere, potable water supply shortages are severe and increasing.
Water may present certain risks in SSA cites, but it also presents abundant opportuni- ties. After all, so many cities in Africa are on coasts or navigable rivers because of trade opportunities that continue to increase. African cities are among the world’s leaders in urban agriculture. Parks, preserves, forested areas, and natural open spaces are also widespread in SSA cities, despite stereotypes of African cities as “cities of slums.” Centers of higher learning across the continent tend to be urban, and the curricula in many countries feature environmental education lessons from primary levels onward that are improving popular knowledge of healthy and efficient water usage. Environmental awareness and activism are on the rise across the continent, especially in urban areas, and water issues are often cen- tral to this activism. in the peri-urban slum of Pikine outside dakar, hip-hop artists, other musicians, graffiti artists, and Senegalese professional wrestlers have played major roles in raising awareness of flood relief and prevention. Water provisioning can also be an impor- tant entrepreneurial arena, particularly in informal settlements (see Figure 8.2). A nigerian- American geography research team has highlighted the policy implications of the ignorance of officials about the struggles of poor niamey residents to obtain water, and the crucial role of entrepreneurial water vendors in providing this most basic need. Water and sanitation activists in nairobi also built a highly successful business, ikotoilet, from environmentally efficient toilets. innovation and creativity abound in water and sanitation services, proving that one must be cautious about seeing water only as a source of problems in urban Africa.
Sources: A. bontianti et al., Fluid experiences, Habitat International 43 (2014): 283–92; R. Fredericks, the old man is dead, Antipode 46, no. 1 (2014): 130–48.
328 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
Municipal authorities have not kept up with
the demand for infrastructure, social services,
or access to resources. Many urban residents
have looked outside the formal economy and
conventional administrative channels to gain
access to income, shelter, land, or social ser-
vices (Box 8.2).
The wide range of seemingly unsolvable
problems has led some to conclude that cit-
ies in Africa just “don’t work.” Others, like
the urban scholar AbdouMaliq Simone, pre-
fer to see them as “works in progress,” driven
forward by inventive ordinary people. In city
after city, urban residents rely on their own
ingenuity to stitch together their daily lives.
SSA cities are often distressed places in need
of good governance, management, or infra-
structure, greater popular participation in
decision making, sustainable livelihoods, and
expanded socioeconomic opportunities. Yet
they are much more than some form of failed
urbanism. To see SSA cities more complexly,
we must appreciate the historical specificity
and heterogeneous cultural vibrancy of differ-
ent cities in Africa.
HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHy OF URbAN DEVELOPMENT
Simply because SSA is often considered among
the least urbanized world regions, outsiders
assume that its cities must be recent. Because
European colonialism was such a pervasive
regional experience, it is also assumed that the
urbanization of Africa ought to be attributed
to colonialism. In fact, many SSA urban set-
tlements are much older than the colonial era,
and the relationships between formal coloni-
alism and the urbanization process in Africa
Figure 8.4 the Victoria and Albert Waterfront is a major shopping destination, center of tourist activity, and gathering place for Cape town’s diverse population. Source: Photo by Garth Myers.
Historical Geography of Urban Development 329
Box 8.2 Multiple livelihoods Strategies
the economic crisis that spread across Africa in the 1970s and 1980s and the structural adjustment programs that were introduced have caused major upheavals in the livelihood strategies of millions of people in African cities, including formal-sector employees.
Since the early 1990s, an increasing number of studies have documented how people of various socioeconomic backgrounds seek additional income by engaging in multiple eco- nomic activities. Many formal-sector employees supplement their incomes with part-time informal-sector jobs, such as cab driving or petty trading. other members of their households may also supplement the family income by engaging in similar activities. For instance, many civil servants in Kampala engage in urban agriculture and poultry keeping, own taxis or oper- ate small kiosks, and about two-thirds of households in Accra are engaged in at least two income-generating activities. Such multiple livelihood strategies have become “the way of doing things” in many African cities. As a result, the traditional distinction between formal sector and informal sector has become more blurry and complex.
the proliferation of multiple livelihood strategies has significant implications for urban planning in the region. First, it signifies the need to revise African city models to include urban cultivation, a ubiquitous feature of the urban landscape, as a legitimate urban activ- ity. this requires documenting the benefits and disadvantages of urban agriculture and find- ing ways of creatively integrating the practice into the urban fabric. Second, the house or dwelling as a mono-functional (residential) unit is increasingly out of sync with the reality in many African cities. Many urban residents of different socioeconomic backgrounds have economic enterprises that are located in their homes. Urban planners need to introduce relevant changes in zoning regulations and housing design standards to accommodate home- based enterprises. third, multiple livelihood strategies also challenge the conventional defi- nition of households and the distinction between urban and rural residence. historically, households, especially in southern Africa, have used migration as a strategy to overcome limitations of particular local economies. but, involvement in multiple livelihood strategies requires different and more creative living arrangements that allow members to participate in multiple urban and/or rural economies. the final issue relates to the increased involve- ment of public-sector employees in multiple economic activities and the implications for public-sector efficiency. While participation in multiple economic activities by public-sector employees benefits those directly involved in the practice, the overall impact on society is often negative. As the involvement of civil servants in multiple income-generating activities becomes widespread, the moral authority of supervisors to reprimand moonlighting staff is compromised, especially when the officials themselves are guilty of the same.
Sources: Francis owusu, “Conceptualizing Livelihood Strategies in African Cities: Planning and develop- ment implications of Multiple Livelihood Strategies,” Journal of Planning Education and Research 26, no. 4 (2007): 450–63.
330 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
are more complicated than they first appear.
Roughly speaking, we may divide contempo-
rary African cities into categories, including
urban areas with origins in the: (1) ancient or
medieval precolonial period; (2) period of the
trans-Atlantic slave trade or European trade
and exploration; (3) period of formal colonial
rule; and (4) postcolonial period. However, it
rapidly becomes difficult to differentiate cities
by these categories. For instance, take the case
of Zanzibar, Tanzania, where an indigenous
urban center with origins in the 1100s was
refashioned under the domination of outsid-
ers from Portugal in the 1500s and Oman in
the 1690s; the city then became caught up in
the slave trade and trade with Europe and
the Americas in the 1700s and 1800s, then
became a British colonial capital, and then
the symbolic heart of a postcolonial socialist
revolution. Like so many hybrid cities of con-
temporary Africa, Zanzibar has elements of
its fabric that belong to all four of the catego-
ries above. Rather than making sharp breaks
between city types based on their origins,
it is more helpful to simply lay out some of
these different types of origin stories and to
appreciate that most contemporary African
cities are woven together from threads of each
origin.
Ancient and Medieval Precolonial
Urban Centers
Many urban centers that were prominent
before 1500 ce—and in some cases, promi-
nent before the Common Era even began—
are ruins now. Other prominent centers of
ancient and medieval times were bypassed
by the new economic geographies that arose
in Africa’s relationships with Europe and
the New World after 1500, which developed
strong associations with coastal urbanisms.
There were at least five major centers of
urbanism before 1500, with the oldest being
the ancient Upper Nile/Ethiopian centers of
Meroë, Axum, and Adulis (Figure 8.5). The
medieval Sahelian (or Western Sudan) cities
of West Africa’s great trading empires, such
as Kumbi Saleh, Timbuktu, Gao, and Jenne,
arose as middle-agent ports of a network of
caravan routes that crisscrossed the Sahara.
They achieved significance in the medieval
world as nodes of empires, trading entrepots,
or centers of learning. Timbuktu, Gao, and
Jenne were widely regarded for their scholar-
ship in medieval times, but they disappeared
or stagnated after the fifteenth century. Tim-
buktu has about the same population as it
had seven hundred years ago, while Gao and
Jenne no longer exist. Other early Western
Sudan urbanisms survived the new circum-
stances of the post-1500 world and developed
into important contemporary settlements,
for instance the Hausa cities of today’s north-
ern Nigeria and southern Niger, particularly
Kano, because their nineteenth-century rulers
derived great strength from Islamic religious
jihad movements.
This adaptation and growth after 1500 was
even more common for many ancient and
medieval cities of Nigeria, like Oyo, Ibadan,
and Benin in the Benin-Yoruba area of early
urbanism. The Yoruba cities of southwestern
Nigeria had developed metalwork artistry
and skill unsurpassed in the first millennium
world. Benin-Yoruba cities, and neighbor-
ing urban areas further to the west, were well
positioned to capitalize on the new trade with
Europeans after 1500, as is seen below.
Some of the trading city-states along the
Swahili coast and the East African coast more
broadly, including Mogadishu and Mom-
basa, also grew after 1500; but many coastal
settlements, like the settlements further to
Historical Geography of Urban Development 331
the southern interior (the Zimbabwean zone
of urbanism, in particular) with whom they
traded, largely disappeared. The ruins of the
Great Zimbabwe in today’s Zimbabwe still
demonstrate the remarkable organizational
and architectural features of the medieval
empire whose central city was located there.
The southern interior cities were connected by
trade to those along the coast for many centu-
ries before 1500.
Coastal trading centers on the Red Sea and
Indian Ocean arose in ancient times, and an
extensive trade linking the African interior
from Zimbabwe north to Lake Victoria with
the Arab and Persian peoples of Asia flourished
for more than a thousand years. Beginning in
the ninth century, the significance of the Swa-
hili coast ratcheted upward with increased
trade with the Arabian peninsula and the Gulf
area, based around the export of gold, ivory,
Figure 8.5 historical Centers of Urbanization in Africa. Source: Assefa Mehretu.
332 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
and slaves from Africa in exchange for textiles,
jewelry, and other commodities. East African
coastal centers such as Kilwa, Malindi, and
Mombasa derived their growth, character, and
political organization from the encounters
and exchanges between the African mainland-
ers that founded them and small numbers of
Arab, Persian, and even South Asian settlers
who made permanent homes there. Their rise
is considered part of the medieval golden age
of Swahili civilization. The greatest of these,
Kilwa, now in ruins in southern Tanzania, had
diplomatic exchanges with China in the fif-
teenth century.
Urban Development after 1500
Nearly all SSA urban centers of the pre-1500
era were comparatively quite small, with less
than 50,000 residents. Europe’s impact on
SSA changed both the locations and the sizes
of major centers. European influence began
with the Portuguese in the fifteenth century.
For about two and a half centuries, most con-
tact between European traders and Africans
occurred in coastal installations, from which
Europeans gradually developed trade net-
works for various tropical commodities. The
slave trade arguably contributed the most to
the development of many coastal trade centers
between about 1500 and 1870, but this impact
was not an unambiguously positive one. Dur-
ing those years, more than 20 million Africans
were forcibly relocated to the Americas or
died en route; roughly an equal number died
or were displaced within Africa. Nonetheless,
it is remarkable how many of the major and
secondary cities of coastal West and Central
Africa in particular grew up in the midst of
the trans-Atlantic slave trade.
The Portuguese established the first of these
towns, St. Louis, in the 1440s at the mouth of
the Senegal River, later creating centers at Bis-
sau in today’s Guinea-Bissau; Luanda and Ben-
guela in Angola; and Lourenço Marques (now
Maputo) and Mozambique in Mozambique.
The Dutch, French, and British followed the
Portuguese lead. The Dutch founded Cape
Town in 1652, and the French and British
established West African coastal towns such
as Conakry in Guinea and Calabar in Nige-
ria. Most towns were merely forts—Accra, for
example, was originally the site of Fort Ussher,
established in 1650 by the Dutch, and Fort
James, founded in 1673 by the British.
During the nineteenth century, the trans-
Atlantic slave trade declined, superseded by
what was termed the “legitimate trade” in
African raw materials. In combination with
competition between European firms and
states as the century progressed, African urban
areas that participated in this increasingly
high-volume and high-value trade grew dra-
matically. Precolonial towns such as Ibadan in
Nigeria witnessed considerable growth. The
nineteenth century also saw the rise of new or
rejuvenated urbanisms in eastern and south-
ern Africa. The city-state of Zanzibar grew
into the “island metropolis of Eastern Africa”
as the center of a mercantile empire whose
tentacles stretched to the Congo. Khartoum
emerged in the Sudan. A number of South
Africa’s major cities, including Port Elizabeth,
Durban, Bloemfontein, East London, and Pre-
toria, were founded via European settlement.
During the period of European contact
before formal colonialism in the 1880s, SSA’s
urban geography began to take form, but
under constraints. First, most European con-
tributions in settlement development were
coastal with minimal impacts in the inte-
rior. Second, many coastal settlements were
intended as transshipment points for trade
and lacked regular urban facilities, except
Historical Geography of Urban Development 333
those structures that served as European
housing or as port and defense establish-
ments. Third, there was a lack of diffusion of
European technology and culture to the inte-
rior’s indigenous urban centers.
African Urbanization in the Era
of Formal Colonial Rule
The European Scramble for Africa lasted from
the 1880s through the 1914 outbreak of the
First World War. By that point, virtually the
entire continent had fallen under European
domination. Ethiopia and Liberia remained
independent states, and South Africa became
an independent, white-minority-ruled state
in 1910; but the British, French, German, Ital-
ian, Portuguese, Belgian, and Spanish colonial
powers controlled the rest of SSA. Urbaniza-
tion followed suit, since social and physical
aspects of urban development followed the
social and political objectives of these Euro-
pean powers. Colonial regimes moved aggres-
sively into the interior of their colonies; and
urban settlements sprang up or expanded
from existing towns along infrastructure lines
(roads or railroads), near mines or large-
scale plantation areas, or in regions requiring
administrative centers. Virtually all coastal
ports and railheads from Dakar to Luanda
became the capitals and/or primate cities in
their respective countries, with external trade
as their major function. In East Africa, where
the resource hinterlands are far in the interior,
towns such as Kampala, Nairobi, and Salisbury
(Harare) were linked by railways to ports in or
near each country, such as Mombasa in Kenya,
and Beira in Mozambique. Other East African
centers, such as Dar es Salaam (Figure 8.6) and
Maputo, became important ports.
In South Africa, the pattern was somewhat
different. Major European settlement in the
interior pre-dated the formal colonial era of
most of SSA (i.e., the 1880s to the 1960s), and
major mining and agro-industrial towns were
well established by 1900. In South Africa, as a
result, there are now numerous urban centers
in the interior served by a number of ports all
around the southern tip of the continent. The
railway pattern is much more intensive, with
a high degree of connectivity between urban
centers in the plateau hinterland as well as
between the interior settlements and the port
cities.
In most of SSA, under European coloni-
alism, little real industrialization occurred.
Figure 8.6 the historic African Cbd of dar es Salaam, Kariakoo, has undergone rapid gentrification in the twenty-first century, where the pace of new construction has outrun the ability of the government to provide basic services. Source: Photo by Garth Myers.
334 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
Colonial regimes prioritized the export of
minerals, metals, or primary goods to Europe,
so that industrial development was most
intensive in places like the Zambian Copper-
belt (in cities such as Ndola or Kitwe) and
the neighboring mining province of Shaba
(Katanga) in Congo. In many colonies, and in
white-ruled South Africa, severe limits were
placed in African residency in urban areas. To
support the scale of trade that flowed between
Africa and Europe and to control the colonies,
larger administrations emerged, leading to an
outsized service sector for the comparatively
shrunken state of secondary sector activi-
ties. Urban services were also generally quite
warped by race and class.
As a result of the limited economic oppor-
tunities and restrictions on movement, many
SSA urban centers remained relatively small
until after World War II. The so-called second
colonial occupation of the postwar era, when
colonial regimes invested in African develop-
ment largely in an effort to shape decoloni-
zation movements away from the influences
of the Soviet Union, led to the growth of
investments in many urban areas. Relaxa-
tion of migration and residency regulations
with independence brought massive rural-to-
urban migration in SSA.
There are differences between the respec-
tive colonial powers (particularly Britain,
France, and Portugal) in terms of their legacies
in urban areas, but there are also facets of their
legacies held in common. British colonies with
substantial white settlement developed more
highly segregated urban settlement patterns
regulated by more rigid building rules and
land laws than would be the case for colonial
cities in the interior areas of many French
West African colonies, for instance. Cities with
significant white populations in the colonial
era tended to have larger investments from
colonial states for infrastructure and from
the private sector for industrial develop-
ment. Yet exceptions to these differentiations
existed, and the distinctions between different
colonial powers’ strategies in urban areas are
often overridden by the commonalities. One
can still see some distinctly British features of
eastern and southern African cities in archi-
tecture (many colonial government build-
ings that are still in use were designed by the
British architect Herbert Baker and an army
of his protégés) or urbanism more generally
(the many small urban parks just adjacent
to Central Business District (CBDs) with the
same strict use rules on signs at their entrance
that one sees in London or Hong Kong). Many
of the neighborhoods formerly segregated by
race are now just as segregated, but by class,
as illustrated by the dramatic air photo from
the late 1990s in Lusaka, Zambia, of what was
until 1964 the whites-only and separately gov-
erned township of Roma and the informal
settlement of Ng’ombe on its eastern edge
(Figure 8.7). Today, Roma is populated pre-
dominantly by the African professional class
and the political elite of Lusaka, and their
maids and gardeners—also African—still
live in Ng’ombe, although it is beginning to
gentrify (Figure 8.8). Distinctively French
architectural or planning legacies are also
in evidence up until today in former French
colonies. But over time, cities all across the
region are becoming more and more alike in
their hybrid form and function as the postco-
lonial era brings unprecedented urban growth
to SSA (Box 8.3).
Postcolonial Urbanization
From the 1960s through the 1980s, SSA con-
tained the world’s most rapidly urbaniz-
ing countries. Eastern and southern African
Historical Geography of Urban Development 335
countries have led the world in urbanization
rates for nearly half a century. Even during the
1990s and 2000s, when many observers noted
a slowdown in African urbanization, several
countries had estimated urban growth rates
near or above 5 percent. In less than 50 years,
some eastern and southern African countries
have gone from being largely rural societies to
being places where almost half the people live
in or around cities.
The rapid growth of many cities and the
path of urbanization in most countries have
been somewhat distinct from what has been
seen in other regions, particularly in wealthy
European or North American settings. With
some exceptions, the extraordinary story
of urbanization in Sub-Saharan Africa has
not accompanied a substantial economic
transformation of society toward indus-
try and manufacturing. In some countries,
Figure 8.7 A dramatic air photo of Lusaka, Zambia, today shows the formerly all-white township of Roma. Source: Photo by Garth Myers.
336 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
notably South Africa, industrial development
occurred with the urban-ward trends. But in
much of SSA, the ever-expanding numbers
of urban residents have become increasingly
dependent on what are termed informal activ-
ities—small-scale, low-technology manufac-
turing, petty wholesale trading, and informal
service provision—for basic needs and daily
life (Figure 8.9). Many of these informal eco-
nomic activities are highly gendered activities
that are defined by—and often challenge—
traditional understandings of gendered divi-
sions of labor (Table 8.1). Especially in the
case of southern Africa, the informal sector is
sometimes associated with another problem,
HIV/AIDS.
Current Urbanization Trends
Compared to the other regions, SSA still
has one of the lowest levels of urbanization.
According to UN estimates, only 41 percent of
the region’s population will live in urban areas
by 2020. There are, however, significant differ-
ences in the levels of urbanization within the
region. Coastal western Africa and southern
Africa have the most developed urban hier-
archies. Eastern Africa is the least urbanized
(Table 8.2).
Unlike the other regions of the world that
play dominant roles in the globalization pro-
cess, SSA lacks many major “world cities”
given its marginality to the world economic
system. Although Johannesburg plays a domi-
nant regional role and Lagos is growing in
economic importance regionally, most large
SSA cities are centers of national economies.
Urbanization in the region has continued,
but at a slower pace over the last decade in
many countries. The proportion of its popu-
lation in urban areas was 15 percent in 1950;
it then jumped to 25 percent in 1970; and it is
Figure 8.8 A billboard advertising a new, high-security elite housing enclave, Silverest Gardens, on the outskirts of Lusaka, built by the henan-Guoji development Company. it is one of nine such neighborhoods built by this Chinese company in SSA cities since 2010. Source: Photo by Garth Myers.
Historical Geography of Urban Development 337
Box 8.3 BriCS, urban investment, and the Middle Class
the last ten years have brought a profound shift in the sources of foreign investment in SSA, with China becoming the region’s biggest trading partner and donor. trade between China and Africa is now valued at more than $200 billion. india, Russia, and brazil are also increasing in significance as trading partners, investors, and donors in the region, and South African investment in the rest of Africa has increased. of the new players in the development and investment game in Africa, the group of five states which calls itself the bRiCS (standing for brazil, Russia, india, China, and South Africa) are the most significant, especially since they formed a development bank to serve as an alternative to the World bank, in part with African development in mind.
traditionally, the interest of bRiCS in the region has been tied to natural resource extrac- tion, often impacting urban areas only indirectly. however, a surprising trend has been the extent to which these countries have entered the urban housing and real estate markets. Some of the most dramatic examples have involved the construction of gated communities, high-security suburbs, or even entirely new satellite cities, often built by private firms from the bRiCS countries. For example, a Russian firm registered in Cyprus, Renaissance Capital, developed and financed plans for satellite cities in South Africa, nigeria, and Kenya, while China’s henan-Guoji development Company created nine high-security suburbs in eight dif- ferent African countries (see Figure 8.8).
this trend is often treated with near-derision, either because of media frenzies over glitzy new ghost cities or because of the galling inequity of luxurious developments in some of the world’s poorest cities. to wit, Kinshasa’s Cité du Fleuve, built by a Chinese-Zambian engineer- ing team on two artificial islands in the Congo River, opened in 2015 with a plan for more than 10,000 luxury apartments with asking prices beginning at $175,000 and a minimum down payment of $50,000—on the edge of a megacity with per capita income estimated at $280 per year. on the other hand, there is certainly a degree to which the new satellite cit- ies and secure suburbs meet the growing demand for high-end housing from SSA’s expanding urban middle class. the most infamous of the bRiCS-built “ghost cities,” Luanda’s Chinese- built satellite city of Kilamba, quietly gained 40,000 Angolan residents between 2012 and 2014 by lowering the asking price for its apartments; even though the new low prices were well out of reach of the average Luanda citizen, other Angolans clearly had the cash.
there is a healthy dose of skepticism surrounding the much-ballyhooed rising tide of SSA’s economies, since so much of the growth is in the familiar oil-and-minerals sector, with its notoriously limited benefits for ordinary urban Africans. yet, across the region, there is no mistaking the expansion of high-end consumerism, as mall after mall emerges in dakar, Accra, nairobi, and many others urban settings. A great many cities are witnessing a housing and construction boom to accommodate the new growth of this urban middle class, and the bRiCS donors, investors, and engineers are a big part of the story. it remains to be seen how durable SSA’s growing middle class will be, and the same may be said for the bRiCS’ interest in them.
338 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
now projected to exceed 50 percent by 2040.
Between 1950 and 1995, SSA’s urban popula-
tion increased by an average of 5 percent per
annum—this represents about twice the aver-
age population growth rate of the region. Since
then, however, the growth rate has slowed and
it is projected to be slightly above 3 percent
by 2030. There are also significant variations
in the urban population growth rates of the
countries in the region.
Although the overall growth of urban
population in SSA has slowed in recent years,
most of the major cities continue to increase
their populations. For instance, the 2015
population of Lagos, Nigeria’s metropoli-
tan area is estimated to be over 13 million;
Kinshasa-Brazzaville is 11 million; greater
Johannesburg 9.9 million, and Abidjan 4.9
million. Between 1990 and 2010, Luanda tri-
pled its population from 1.6 million to 4.8
million, and Conakry doubled its population
to 1.7 million. Also, some of the secondary
urban centers have experienced some growth
since the 1960s due to deliberate government
policies to slow the growth of the capital
cities.
Figure 8.9 Along Great East Road in Lusaka, Zambia, the informal economy punctuates the streets as vendors sharpen the pitches that they need to clinch each sale. Source: Photo by Angela Gray Subulwa.
Historical Geography of Urban Development 339
Most of the largest cities in SSA are the
national capitals of their country. In most
cases, the other urban centers are much
smaller, except when such cities house major
economic activity like a mine or a port. Devel-
opment efforts have focused on such national
cities while ignoring the many smaller urban
centers. Most administrative, transport, com-
munications, commercial, educational, and
industrial functions are concentrated in the
major national cities.
Many SSA cities derive their importance
from the role that they played during the colo-
nial and/or postcolonial eras. An important
postcolonial SSA urban development phe-
nomenon is the creation of newly planned
cities. The first of such cities was the port
of Tema, Ghana, built in the early 1960s in
anticipation of the country’s industrial devel-
opment. Several countries have since estab-
lished new cities as their capitals, including
Dodoma in Tanzania, Lilongwe in Malawi,
Yamoussoukro in Côte d’Ivoire, and Abuja in
Nigeria. These new capitals were meant to give
the nation a “fresh start” and to direct growth
away from existing cities (Figure 8.10). How-
ever, considering that none of the new capi-
tals, other than Abuja, have grown to much
more than about half a million inhabitants,
one can say that these new cities have not had
significant influence on the growth of the
already established cities. And in Abuja’s case,
the staggering rates of growth that the city
has experienced (its population jumped from
800,000 to 2 million between 2000 and 2010
alone) have far outstripped Nigeria’s planning
capacity for coping with it.
Another characteristic of SSA urban cent-
ers is the importance of port cities. Apart
from the landlocked countries in the region
and those that have created new capitals,
many of the rest of the countries have port
Table 8.1 Female and Male, age 15–24, in Informal Employment (in percent)
Female Male Year
Benin 79.8 69.8 2006
Burkina Faso 82.8 20.7 2003
Cameroon 69.9 62 1998
CAR 96.8 75.2 1994
Chad 83.6 60.2 2004
Comoros 93.4 54.5 1996
Congo 92.5 52 2005
Cote d’Ivoire 77.6 35.3 1998
Ethiopia 69.9 16.8 2005
Gabon 75.6 71 2000
Ghana 85.2 30.1 2003
Guinea 98.6 – 2005
Kenya 63.8 5.3 2003
Madagascar 77.7 – 1997
Malawi 72.6 – 2000
Mali 91.2 53.3 2001
Mozambique 70.9 8.5 2003
Namibia 38 – 2000
Niger 92.1 57.2 1998
Nigeria 59 16.8 2003
Rwanda 60 23.2 2005
Senegal 84 23.9 2005
South Africa 39.3 – 1998
Togo 94.3 60.1 1998
Uganda 74.4 14.9 2001
Tanzania 70.6 4.7 2004
Zambia 68.7 11.4 2002
Zimbabwe 53.6 – 1999
Source: Global Urban Indicators Database 2010.
Table 8.2 Urban Population as Percentage of Total Population
Regions 1990 2020 Projected
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA 28.2 40.7
Eastern Africa 17.7 27.3
Middle Africa 32.4 46.1
Southern Africa 48.8 62.7
Western Africa 33.2 49.9
Source: UN Habitat (2014): 266–67.
340 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
cities as their capital city (see Figure 8.1). This
is often a carryover from the colonial period
when the main function of the capital city was
to provide access to the metropolitan coun-
try. In addition, SSA’s role during the colo-
nial era as the producer of natural resources
led to urban development that was based on
resource exploitation. Zambia provides a good
example of urban centers that grew out of the
copper mining centers. For instance, Chingola
grew up around the Nchanga copper mine;
Kitwe is at the site of the Nkana mine and
Luanshya stems from the Roan Antelope cop-
per mine. Another important feature of SSA’s
urban evolution is the increasing importance
of tourism cities. Mombasa, the second-larg-
est city in Kenya and the center of the coastal
tourism industry, continues to attract immi-
grants from the interior of Kenya because of
the employment opportunities in the tourist
industry. Gorée Island, located just off the
Dakar Peninsula also attracts many tourists
annually because of its slave history. Simi-
larly, Cape Coast and Elmina in Ghana attract
many tourists, who are interested in the expe-
riences of the trans-Atlantic slave trade, to the
castles from where the slaves were shipped to
the New World.
DISTINCTIVE CITIES
Kinshasa: The Invisible City
About 40 percent of the Democratic Repub-
lic of the Congo’s (DRC) population lives in
cities, with that percentage expected to top 50
percent by 2040. Kinshasa’s population was
conservatively estimated to be 11 million in
2015. This capital city has more than 15 per-
cent of the DRC’s population. Instability and
Figure 8.10 A downtown shopping street in dodoma, tanzania. tanzania’s socialist government relocated the national capital from the colonial port of dar es Salaam to the deliberately non- monumental new capital of dodoma, beginning in the 1970s, as an attempt to overturn the colonial legacy. Source: Photo by Garth Myers.
Distinctive Cities 341
warfare (especially from 1996 to 2002) have
hindered Kinshasa’s economic development,
even while enhancing incentives for Congo-
lese people to migrate to it. Its rapid growth in
the last half-century has outstripped the gov-
ernment’s political and economic capacity to
provide for its needs.
For Sub-Saharan Africa’s second-largest
city, Kinshasa has a relatively brief and not-
ably turbulent history. The British-American
explorer-agent for the Belgians, Henry Morton
Stanley, built a new city just adjacent to a set
of preexisting settlements in 1881, naming it
Leopoldville to honor Leopold II, the Belgian
king. A railway connection with the coastal
port of Matadi soon made Leopoldville a
key town for linking the vast interior of the
basin with the world economy, and in 1923
Leopoldville became the Belgian Congo’s capi-
tal. Eventually, the Belgians extended the city’s
boundaries; at independence, this expanded
entity became Kinshasa.
Kinshasa had only about 30,000 residents
in the 1880s, but this had risen to 400,000 by
independence in 1960. As was the case in many
cities in SSA, colonialism held the population
down by enforcing restrictions on urban resi-
dence. At independence, the new government
ended these controls, opening the doors for
massive rural-to-urban migration. For much
of the last half-century, the annual growth
rate of the city’s population has been above 5
percent; it is estimated to have slowed to 3.8
percent for 2010–2020.
Until 1945, most of Leopoldville’s Afri-
cans lived not in the city itself, but in adja-
cent riverine settlements. After World War II,
new neighborhoods arose, some planned for
African workers by the colonial regime. These
planned neighborhoods were nearly the only
serious investments in African areas of the
city made during the Belgian era; Leopold II’s
Congo Free State and the Belgian Congo that
replaced it in 1908 are considered by many
scholars to demonstrate the worst case for
colonialism’s negative impacts, with extremely
limited investments in human welfare or
security in the colony’s capital city. Thus, Kin-
shasa’s infrastructure woes are not entirely the
result of warped postcolonial era’s politics—
the colonial regime failed to provide urban
services to African areas even when investing
heavily in European areas of the city.
The governments that have ruled Kinshasa
since 1960 and the private-sector entities that
have invested in the Congo’s vast resources
have not improved matters. Both government
and the formal private sector failed to keep
pace with Kinshasa’s housing, infrastructure,
or employment demands. Despite this, migra-
tion to Kinshasa continues to rise. Warfare,
violence, hunger, insecurity, and the departure
of industries from rural areas drive people
to Kinshasa. Their perceptions do not match
with realities—some 60 percent of Kinshasa’s
workforce is estimated to be unemployed;
housing and sanitation conditions remain
poor; and environmental health problems are
rampant.
Population-wise, the largest zones in the
city are at the far eastern and far western edges
of its urban expanse. Growth in these and other
areas is mostly unregulated and uncontrolled.
Postindependence efforts to provide public
housing, credit facilities, or transport have
been marred by gross corruption, mismanage-
ment, and negligence, particularly under the
notorious dictatorship of Mobutu Sese Seko,
who ruled the DRC (which he renamed Zaire)
with brutal inefficiency from 1965 to 1997. As
a result, Kinshasa’s residents do as much as
they can informally, outside of the state’s pur-
view or the formal private sector. So much of
what comprises Kinshasa in both physical and
342 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
economic terms is undocumented, giving rise
to discussion of it as an “invisible city.” Geog-
raphers Guillaume Iyenda and David Simon
estimate that three-fourths of Kinshasa’s
houses are self-built by their owners, often in
such close proximity to one another as to pro-
hibit sufficient road construction. Roads, rail-
roads, airports, port facilities, river transport,
bridges, and public vehicles in Kinshasa have
deteriorated steadily.
Industry in Kinshasa has been declining for
30 years or more. Rioting, looting, and urban
violence in the 1990s and 2000s reduced the
city’s industrial capacity still further. Kin-
shasa’s manufacturing sector still produces
many lower-order goods, but in declining vol-
ume. The service sector dominates Kinshasa’s
economy, accounting for three-fourths of all
urban activities. Yet, the extraordinary degree
of urban primacy that Kinshasa still main-
tains means that it continues to dominate
the DRC’s economy, accounting for between
19 percent and 33 percent of all firms or
establishments.
Despite the negativity that surrounds most
descriptions of and scholarship about Kin-
shasa, this megacity is a thriving center of the
arts, particularly for popular music. Kinshasa’s
musicians have produced chart-toppers and
dance-hall favorites across SSA and Europe
for decades, inventing new styles of music and
dance and pushing on through every new twist
in the city’s political and economic malaise.
The 2006 democratic elections in the DRC
marked a turning point toward peace and
stability, and Kinshasa is beginning to benefit
from the DRC’s tremendous base of natu-
ral resources. DRC was once among the top
five producers of industrial diamonds in the
world, and these are still estimated to account
for more than half of the country’s export
earnings, alongside extensive copper, cobalt,
coffee, palm oil, and rubber exports. Such
riches have attracted many foreign investors
to the DRC, some of whom are investing in
real estate and housing ventures in Kinshasa,
as the DRC’s government begins to invest in
long-overdue infrastructure for this megac-
ity. Widespread street protests in 2014 against
efforts to change the constitution to allow
the president a third term in office, though,
were reminders that Kinshasa still faces many
challenges on the road to more equitable and
democratic government (Box 8.4).
Accra: African Neoliberal City?
Ghana’s level of urbanization in 2014 was 53
percent, and it is projected to increase to over
63 percent by 2030. The two most important
cities in the country are Accra, along the coast,
and Kumasi, in the interior. Accra, however,
with an estimated 2015 population of 2.3 mil-
lion, is the undisputed primate city of Ghana.
Accra’s dominance manifests itself in the
political, administrative, economic, and cul-
tural spheres. The country’s open economic
policies and its relative political stability in a
region characterized by instability have also
elevated Accra’s influence internationally.
Accra has experienced a surge in business and
industry, becoming a destination for many
foreign visitors to West Africa. At the same
time, a significant proportion of the city’s resi-
dents have not benefited from the good eco-
nomic fortunes.
Accra began as a coastal fishing settle-
ment of the Ga-Adanbge people in the late
sixteenth century. Although there were other
trade and political centers in the inland of
the country at the time, there is no evidence
that they were connected in any way to Accra.
During the seventeenth century, a number
of forts were established in the area by the
Distinctive Cities 343
Box 8.4 Kinshasa’s imaginative and Generative Side
Kinshasa is often seen as one of the worst examples of what has gone wrong in SSA’s cities. it has grown very rapidly without corresponding industrial manufacturing growth, enduring decades of mismanagement amidst severe governance crises in the dRC. its vast sprawl and poor infrastructure are part of why it is often portrayed as an example of relocalization: where a city becomes a set of villages distinct and cut off from each other. And yet at the same time, Kinshasa has endured as a major engine of creativity in music and the arts, and its people display tremendous ingenuity in manufacturing the means to survive. in recent years, its residents have farmed its cemeteries and reclaimed stretches of the Malebo Pool in the Congo River as arable land. Filip de boeck has estimated that Kinois (the people of Kinshasa) have now empoldered more than 800 hectares of the Malebo Pool. More than 80 farmers’ associations govern this vast urban agricultural garden belt essentially outside of government control. What de boeck calls an “organic approach to the production of the city” certainly does not occur without conflicts, but its freedoms and innovations need to be recognized in any future attempts to come to grips with this megacity. Unfortunately, the creativity of Kinois residents is more frequently subjected to harsh and capricious crack- downs, street-sweeps, or programs of demolition.
the new democratically elected regime of Joseph Kabila has, since the 2006 election, invested heavily in remaking Kinshasa’s downtown, with Chinese, indian, Pakistani, UAE, or Zambian engineers, contractors, or investors. Ubiquitous billboards advertise the global ambitions for Kinshasa among the dRC’s new elites, including a proposed gated condo- minium community, La Cite du Fleuve, to be built on two artificial islands in the Congo River. Kinshasa’s artists, such as bodys isek Kingelez, have reimagined Kinshasa as well. Kingelez’s most striking piece, Projet pour le Kinshasa du troisième millénaire, is a multimedia model imaginarium for the dRC’s megalopolis in the future, the “third Millennium.” in all likeli- hood, the future of Kinshasa belongs to the farmers reclaiming Malebo Pool for their gardens more than it does to the dreamland of billboards or dioramas of its glory. but Kinshasa, far from an “invisible” city, actually makes itself a visible symbol of all that is wrong, but also all that is marvelous, about the dRC.
Source: Filip de boeck. 2010. “Spectral Kinshasa: building the City through an Architecture of Words,” paper presented to the workshop, “beyond dysfunctionality: ProSocial Writing on Africa’s Cities,” nor- dic Africa institute, Uppsala, Sweden.
Europeans. The rise of Accra as an urban
center began in 1877 when it replaced Cape
Coast as the capital of the British Gold Coast
colony. Unlike many SSA capital cities such as
Dakar that were selected because of preexist-
ing economic advantages, the choice of Accra
was influenced by the colonialists’ desire to
find a newer area that would protect Europe-
ans from native-borne diseases. Accra’s new
status as the capital made it an attractive loca-
tion for many merchants and investors, and
by 1899 the city had been transformed into
344 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
the busiest port on the Gold Coast with the
largest number of warehouses. The colonial
administration used legislation to limit the
development of manufacturing in the city, so
at independence in 1957 Accra had developed
a reputation not as a factory city but a ware-
house city. As the first city in Africa to become
the capital of a new nation after World War
II, Accra also became an important political
center for the struggle for independence in
Ghana and in Africa.
Postindependence governments in Ghana
continued to promote the city’s development
by concentrating governmental functions and
economic opportunities in the city and ignor-
ing the other important cities in the country,
such as Kumasi. As a result, Accra expanded
as the administrative functions for the entire
country expanded. In addition, the develop-
ment of Tema port led to the abandonment
of Accra harbor as a commercial port. How-
ever, like many cities in Ghana, Accra’s growth
began to slow down significantly in the 1970s
and 1980s because of the economic crisis that
engulfed the country.
The Ghanaian government accepted a
World Bank-supported economic reform
package in 1983 and agreed to pursue neolib-
eral economic policies, including the privatiza-
tion of state-owned enterprises, deregulation
of currency markets, promotion of the private
sector and foreign direct investment, reduc-
tion in the public sector, and trade liberaliza-
tion. These free-market policies are essential
for understanding the contemporary urban
economy. The policies helped to transform the
state-controlled business environment in the
country and encouraged the development of
the private sector. It became easier to import
many commodities, including building mate-
rials, leading to rapid residential development
in the city and an expansion in the number
of motor vehicles that clutter Accra’s roads
(Figure 8.11). In addition, the infrastructure-
building program created visible signs of
development in the city such as major road
Figure 8.11 A long line of drivers wait for gas at a station in Accra. one of the great ironies in many SSA cities appears in situations where Africans experience shortages of a major export commodity of their own country. here, the irony is that Ghana is an exporter of petroleum, yet has not been able to keep up with demand in its own capital city. Source: Photo by Francis owusu.
Distinctive Cities 345
construction (new thoroughfares and flyo-
vers), upgrading of the international airport
in Accra and the Tema port, and the creation
of export-processing zones to attract foreign
investors. As the hub of Ghana’s economic
activities, Accra has also become the host to
a number of the national, regional, and mul-
tinational financial and business institutions.
These economic activities have exceeded the
ability of the old central business district to
house them, and as a result many of the head-
quarters are located around the outskirts of
the city. The proposed “Hope City” near Accra
is one such effort and is expected to transform
Accra into an important IT hub and increase
its global competiveness.
Yet, not all residents in Accra have benefited
from free-market policies—negative effects of
the policies are also visible on the urban land-
scape. Income levels of most residents have
not kept up with the rising cost of living. Lack
of employment opportunities for the majority
of the residents has widened the gap between
the rising, yet small, middle class and the poor
majority. The unequal distribution of wealth
can be seen from the proliferation of new
housing developments on the outskirts of the
city, including development of gated com-
munities, luxury apartment buildings, expen-
sive urban shopping malls, and the increased
securitization of architecture presumably for
protection against crime. Although the crime
rate in Accra is low (compared to other SSA
cities such as Lagos), the growth of the pri-
vate security industry in the city reflects the
feeling of insecurity among the residents and
emphasizes the need to address this emerg-
ing problem. The poverty in the city can also
be seen from the increasing number of street
traders on busy intersections and other hot
spots. Many of the poor, including young chil-
dren, make a living by hawking anything that
they can find, especially the ubiquitous water
in plastic bags. The effect of the liberalization
policy has also been the flooding of the city
with vehicles which, combined with lack of
comprehensive transportation planning, has
created insurmountable traffic problems in
the city.
Ghana celebrated its 50 years of independ-
ence in 2007, with the country booming with
many activities of varying proportions; and, as
the nation’s capital, Accra played an important
role. In the same year, Ghana also discovered
oil offshore and began pumping in 2010. It
is hoped that the nationalistic overtones of
the 50th independence anniversary and the
country’s oil resources will help address the
challenges facing the majority of the city’s res-
idents who so far have not benefited from the
liberalization of the city but are bearing the
brunt of the government’s policies.
The optimism over the future of Accra and
Ghana is being tampered by the recent per-
formance of the Ghanaian economy. Follow-
ing years of growth, Ghana’s economy slowed
down to 5.5 percent growth in 2013. This was
accompanied by large budget deficiencies,
currency devaluation, high interest rates, and
rising inflation. To compensate, the govern-
ment raised electricity and water tariffs. Lack
of infrastructure has already been cited as one
of the major barriers to growth and this eco-
nomic decline caused further cuts to public
expenditure. Specifically, deficiencies in elec-
trical and transportation systems impact both
commerce and residential areas throughout
Accra.
Lagos: Largest Megacity of SSA
Nigeria’s population is more than 47 percent
urbanized. Lagos, with over 13 million inhab-
itants in 2015 and over 18 million projected
346 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
for 2025, qualifies as SSA’s most populous city
and one of the world’s megacities. The devel-
opment of the petroleum industry in Nige-
ria has given a boost to urban development,
including that of Lagos. It is often said that
Lagos owes its growth and dynamism to Euro-
pean influence. Yet, it is also true that Lagos,
in its development dynamic, owes much to
early African urban development. Lagos was
established in the seventeenth century, when
a group of Awari decided to cross over the
lagoons and settle in a more secure setting
on the island of Iddo. They later crossed over
to Lagos Island in search of more farmland.
In this manner, the three important parts of
the city of Lagos were founded as fishing and
farming villages by the indigenous population
well before the impact of major external influ-
ences in the eighteenth century were felt.
Another important historical factor in
the development of Lagos is its significance
in the slave trade between 1786 and 1851, in
which Africans, especially the Yoruba, played
an important facilitating role. Lagos was not
a slave market until 1760, but it soon became
one of the most important West African ports
in the slave trade. Lagos Island became an
important center where slaves were barri-
caded as they awaited their export along with
primary commodities, particularly foodstuffs
and Yoruba cloth, which reached markets as
distant as Brazil. Although in 1807 the Brit-
ish passed an act to abolish the slave trade,
Lagos, because of its locational advantage,
continued the trade until it was halted by the
British invasion of the city in 1851, which also
caused a temporary decline in the city’s popu-
lation. With the cession of Lagos to Britain as a
colony in 1861, the colonial era for Lagos had
begun.
People continued to move into the “free
colony,” leaving behind slavery, war, and
instability in the interior. Freed slaves also
returned from Brazil as well as Sierra Leone
and made their homes in Lagos. Toward the
end of the nineteenth century, Britain inter-
vened to stop internal hostilities and estab-
lished a protectorate over the whole of Nigeria.
A railway from Lagos, begun in 1895, reached
Kano in 1912. As its effective hinterland now
expanded to the interior of Nigeria, Lagos
became even more important as a trade and
administrative center. By 1901, the city had a
population of more than 40,000, and by this
time the future prominence of the “modern
metropolis” was pretty much established.
Lagos has experienced spectacular popula-
tion growth and spatial expansion in the past
four decades. Many of city’s current prob-
lems are rooted in its rapid growth. It has
been called the “biggest disaster area that ever
passed for a city.” That may be overstating it,
but Lagos has acute, sometimes incompre-
hensible, problems of congested traffic, inad-
equate sanitation, housing and social services,
and urban decay.
Lagos is a primate city. The disparity in
socioeconomic status between the elite and
the mass of urbanites is very wide. That also
means the city reflects two contradictory
modes of living: one that is an extension of
European style brought about by those who
can afford the luxuries of a high level of tech-
nology and another that is an extension of the
traditional mode of living, which has been
distorted to fit an urban milieu. This curi-
ous amalgam, as it reflects itself in an African
urban setting, loses the beauty, charm, and
convenience of both of its parts and becomes
a nuisance, as exemplified by the traffic con-
gestion and slum dwellings of Lagos.
As a megacity, Lagos has the typical prob-
lems of rapid population growth and insuf-
ficient employment opportunities. The net
Distinctive Cities 347
effect of these problems is enormous. It
depresses urban wages to almost marginal
subsistence levels and adds to the pressure
on urban amenities and housing, as well as to
numerous other social problems, especially in
the slums of Lagos and peripheral residential
communities. In fact, an estimated 64 percent
of the residents of Lagos reside in slum areas.
Lagos is a good example of an African primate
city whose growth rates and attendant prob-
lems in distorted consumption patterns have
created a stultifying effect that a weak and
often disorganized city government is incapa-
ble of handling.
There are, however, some positive devel-
opments underway. Abuja, in the vicinity of
the confluence between the Niger and Benue
rivers, was designated as the new capital city
of the country and all government functions
have steadily moved to that more central
location. This has meant a major step toward
decentralization, and it has reduced the con-
centration of functions in Lagos. Another
major development in Lagos that hopes to
reshape Lagos’ relations with the global polit-
ical economy and transform it into a world,
or perhaps even a global, city in time is Eko-
Atlantic. This new development is expected
to include 3,000 new buildings zoned in 10
separate districts on reclaimed land with
waterfront areas, tree-lined streets, efficient
transport systems, and mixed-use plots that
combine residential areas with leisure facili-
ties, offices, and shops. It is projected to house
many businesses, 250,000 residents, serve as
the workplace for 150,000 people, and sup-
port an additional 190,000 commuters. It is
expected to help to reverse coastal erosion
and relieve some of the pressure on land
and resources in Lagos as well as privately
administer and supply the city with electric-
ity, water, mass transit, sewage, and security.
Despite these promises, there is a risk in aban-
doning traditional African cities through the
promotion of detached new cities that are
explicitly geared toward serving elites and
international capital. Further, Eko-Atlantic
does not address the problems of Lagos that
are discussed above and may indeed exac-
erbate them. For instance, it is unclear how
many jobs would be created beyond those
that will be available during the construc-
tion phase, and the exclusivity of the new city
could promote existing inequality.
Lagos, even in the colonial period, had less
than 5,000 expatriates. Hence, compared with
Dakar, Nairobi, and Kinshasa, the character of
the city and its spatial organization were con-
siderably less a function of the impact of the
Europeans. The process that Lagos is under-
going, if there is any recognizable process at
all, may throw light on the problems of indi-
genization of African primate cities that have
been, and in most cases still are, enclaves of
European economic systems and often are as
alien to their people as cities in Europe. Lagos
is a bona fide African city and, as disorgan-
ized as it is, it may offer a lesson on the transi-
tion from a colonial to an indigenous urban
environment.
Nairobi: Urban Legacies of Colonialism
East Africa has commonly been taken to be
SSA’s least urbanized region and, until quite
recently, it was estimated that only 20 percent
of Kenya’s population lived in cities. That per-
centage had risen to 24 percent by 2010, and it
is expected to hit the 40 percent mark by 2040.
Nairobi, the capital and primate city of Kenya,
is currently estimated to have 4 million resi-
dents. It is a transport hub for much of East
Africa, as well as a key site for international
diplomacy, and it serves as the headquarters
348 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
or conference space for many international
organizations. Despite its short history, Nai-
robi has grown into the major industrial
urban center in its region, and the economic
engine of Kenya. Nonetheless, it is a city with
substantial rates of poverty, great disparities
between rich and poor, and faltering urban
services.
Nairobi is something of an accident of
geography. Sparsely inhabited forest and
swampland in the 1890s, Nairobi was by 1906
the site of the new capital of British East Africa
(renamed Kenya Colony in 1920). Nairobi
became the headquarters of the BEA’s Uganda
Railway, conveniently positioned near the
Nairobi River and the mid-point of the rail
line. The site’s drainage and health problems
did not prevent the colonial rulers from see-
ing the new railway headquarters as an ideally
situated forward capital for the colony.
By 1906, the new city contained more
than 13,000 people. By 1931, this popula-
tion had grown to 45,000, nearly 60 percent
of whom were Africans. Nairobi became the
most important colonial capital in the region,
as the seat of Britain’s High Commission for
East Africa (including the colonies of Kenya,
Uganda, Tanganyika, and Zanzibar). By 1948,
the city had more than 100,000 people, and its
growth continued steadily through to inde-
pendence in 1963.
Nairobi’s colonial legacies continue to
haunt it. The first element of this legacy is its
physical location. It might have been conveni-
ent as a site for railway administration and
management, and its geographical centrality
might have assisted the efficiency of colonial
rule; but physically, colonial Nairobi was, as the
early colonial administrator Eric Dutton once
put it, “a slatternly creature, unfit to queen it
over so lovely a country.” Sanitation and urban
services more generally lagged—and continue
to do so—in part because much of the city lies
in or near wetlands.
The second legacy scars Nairobi more
heavily, and that is the legacy of colonial seg-
regation. Nairobi was built to be the capital
of what its small population of European set-
tlers claimed as a “white man’s country”; and,
though Africans were a majority in the city
by 1922, most were not legally given rights
of residency under colonial rule. When the
colonial regime did begin to formally plan
for the African areas in Nairobi in the 1920s,
these were consistently laid out in the low-
est-lying, least-desirable eastern areas of the
urban zone. Whites invariably were situated
in the higher elevation areas west of Nairobi’s
downtown. Since the colonial regime at times
also encouraged the immigration of Indians
and Pakistanis to East Africa, Nairobi quickly
developed a substantial Asian population that
took up residence in the middle, literally and
figuratively.
Under colonial rule, the Europeans con-
trolled the government, the resources, and the
finances of Kenya despite the paltry percent-
age of the population that they represented.
More than half of the urbanized land of Nai-
robi in the 1960s still remained in white hands,
when whites comprised less than 5 percent of
the city population. The Asians of the colonial
era were mostly shopkeepers, merchants or
skilled artisans. Eventually, much of the land
of the eastern, African-dominated areas of the
city came to be Asian owned. From the begin-
ning, in Nairobi, Africans occupied the lowest
ground and the lowest rungs of the economy.
Most Africans lived in rented housing built
by the city or their employers. The African
residential zone of Eastlands, for example,
was characterized by high turnover rates, high
unemployment, and poor environmental
conditions.
Distinctive Cities 349
Although the tripartite racial geography of
the city has faded somewhat in the 48 years
since independence, Nairobi remains a heav-
ily divided city, in class terms now as much
or more so than in racial terms. The western
and northwestern suburbs remain low density
elite—albeit increasingly multiracial—areas.
Some African elites have moved into tradi-
tionally European and Asian neighborhoods,
but this is a minority in the upper echelons
of political society. Upper Nairobi and the
“Nairobi Hill” residential areas continue to
be dominated by European single-unit and
fashionable homes complete with servants’
quarters. Well-to-do Asians inhabit Parklands,
adjacent to the historically European sector.
Poorer Asians live in Eastleigh. Some of the
Asian population has moved to a second Asian
quarter in Nairobi South. The CBD and mid-
dle-class or working-class zones predominate
in Nairobi’s geographical center, and most of
the city east of downtown is dominated by
informal squatter settlements. The unregu-
lated growth of the latter has been the major
story of the postindependence landscape of
Nairobi, and occasionally these interrupt the
general geographical pattern. Extensive efforts
have gone toward their formal upgrading, but
the more significant process of transforma-
tion has been toward their densification, as
private investors replace shacks with mid-rise
tenements.
Although both its growth rate and its eco-
nomic health have declined in the past 25
years, Nairobi has become a major African
metropolis. Its primate city role for Kenya
is augmented by its role as an international
center for East Africa and even SSA more
generally. Nairobi is a prime African exam-
ple of a “splintering urbanism,” where one
portion of the city is highly integrated with
the world economy while another larger
portion is disintegrated, literally and figura-
tively. Compared to many SSA cities, Nairobi
has had a good record in industry and has
an important financial services sector in the
CBD. The average European, African elite, or
Asian in the city lives in a comfortable home
in Upper Nairobi or Parklands and works in
the CBD or some other similar enclave. Many
African residents are not integrated into the
core functions of the city and find themselves
locked out of the Nairobi economy that most
Western visitors see—as in the development
of gated communities for elites in the city.
The informal economy provides the over-
whelming majority of job opportunities and
residences in Nairobi now. Although Nairobi
shows evidence of a growing middle class and
middle-class housing estates, over 40 percent
of the population still resides in informal
settlements.
The CBD of Nairobi represents one of
the busiest spots in the continent. Its most
prominent functions are commerce, retail-
ing, tourism, banking, government, interna-
tional institutions, and education. It gained
unwanted international notoriety with the
1998 bombing of the U.S. embassy and an adja-
cent office building that caused 284 deaths, all
but ten being Kenyans. It returned to the news
again with a wave of postelection violence in
2007–2008 that left thousands of Nairobi resi-
dents displaced for months afterward. In 2013,
al-Shabaab Islamic militants claimed respon-
sibility for a horrific assault on the Westgate
Mall just north of the CBD, resulting in more
than one hundred deaths and the mall’s total
demolition. Despite these tragedies, the Nai-
robi CBD still provides SSA with arguably its
most picturesque and captivating skyline of
multistory buildings, and the CBD is ringed
by several, even larger, elite shopping malls
besides the now-destroyed Westgate.
350 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
Box 8.5 Crisis Mapping from Kenya to the Globe
As the postelection violence unfolded in the streets of nairobi in 2007, a group of bloggers, citizen journalists, and software developers created a website to map reports of political vio- lence in Kenya. the original developers, led by Kenyan activist ory okollah, were all current or former residents of Kenya committed to providing real-time, open-source, participatory spatial information and maps of the violence.
the initial website was named Ushahidi—Swahili for “testimony”—and, by most accounts, it outperformed mainstream Kenyan and international media in covering the grounded reali- ties of postelection violence. the Ushahidi site utilized text messages and Google Maps and allowed crowd-sourced information to be visually displayed on an online, interactive map that built-up “hot spots” of activity. due to the highly accessible platform, the original Ushahidi site was able to accurately capture the multifaceted dimensions of political vio- lence—mapping both fatal and nonfatal events —with input from over 45,000 users.
Since its inception in 2008, the Ushahidi idea has evolved and expanded into a company with a platform that extends beyond a single website focused on mapping postelection vio- lence in Kenya into a platform with numerous products, developments, and prominent global deployments. the main Ushahidi platform has undergone significant updates since its first release (1.0 Mogadishu, 2.0 Luanda, 2.3 Juba), with release 3.0 currently under development. in addition to the original site, the Ushahidi Platform also provides a number of other prod- ucts, such as CrowdMap, CrisisnEt, Ping, and SMSsync, all designed to provide tools for crowd- sourced mapping and information sharing. the Platform was used extensively in 2008 to map and track anti-immigrant violence in South Africa. the Ushahidi Platform has been deployed in numerous crisis situations outside of the continent as well, most visibly during the 2010 haitian earthquake. in addition to extensive use of CrisisnEt data and CrowdMap to target humanitarian assistance in post-earthquake haiti, the Platform has also been used to organize global occupy Movement events, track pharmaceutical supplies in Kenya, Malawi, Uganda, and Zambia, monitor elections in Mexico and india, and build a pollution map in post-deepwater horizon oil spill in Louisiana. Ping is a two-way, multichannel alert and group check-in system to ask, “Are you ok?” during an emergency. Like the original Ushahidi site, Ping developed directly from events unfolding in nairobi, specifically the need for real-time group check-in during the 2013 Westgate Mall attacks. Most recently, the Ushahidi Platform was utilized to map, monitor, and track the Ebola outbreak in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone.
According to the Ushahidi team, the core platform is “built on the premise that gather- ing crisis information from the general public provides new insights into events happening in near real-time.” the team is committed to covering events and geographic regions that typically exist at the margins of mainstream media, with particular attention to sub-Saharan Africa. in addition to these commitments, the Ushahidi Platform is deliberate in showcasing that a cutting-edge software company can arise and thrive from the continent. these com- mitments were recognized with a MacArthur award in 2013.
Source: ory okolloh, “how i became an Activist,” tEdGlobal 2007.
Distinctive Cities 351
Nairobi’s massive congestion, gigantic bill-
boards, neon signs, glitzy hotels and casinos,
and elite residents from all over the world
make it the ultramodern heartbeat of Kenya
and, for many, of SSA. The reconciliation and
constitutional changes that have followed the
cessation of postelection violence in 2008
brought hope to many Nairobi residents that
renewed government attention and reinvigor-
ated foreign investments would reverse their
city’s steady decline. The peaceful and fair 2013
elections conducted under Kenya’s popularly
endorsed 2010 constitution further solidified
this hope. Despite numerous setbacks for the
post-2013 government, including trials for the
president and vice president in the Interna-
tional Criminal Court for their alleged culpa-
bility in the 2007–2008 postelection violence,
Nairobi continues to catapult forward toward
its ambitions to be a world-class city-region
by 2030. While no real reversal of Nairobi’s
declining fortunes is in evidence, the city
remains a lively and creative cultural center
for Kenya and the region around it (Box 8.5).
Dakar: Senegal’s City of Contradictions
Senegal is about 43 percent urbanized. With
3.5 million inhabitants, Dakar is a principal
primate city in West Africa. The city is known
for its beauty, modernity, charm, and style, as
well as its agreeable climate, excellent location,
and urban morphology. But, of course, this
image applies to only part of Dakar. As with
Nairobi, Dakar is a city of phenomenal con-
tradictions (Figure 8.12).
The city was founded in 1444, when Portu-
guese sailors made a small settlement on the
tiny island of Gorée, located just off the Dakar
Peninsula. In 1588, the Dutch also made the
Figure 8.12 Fishing boats at Soumbedione fish market in dakar. Source: Photo by Garth Myers.
352 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
island of Gorée a resting point. Although
the French came to the site in 1675, they did
not move onto the mainland until 1857; they
used Dakar as a refueling and coal bunkering
point. A number of developments expanded
Dakar’s functions, leading it to be, in a short
time, the most important colonial port on
the west coast of Africa. In 1885, Dakar was
linked to St. Louis, the old Portuguese port, by
rail; and this gave it an added importance as
a trading center. Because of its situation and
site advantages, Dakar soon became a focus
for French colonial functions in the region.
In 1898, Dakar became a naval base and in
1904 it became the capital of the Federation
of French West Africa. Dakar’s location on the
westernmost part of the continent made it the
most strategic point for ships moving between
Europe and southern Africa and from Africa
to the New World. As capital of French West
Africa until 1956, it served a hinterland
stretching from Senegal in the west to the
easternmost part of Francophone West Africa,
which included Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger
(Figure 8.13).
After the French moved from the island of
Gorée to the peninsula, there was some uneas-
iness about living in quarters surrounded by
African villages. Although a policy of racial
segregation was not officially pursued, the
French settlers had always wanted to keep the
two communities separate. However, only
because of a natural calamity that befell the
Africans could the French finally accelerate
the establishment of their exclusive holdings.
Progressive displacement of African dwellings
was underway before the outbreak of a yellow
fever epidemic in 1900, but the Europeans,
invoking sanitation requirements, displaced
the Africans at a greater rate afterwards, push-
ing them northward. Between 1900 and 1902,
numerous African homesteads were burned
Figure 8.13 the influence of dakar extends well inland to the landlocked states of Mali, burkina Faso, and niger via the trans- Sahel highway. these residents of Mali’s capital, bamako, share a language with the residents of dakar: French. Source: Photo by Jared boone.
Distinctive Cities 353
down as a “sanitary measure,” and the occu-
pants were relocated after receiving com-
pensation. Another epidemic in 1914 again
brought destruction of African homesteads
in the south and more relocation of Africans
to the north. On the eve of World War II, the
French succeeded in almost completely domi-
nating downtown Dakar, often called Le Pla-
teau or Dakar Ville, concentrating Africans in
what became known as the African Medina, in
the north-central part of the peninsula. The
problem of “cohabitation,” as the French called
it, was at the root of the whole displacement
campaign. Although the colonial authorities
would never admit a policy of official segre-
gation, many recommendations were made
to openly enforce a system based on race. A
commission charged with the study of Dakar
in 1889 put forth a recommendation for sepa-
rate residential quarters for European and
African populations. In 1901, another report
proposed relocating the Africans outside the
confines of the city. A new plan, implemented
in 1950–1951, gave further excuse to the colo-
nial administrators to displace more Africans.
The present internal morphology of Dakar
reflects this historical background. The city is
composed of four main divisions. Although
rigid, exclusive ethnic domains are no longer
in evidence, Le Plateau still contains one of
the most westernized sectors in Africa. It
compares easily with any European city—
with high-rise buildings, expensive shops,
exclusive restaurants, business offices, and
many European residents. Characterized by
its white-painted, tree-lined boulevards, Le
Plateau is the most modern sector of the city,
and contains upper-class residential quar-
ters, commercial and retail functions, and
government offices and institutions. The
African Medina, by contrast, reflects its back-
ground as a concentration of Africans into
high-density housing projects and bidonvilles
(squatter settlements). It is the popular area
of the city, is still densely populated, and
houses many popular markets and clubs. Its
functions are primarily residential, but it also
contains shops, markets, and cultural fea-
tures. It contains the industrial laborers and
those employed in the informal sector, both
outside and inside the Medina. The popula-
tion of the Medina, and the adjacent bidon-
villes of Ouakem and Grand Yof, is uniformly
poor and lives in poorly serviced parts of
the city. Recent expansions of the city have
also resulted in the development of a sector
called Grand Dakar, which contains a variety
of neighborhoods ranging from the well-to-
do through middle-income and poor sectors
and includes a mixture of modern residential
quarters, industries, and bidonvilles. There is
also the Dakar industrial sector, which houses
the bulk of the city’s industrial activities.
Another important part of Dakar that
deserves attention is Gorée Island. This island
served for many centuries as one of the prin-
cipal factories in the triangular trade between
Africa, Europe, and the Americas. The popular
Maison des Esclaves (Slave House) built by the
Dutch in 1776 serves as a poignant reminder
of Gorée’s role as the center of the West African
slave trade. The Slave House with its famous
“Door of No Return” served as a place where
Africans were brought to be loaded onto ships
bound for the New World. The Slave House
has been preserved in its original state and
attracts thousands of tourists each year.
As with many African primate cities, Dakar
faces the problem of rapid population growth.
In 1914, the city had a total population of
18,000; by 1945 it had 132,000; and by 2015 it
had 3.5 million. Clearly most of the growth is
attributable to rural-urban migration, which
is characteristic of all Sub-Saharan primate
354 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
cities. The rate of natural increase of the city’s
population has also been much higher than
the national average on account of better sani-
tation and medical services.
There is no doubt that Dakar is still an
important center whose functions reach far
beyond its national boundaries. Its ideal loca-
tion still makes it a center of maritime as well
as airline traffic. Many international organi-
zations are located in Dakar because of its
geographic situation and agreeable urban
environment. Many international confer-
ences and meetings are held there. Above all,
it is one of the most favored vacation spots in
West Africa for European tourists, especially
those from the Mediterranean, who find a
familiar climatic comfort in exotic surround-
ings. Dakar’s position on the coast, however,
also leaves the area vulnerable to the pro-
jected increase in sea level and coastal erosion
and the threats of more flooding and storms
throughout the urban region. As many of the
tourism locations are situated along the coast,
this degradation could also bring a decrease in
this important revenue source for the region.
The future of Dakar, nevertheless, depends
largely on confronting two challenges. One is
to stem the tide of rural-to-urban migration by
a sound policy of regional and rural develop-
ment, including development of satellite cit-
ies and subsequent decentralization. Senegal
is attempting to stem rural-to-urban migra-
tion through the development of “ecovillages.”
This strategy focuses on equipping existing
communities with the means to utilize solar
energy, sustainable water storage, and waste
management techniques such as compost-
ing. As Dakar continues to grow, developing
strategies to sustain rural livelihoods such as
ecovillage development could curb the intense
urban migration and hold growth at a man-
ageable level for the city. The other challenge,
as in other African primate cities, is to bridge
the gap between the city’s ultramodern sec-
tors and the bidonvilles and make Dakar a true
African city.
Johannesburg: A Multicentered City of Gold
South Africa has long been among the most
urbanized countries in SSA. Some 64 percent
of its population now lives in cities. With more
than 4.4 million inhabitants, Johannesburg is
the largest city in South Africa. Gauging its
population is, however, both easier and more
complicated at the same time. On the one hand,
the relative wealth of the Republic of South
Africa affords it the possibility of keeping
more regular and reliable census figures than
most SSA countries, and the South African
Cities Network is one of the continent’s best
repositories of urban data. On the other hand,
the reorganization of municipal and local gov-
ernment in South Africa and the presence of
Johannesburg in the geographical center of
Africa’s greatest example of a polynodal con-
urbation (many-centered urban area) make
it more complicated to decide where Johan-
nesburg begins and ends. The major cities of
Ekurhuleni (formerly East Rand, 3.2 million),
Tshwane (formerly Pretoria, 2.9 million) and
Vereeniging (1.1 million residents) are within
the metropolitan area of Johannesburg, and
other big towns adjoin it as well. Thus the
metropolitan conurbation is said to contain
more than 11.6 million residents.
South Africa also has the most deeply
developed urban hierarchy in SSA. The com-
mon issues surrounding primacy in African
urban hierarchies are moot here. Johannes-
burg’s population of over 4.4 million is nearly
equaled by Cape Town (3.7 million); eThek-
wini (formerly Durban) has 3 million, and
both Nelson Mandela Bay (formerly Port
Distinctive Cities 355
Elizabeth) and Vereeniging are over 1 million,
giving South Africa seven municipalities with
more than 1 million residents. Five more cit-
ies have more than a half a million. This sig-
nificantly dilutes any primacy Johannesburg
might claim, although, when one considers
the immediate proximity of Tshwane and
Ekurhuleni, it is still possible to recognize the
greater Johannesburg area and Gauteng Prov-
ince as the core of the South African economy.
Johannesburg is frequently the only SSA
city to be considered a world city (though the
global connectivity of Cape Town, eThekwini,
and Tshwane is increasingly significant, along
with a few other SSA cities). It holds the larg-
est mining and industrial center on the Afri-
can continent. It is home to Africa’s largest
stock exchange, busiest airport, most diverse
manufacturing sector, and the ugliest urban
racial history in Africa.
Johannesburg owes its establishment and
phenomenal growth to the discovery of gold
in 1886. The rush of settlers from the south
to share in the riches of the land caused
the town’s population to increase to 10,000
within a year of its birth. By 1895, hardly
ten years after its establishment, the city had
about 100,000 people, half of whom were
European. Johannesburg was the creation of
the mining companies, which until recently
probably had more to do in determining the
spatial organization of the city than did the
civil authorities.
The City of Gold has the unfortunate
distinction of having been at the heart of a
notorious experiment in social engineering.
This experiment was built around the notion
of separate development for settlers and the
indigenous African population. Johannes-
burg’s separate development started with the
assertion in 1886 that no native tribes could
live within 70 miles (112 km) of the site of
the new town. When the “native” problem
first arose in 1903 and when it surfaced again
in 1932, with the creation of the Native Eco-
nomic Commission, the European settlers
argued that Johannesburg had been built
by the Europeans, for the Europeans, and
belonged to them alone. They maintained that
the “natives” were needed for unskilled labor
and came to the city to work but not to live in
it, mainly because of their inability to handle
European civilization. Africans were barred
from living in the city and denied permanence
of dwelling while they worked in the city; they
were restricted to guarded compounds or
distinct townships during the tenure of their
urban employment. The “pass law” (requiring
all Africans to carry passes, or internal pass-
ports) begun in 1890 and the “compound-
ing system” (restricting Africans to certain
residential areas) contributed to severe urban
structural problems with which Johannesburg
still has to cope.
Johannesburg became Africa’s largest
manufacturing center and a principal center
of culture and education. The prosperity of
the city was derived from the labors of all the
races, but was appropriated by the European
minority who enjoyed perhaps one of the
highest living standards in the world. Today,
the city is clean, with well-planned streets,
skyscrapers, and plush residential quarters.
The downtown area is similar to that of any
industrial city in Europe and North Amer-
ica, with high-rise development to house the
offices of the numerous companies, trading
firms, and government institutions. In the
suburbs of Johannesburg, such as Sandton
(which is increasingly an alternative white-
oriented CBD), are residential homes for the
well-to-do Europeans, whose architecture and
amenities match those of their European and
North American counterparts.
356 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
Separate development became a formal
national policy under the name apartheid, after
the 1948 election of the white racist National
Party in whites-only polls. The Nationalists’
apartheid built on decades of gradual evolu-
tion and enforced unequal separation in an
extremely geographical manner. Apartheid
was a socially engineered, hegemonic tool to
maintain a privileged status for the European
settler population so that its small number
could appropriate the vast amount of wealth
that was being generated in the country. The
impact of this policy was perhaps felt more
in places like Johannesburg than anywhere
else in the country. Apartheid’s application
was severely tested in the dynamic environ-
ment of Johannesburg, which was attracting
a great number of Africans to supply the labor
requirements of a rapidly growing industrial
conurbation. The authors of apartheid fol-
lowed a myopic vision by engineering an
unsustainable institution of separate develop-
ment for Africans in their native homelands.
They were later forced to tolerate settlements
such as Soweto, growing by leaps and bounds
in the shadows of Johannesburg. Apartheid
was doomed to succumb to the social dis-
order that its authors never anticipated. The
1976 race riot in Soweto was a watershed in
the development of non-racist South Africa.
The impatience of the world community with
the brutal regime brought moral outrage from
outside and increased violence from within.
Under the weight of these two dynamics, and
aided by a visionary leader Nelson Mandela,
South Africa emerged from its nightmare by
the early 1990s when apartheid came to a for-
mal end, symbolized by Mandela’s election as
president in 1994.
The future of Johannesburg lies in how
the root causes of urban instability created by
apartheid are dismantled while maintaining
the city’s ability to continue as South Afri-
ca’s most important industrial and business
center. The challenges that Johannesburg faces
are evident from what has been happening in
attempts to resolve the severe socioeconomic
disparities. With the enforcement mechanisms
of the apartheid influx control laws gone, an
orderly transition from a divided city into an
integrated city has been a daunting task for
policy makers and city planners. Johannes-
burg residents long suffered from high rates
of violent crime and continuing insecurity.
Johannesburg is becoming a megalopolis, as
a series of mining towns and industrial areas
merge together. The previously marginalized
townships such as Soweto and Alexandra are
now firmly integrated into metropolitan life.
Though still high, income inequality within
Johannesburg has declined, as has the violent
crime rate. Johannesburg (home to two of the
stadiums used to host the final games) led the
rest of South Africa in celebrating the success
of the 2010 FIFA World Cup in soccer—the
first time the world’s biggest sporting event
had ever been held in Africa. While contro-
versies persisted over the massive investment
in stadiums and infrastructure that hosting
the World Cup necessitated, Johannesburg’s
new Gautrain rapid transit railway, remodeled
international airport, fully upgraded highway
system, and many other manifestations of
FIFA 2010 remain on the landscape, alongside
a deep pride among urban residents across the
country in South Africa’s ability to produce
a first-rate World Cup without the mishaps
and fiascos many outsiders (almost gleefully)
seemed to expect.
With a nonracial central government at
the helm and with ample human and physical
resources for economic progress, all signs con-
tinue to point to a more progressive trajectory
for cities like Johannesburg. Success depends
Urban Challenges 357
on whether people of all ethnic groups living
in the city can deal responsibly with the his-
tory of their relations and choose to build a
diverse society in which everyone has a stake
in the new South Africa’s development.
URbAN CHALLENGES
Urban Environmental Issues
Given the diversity of environments across
the continent, the impacts of global climate
change in SSA cities are extremely varied.
Places in northern and southern Africa are
projected to become much hotter and drier in
the summers, with increased risks for drought,
while drier subtropical regions will become
warmer than the wetter tropics. Many of SSA’s
largest cities are located along the continent’s
coast and are particularly vulnerable to the
threat of rising sea levels (Figure 8.14). Because
most SSA cities have experienced more lim-
ited industrialization processes than similarly
sized cities of Europe, Asia, or the Americas,
specifically urban environmental problems are
often assumed to be of a smaller magnitude.
Yet problems of solid-waste management, air
and water pollution, toxic-waste disposal, and
environmental health are profound issues in
much of urban SSA. In part, due to the gen-
erally smaller formal industrial sector and
smaller manufacturing value-added base in
urban Africa, revenues that accrue to urban
local government are typically not significant
enough to support the broad array of urban
services expected of city governments. This
array includes environmental management
services such as solid-waste management,
water and sanitation supply, as well as any
form of environmental monitoring or over-
sight. As a consequence, formal and regulated
supply of these services in SSA cities is often
Figure 8.14 African cities located in low-elevation coastal zones, such as Monrovia, Liberia, are vulnerable to severe flooding from sea-level rise. Source: Photo by Robert Zeigler.
358 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
in very short supply. Even in cities with some
service provision, access to basic services is
typically skewed toward high-income groups
and neighborhoods.
Solid-waste services illustrate one crucial
example of the interlocking environmental
problems facing SSA cities. Many SSA cities
with more than 1 million inhabitants report
that the proportion of the residential solid
waste produced that actually makes it to a
landfill ranges from 3 percent to 45 percent,
meaning that the majority of solid waste
remains in urban neighborhoods. In an earlier
era of smaller settlements, the burial or burn-
ing of such waste was not a significant prob-
lem because its content was overwhelmingly
organic and biodegradable. The increasing
use of plastics and other inorganic materials,
along with ordinary source items for toxic
waste (such as batteries and household insec-
ticides in aerosol canisters), and the stagger-
ing growth of settlements mean that the lack
of proper solid-waste management is a severe
crisis for SSA’s urban environments. Buried
in congested neighborhoods, solid wastes can
and do pollute the water supplies of untold
millions of urban Africans. Pollutants sourced
to uncontrolled landfills have been shown
to enter into the fruits and vegetables urban
farmers pluck from downstream gardens in
Dar es Salaam, Lusaka, and elsewhere. For
example, just along the Roma-Ng’ombe bor-
der (see Figure 8.8), urban women garden-
ers utilize a “rich” section of sewage-infested
wetland for growing tomatoes, vegetables, and
sugar cane for sale in downtown Lusaka, as
well as in the surrounding compounds such
as Ng’ombe. Burned on the surface, the waste
causes serious damage to the air quality of such
neighborhoods. Left in ditches, the waste can
inhibit proper drainage, leading to flooding or
the increased presence of standing water that
becomes a breeding space for malarial mos-
quitoes. Mounds of waste left for months on
the surfaces of African urban neighborhoods
provide habitat for vermin that carry serious
public health risks.
The interconnected water, sanitation,
waste, air quality, and environmental health
problems of African cities may in fact be as
bad or worse, proportionally, as the infamous
environmental crises of Southeast Asian or
Latin American megacities. This is because
the problems have great potential to magnify
one another in the absence of regulation or
amelioration. Even where significant indus-
trial development is associated with African
urbanization, such as in Nigeria’s oil-rich
Niger Delta, Zambia’s Copperbelt, or South
Africa’s Gauteng Province (i.e., greater Johan-
nesburg), colonialism, transnational capi-
talism, or repressive governments (or, in the
latter case under apartheid, all three at once)
make for a heady combination of roadblocks
to environmental control. The levels of heavy
metals pollution downstream from the Cop-
perbelt’s largest copper smelter, for example,
are mind-boggling, and yet even as the tech-
nology exists to prevent or significantly reduce
the smelter’s air and water pollution, succes-
sive colonial and postcolonial governments
for many decades now have shown reluc-
tance to force environmental controls onto an
industry that provides more than 90 percent
of all of Zambia’s export earnings.
Despite such limited or politically circum-
scribed capacity for urban environmental
management, many African cities are witness-
ing substantial efforts to bring environmental
crisis points under control. In line with the
prevailing development models of the day,
many cities are experimenting with private-
sector urban-service provision, including in
environment-related sectors. Dar es Salaam,
Urban Challenges 359
as the pilot city for the United Nations Sus-
tainable Cities Program, privatized solid-
waste management services and produced
an increased rate of deposition from under
10 percent of residential waste to more than
40 percent in less than a decade. Other cities
have privatized water supply or even sanita-
tion services. Still more have attempted pub-
lic-private partnerships where private-sector
companies have joined forces with govern-
ments to provide services.
Not all of the new innovations have been
driven by the private sector, nor have they
been automatically friendly to the environ-
ment. For instance, South Africa’s post-
apartheid regime has carried out a policy of
free basic water provision that did increase
the supply of clean water for the poor; but
many critics point to the limitations in that
system that are causing poor urbanites to
seek unclean water alternatives, exacerbating
a cholera epidemic. In other cities, the driv-
ing forces for change in urban environmental
management belong with grassroots commu-
nity groups, such as Nairobi’s Mathare Sports
Club, whose local environmental planning
and consciousness raising earned them
global attention at the World Summit on the
Environment in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 that,
in turn, improved the club’s soccer match
gate revenues. Regardless of the paths taken,
though, it is clear that much more needs to
change for African cities to gain control over
the daunting array of environmental prob-
lems confronting them.
Primate Cities
Urban primacy continues to dominate the
African scene (Figure 8.15). Indeed, one of the
more significant factors in urban transforma-
tion in Africa in the post–World War II and
postindependence period has been the dra-
matic growth of the primate cities. Primate
cities contain more than 25 percent of the
total urban population in SSA. In places such
as Lesotho, the Seychelles, and Djibouti, pri-
mate cities contain 100 percent of the urban
population. Primate cities in SSA are also not
limited to small countries such as Burkina
Faso or Guinea-Bissau; they can also be found
in such large countries as Angola or Mozam-
bique. Generally, in those countries where
urbanization has had a relatively long history,
the ratios are lower. But the degree of primacy
will continue to be a significant pattern in
Africa’s urban development for quite a long
time (see Table 8.2).
In the 1960s, most primate cities in Africa
accounted for about 10 percent of the urban
population. By the year 2000, many cities,
such as Kinshasa, Lusaka, Accra, Nairobi,
Addis Ababa, Luanda, Dakar, and Harare,
increased their share of their respective
nation’s urban population to over 20 percent.
Currently, many primate cities account for
over 30 percent of the urban populations in
their respective countries. It is also important
to note that, since the second half of the 1980s,
some encouraging signs of deconcentration
around primate cities have been observed and
the ratios of urban populations that reside
in primate cities seem to be stabilizing. For
instance, between 1990 and 2005, the share of
the urban population in the primate city in
several countries has declined. The decreases
in the percent of urban population in the larg-
est city were highest in Angola, Burkina Faso,
and Guinea.
While the dominance of primate cities in
SSA has historical roots traceable to colonial
administration policies, postcolonial govern-
ments have perpetuated this pattern by mak-
ing them the centers of modern development
360 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
and governance. SSA’s primate cities dominate
the political processes, often reinforcing the
status quo but sometimes creating avenues
for change (Figure 8.16). For example, urban
political processes in some SSA cities have cre-
ated new spaces of engagement, particularly
for professional women. For example, women
comprise over 30 percent of parliament in
Burundi, Mozambique, Rwanda, Tanzania,
Angola, Uganda, and South Africa (in com-
parison, the female representation in the U.S.
Congress is less than 20 percent) and over
Figure 8.15 Principal Urban Centers of Sub-Saharan Africa, many of which are primate capital cities. Source: United nations, department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population division (2014), World Urbanization Prospects: 2014 Revision, http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/.
Urban Challenges 361
25 percent of ministerial positions in Niger,
Burundi, Mozambique, Gambia, Uganda,
Lesotho, South Africa, and Botswana. Formal
and informal solidarity organizations and
movements of women, operating in SSA’s pri-
mate cities, have also emerged as significant
agents of change. The Liberian peace move-
ment, for example, was heavily influenced by
such coalitions of women and ultimately ush-
ered in SSA’s first female head-of-state, Ellen
Johnson Sirleaf.
Primate cities in SSA not only tend to be
the capital city of the country; they often also
have more disproportionate influence than is
warranted by the magnitude of the popula-
tions living in them. They dominate the polit-
ical, economic, infrastructural, and cultural
scene of their countries. The strong influ-
ence that they exercise also enables them to
preempt a good portion of the national social
and industrial investments. Concentration of
power in these cities has produced large dis-
parities in standards of living between those
who live in them and the population in the
rest of the country. Primate cities also have
some of the most serious urban problems in
the region. These include mounting unem-
ployment and the resultant increased crime
and youth unemployment; severe housing
problems, reflected in overcrowding and the
spread of slums and squatter settlements (over
80 percent of the urban populations reside in
slums in Mozambique, Niger, Angola, Chad,
Central African Republic, and Sierra Leone);
and immense pressures on urban infrastruc-
ture and services such as water, sewage, and
transportation.
Rural-to-Urban Migration
Between 50 and 60 percent of the urban
growth in SSA comes from rural-to-urban
Figure 8.16 by using billboards to help change human behavior, Lusaka, Zambia, tries to create a greener capital city as a role model for the nation. Source: Photo by Angela Gray Subulwa.
362 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
migration of young adults seeking jobs and
other livelihood opportunities in urban
areas. This migration is one of the most cru-
cial problems facing African governments at
present. A massive flow of people into the
few urban centers that became the locus of
power and investment, particularly in the
period following decolonization of the con-
tinent, has strained the carrying capacity
of most urban centers. Concern about the
rate of SSA urbanization would hardly seem
justifiable, considering the very high mag-
nitude of its rural population. However, the
urban growth pattern, often dominated by
the primate city and the high rate of growth
of such centers, is far beyond the capabili-
ties of the urban socioeconomic system to
generate the needed employment oppor-
tunities, housing, and social services. As a
consequence, the primate city has become,
in most instances, a liability to the overall
development process.
The paradoxical fact that rural-urban
migration continues to grow in spite of rising
unemployment in urban centers of the Global
South has given rise to a migration theory
based on rural-urban income differentials.
This theory assumes that migration is “pri-
marily an economic phenomenon” and that
the potential migrant makes a calculated move
in order to realize much higher “expected”
earnings with varying probabilities. According
to this theory, the wide differences between
urban and rural wages, coupled with the fact
that the long-run probability that a migrant
could secure wage employment in the urban
area, explains the motives behind the increases
in rural-urban migration. The structural
adjustment programs implemented across
the region were meant to bridge this gap by
increasing the prices of agricultural exports
and instituting payment for previously free
or subsidized services consumed mostly by
urban dwellers.
Rural-to-urban migration in SSA is also
explained with reference to “push factors” that
operate in rural areas and “pull factors” that
attract migrants to urban areas. The push fac-
tors include the deteriorating socioeconomic
conditions in rural areas, including lack of
access to agricultural land, which literally
forces people to leave rural areas. The pull fac-
tors emphasize the attractions and socioeco-
nomic opportunities available in urban areas.
The economic opportunities in urban areas, as
well as social, cultural, and psychological fac-
tors including escaping social controls in rural
areas, also attract people to urban areas.
Whether rural-to-urban migration in SSA is
caused primarily by the difference in expected
wage from migration (urban wage) versus an
agricultural wage or the balance between pull
and push factors might be open to debate. It is
important to note that more recent evidence
seems to suggest that rural out-migration has
not only abated in SSA, but that its counter-
stream (i.e., urban out-migration) has pro-
gressed and even, in some cases, surpassed the
rural-to-urban flow of people. For instance, a
number of major towns and cities in Ghana
and Zambia experienced a negative migratory
balance between the 1970s and 1980s. Zam-
bian census data also indicated that the popu-
lation of some urban areas decreased between
1990 and 2000, due in large part to growth in
some secondary cities, but also due to opening
up large farm blocks and resettlement schemes
designed to attract some urban dwellers and
retirees. Similar patterns have been observed
in the Francophone West African countries
of Burkina Faso, Guinea, Côte d’Ivoire, Mali,
Mauritania, Niger, and Senegal, where many
secondary towns registered a negative net loss
of migrants between 1988 and 1992. In some
A Hopeful Vignette 363
of these countries, the net migration rates of
rural areas suggest that rural-to-urban migra-
tion may not be as important as expected or
that the reverse movement has increased.
While the apparent slowdown of rural-
urban migration is important, the fact
remains that the SSA primate city is a major
factor in the contradictions between urban
and rural life. Because of its monopoly of eco-
nomic opportunities and political power, the
city has created a perception on the part of
rural-urban migrants of certain and immedi-
ate opportunities for socioeconomic improve-
ment, a perception that is rarely realized. The
phenomenal growth of shantytowns and
squatter settlements and the proliferation of
informal employment in the cities of SSA are
the result of this miscalculation (Figure 8.17).
A HOPEFUL VIGNETTE
Namushi comes from a family of seven—four
boys and two girls living with their mother—
and was born in Mabumbu village in western
Zambia. Throughout her childhood, Namushi
and her family survived on what they man-
aged to grow from their fields, together with
any small temporary jobs, to access limited
cash. Often times, Namushi’s family struggled
to provide more than one meal a day. At the
age of 20, Namushi, along with four boys from
Figure 8.17 Getting hair cut and styled is one of the basic services provided by every culture. Around Kaunda Square in Lusaka, entrepreneurs earn a bit more by adding telephone services to their business model. Source: Photo by Angela Gray Subulwa.
364 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
her village, made the (mis)calculation to set
out for the capital city of Lusaka in search of a
better life. According to Namushi, she set out
with an unquestioned belief in the socioeco-
nomic possibilities that life in Lusaka would
offer.
Upon arrival, Namushi quickly realized
that her beliefs and perceptions about life
in Lusaka were indeed miscalculations. Her
childhood in rural, western Zambia did not
equip her with the tools (linguistic or oth-
erwise) to easily navigate and negotiate the
complexities of life in Lusaka. Although she
struggled to learn Nyanja and English, she
remained committed to the idea that succeed-
ing here would translate to success for her
entire family back home in Mabumbu. For the
first few days (before they could locate anyone
who lived in the city from Mabumbu’s nearby
villages), Namushi and her four travel com-
panions slept at the bus station and set out
each morning in search of employment. Luck-
ily, Namushi was able to secure employment
as a housemaid in the suburbs of Lusaka by
her third week in the city.
For the next year, Namushi worked as a
housemaid, while sending a significant por-
tion of her earnings back home to her village.
It was during this time that Namushi was able
to improve her English, which later helped
secure better employment at a newly opened
gas station. While working at the gas station,
Namushi realized that she would continue
to struggle and fail to realize her goals if she
continued to send all of her earnings directly
home to Mabumbu. She decided to reduce
her remittances to the village and direct some
of her income into savings, with the goal of
opening a small business in the nearby com-
pound, Kaunda Square. Over the course of a
year, Namushi saved enough cash to construct
a small, mobile store (katemba) from which
she sold vegetables, candy, candles, salt, and
the daily essentials of life in the compound.
As her business stabilized, Namushi contin-
ued to save cash, hoping one day to open a
larger, permanent-structure grocery in the
compound market area. Within three years of
saving and navigating the intricacies of gro-
cery marketing in the compounds, Namushi
finally succeeded as she opened her grocery in
Kaunda Square in 2005.
When asked, Namushi characterizes her
successful navigation of life in Lusaka as a
story of constant negotiations and calcula-
tions of risk, coupled with the determina-
tion to survive that she learned from her
grandmothers back in Mabumbu. Namushi
reflected on the overlapping challenges that
she faced—coming from a rural area, navi-
gating the informal urban economy, lacking
any support system or network, and most
critically doing all of this as a woman. As a
woman, Namushi felt compelled to carry her-
self a “bit rough” in order to guard against
those who saw an opportunity to take advan-
tage of a young, single, rural woman in the
city. Another problem she faced as a woman
entrepreneur in the informal economy was
the issue of transportation (from the whole-
salers to the compound). Namushi found
it difficult to secure transport without the
fear of being taken advantage of by the over-
whelmingly male drivers—fears ranging from
simply being overcharged to fears of thieves
and even fears of being raped along the way.
Another obstacle Namushi faced came from
the wholesalers themselves (in Lusaka, the
wholesale market is dominated by men of
Indian descent). Namushi often found herself
served last even if she arrived first. And while
her male counterparts were able to negotiate
for small credits and loans on their wholesale
purchases, Namushi was unable to negotiate
Suggested Readings 365
similar deals. In the face of all of these obsta-
cles, Namushi did succeed in opening her
small, permanent grocery shop on a busy cor-
ner near the Kaunda Square vegetable market
in 2005 (Figure 8.18).
By 2010, she had expanded her original
grocery shop and had opened another six
shops in Kaunda Square (three additional
groceries and three cosmetics/pharmacies).
Namushi returned to Mabumbu, collected
her four brothers, and returned with them
to Lusaka. The boys assisted Namushi in
maintaining and expanding her shops, often
mediating some of the gender constraints
that remain in Lusaka’s informal economies.
While her brothers helped her with the shops,
Namushi sent her nieces to school, in the
hopes that they will do greater things than she
had accomplished herself.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Bekker, S., and L. Fourchard, eds. 2013. Governing
Cities in Africa: Politics and Policies. Cape Town:
HSRC Press.
Charton-Bigot, H., and D. Rodrigues-Torres, eds.
2010. Nairobi Today: The Paradox of a Frag-
mented City. Dar es Salaam: Mkuki na Nyota
Publishers.
Locatelli, F., and P. Nugent, eds. 2009. African
Cities: Competing Claims on Urban Spaces. Lei-
den: Brill.
Figure 8.18 namushi and her grocery shop on Kaunda Square in Kinshasa. Source: Photo by Angela Gray Subulwa.
366 CITIES OF SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
Murray, M. 2011. City of Extremes: the Spatial
Politics of Johannesburg. Durham, NC: Duke
University Press.
Myers, G. 2011. African Cities: Alternative Visions of
Urban Theory and Practice. London: Zed Books.
Obrist, B., V. Arlt, and E. Macamo, eds. 2013. Liv-
ing the City in Africa: Processes of Invention and
Intervention. Berlin: Lit Verlag.
Parnell, S., and E. Pieterse, eds. 2014. Africa’s Urban
Revolution. London: Zed Books.
Pieterse, E., and A. Simone, eds. 2013. Rogue Urban-
ism: Emergent African Cities. Cape Town: Jacana
Media & African Centre for Cities.
Quayson, A. 2014. Oxford Street, Accra: City Life and
the Itineraries of Transnationalism. Durham, NC
and London: Duke University Press.
United Nations Habitat. 2014. State of African Cit-
ies 2014: Re-imagining Sustainable Urban Tran-
sitions. Nairobi: UN Habitat.
Figure 9.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of South Asia. Source: United nations, department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population division (2014), World Urbanization Prospects: 2014 Revision, http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/.
9
Cities of South Asia ASHOK DUTT, GEORGE POMEROY,
ISHRAT ISLAM, AND IPSITA CHATTERJEE
KEy URbAN FACTS
Total Population 1.7 billion
Percent Urban Population 33%
Total Urban Population 552 million
Most Urbanized Countries Maldives (45%)
Pakistan (38%)
Least Urbanized Countries Nepal (18%)
Sri Lanka (18%)
Number of Megacities 6
Number of Cities of More Than 1 Million 72
Three Largest Cities (Metacities) Delhi (25 m), Mumbai (21 m), Dhaka (17 m)
Number of World Cities (Highest Ranking) 5 (Mumbai, New Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai,
Karachi)
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. The duality of prosperity alongside poverty in the midst of a vibrant mosaic of language,
ethnicity, and faiths make cities in South Asia unique.
2. There are three basic types of South Asian cities: bazaar based, colonial, and planned.
3. There have been five major influences on the development of South Asian cities: the Indus
Valley civilization, the Aryan Hindus, the Dravidians, the Muslims, and the Europeans.
4. The current urban system most distinctly reflects the dominance of Presidency towns dur-
ing the colonial era.
5. The urban form of South Asian cities is reflected in two basic models: the colonial-based
city model and the bazaar-based city model, with permutations of both.
6. India has a relatively well-balanced urban hierarchy; Pakistan has a dominant southern city
and dominant northern one; all other South Asian countries are characterized by urban
primacy.
370 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
In the cities of South Asia, a vibrant opti-
mism and a newfound confidence abounds
(Figure 9.1). Led by the 300 million-strong
Indian middle class, a rampant consumerism
illustrates a giddy self-assurance and sense of
hope. One merely needs to step into the bright,
flashy, and glamorous automobile showrooms,
where eager upper-middle-income buyers
may be seen purchasing not just a car, but
in some cases a fifth family car and at prices
over $23,000—more than 46 times the aver-
age per capita-income in India. Glossy malls,
housing dominant retail giants like Gucci
and Prada, boutiques selling designer clothes,
discotheques packed with hip youngsters,
McDonalds and Pizza Huts filled to the brim
with kids wanting the “American experience,”
amusement parks and movie theaters run
by the latest digital technologies, and beauty
parlors and spas define the landscape of fast-
globalizing South Asian cities. Globalization
is here to stay, and the growing South Asian
middle class wants more of it. Computer lit-
eracy, software proficiency, and business man-
agement skills define the youth component of
the middle class, who are increasingly acquir-
ing lucrative jobs in the local branch offices of
global corporate giants. The grim determina-
tion of the postindependence era (post-1947),
to produce scientists, engineers, and doctors
who could build the nation, is slowly being
replaced by a global dream to produce CEOs,
accountants, software professionals, who
could afford the consumptive lifestyle of the
American middle class. Mumbai, the domi-
nant financial, commercial, and movie hot-
spot in India, is considered a world city of the
first order because it sends and receives mas-
sive financial, commercial, and cultural flows.
Delhi, Bengalūru (Bangalore), Hyderabad, and Kolkata (Calcutta) in India, Dhaka in
Bangladesh, Colombo in Sri Lanka, and Kara-
chi and Lahore in Pakistan are also world
cities because they are economically and cul-
turally integrated with global flows of goods,
investments, images, and people. Beginning
in the late 1980s, the countries in South Asia
dissolved protectionist economic systems that
shielded their domestic markets through tariff
walls, licensing, and quotas. The “License Raj”
(as it was known in India) was abolished, and
through rounds of structural adjustments, a
New Economic Policy of liberalization or free-
market globalization was adopted. The adop-
tion of this policy opened up South Asian
markets and also its people to global corpo-
rations and their investments. The economic
reforms have produced tremendous urban
impacts, many of which have been contradic-
tory and controversial (Box 9.1). While the
7. Massive rural-to-urban migration has led to exploding urban populations, the growth of
squatter settlements, and emerging inabilities to supply urban residents with clean water
and other urban services.
8. Civil wars and political instability have been major contributing factors to the destabiliza-
tion of urban areas over the decades, most recently in Afghanistan and Sri Lanka.
9. Planned cities and new towns have played an important but subsidiary role in the region for
a long time, with Islamabad (Pakistan) and Chandigarh (India) as notable recent examples.
10. Globalization, which began with the adoption of economic reforms, has resulted in grow-
ing affluence among a rising middle class; but it has also increased urban poverty, spatial
exclusion of the poor, urban violence, and perhaps worsening environmental quality.
Key Chapter Themes 371
Box 9.1 Call Centers, SeZs, and Sweatshops
have you done any of the following of late? Called to reserve a rental car? telephoned tech- nical support for help with your new computer? Spoken to someone via phone to straighten out a credit card issue?
if you have, then chances are good that the person on the other end of the line was in india. if, indeed, this was the case, then it was your personal encounter with “outsourc- ing,” a phenomenon that is transforming the way business is done across the globe. With the adoption of global free-market policies, corporations now have the freedom to take their production activities outside their home country and situate it anywhere they find more advantageous. the result is a dismantling of factory-based manufacturing and the beginning of a more flexible-style of production— different parts of the production process can be geo- graphically dispersed or outsourced. outsourcing first gained attention as U.S. automakers began to subcontract the manufacturing of certain auto components to other firms in the United States. For example, Ford would contract with a smaller, independent firm for wheel assemblies.
Offshore outsourcing is when a firm takes activities and moves these overseas. Giant corporations in the United States, Western Europe, and Japan prefer outsourcing, because it allows them access to cheap labor, tax rebates, and relaxed environmental norms, hence higher profits. the rise of business process outsourcing firms (BPOs) shows that even ser- vice-sector employment can be outsourced. business process outsourcing involves taking accounting functions, customer services, computer programming, and other activities out- side and usually offshore.
india has several advantages, which make it an attractive destination for bPo oppor- tunities. First, it has a well-developed system of universities and technical colleges that produce a large supply of technically qualified and well-educated personnel. Second, English proficiency, a legacy of british colonial rule, has provided postsecondary graduates with the language skills needed to work in “call centers.” third, the cost differential between hiring U.S. workers and hiring those in india may be as high as 10 to 1. this represents a potential savings—hard for any firm to ignore. Finally, with the rise of modern information technolo- gies (telephone, internet), distance has “collapsed” and the cost of doing business over great distances has in many ways vanished. bengal ru, Mumbai, Pune, hyderabad, and Chen- nai represent important bPo destinations; Accenture, Citibank, dell, ibM, infosys, Microsoft, office tiger, Verizon, and Wipro are some of the corporations setting up shop there. the call center workers function as customer service representatives answering 1–800 calls; they undergo accent training, are briefed about American sports and weather so that they can politely chat with a customer. they are often given more “relatable” names like dave or nancy so that customers are comfortable.
outsourcing has become the site for heated debates because of its controversial impacts on labor and the environment. A large portion of the outsourced jobs include flexible-style manufacturing jobs—a shirt can be stitched in China, the label sown in Guatemala, and the
372 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
middle class has become a global labor source,
manning call centers, foreign banks, and cor-
porate offices, the majority of urban poor have
been relegated to sweatshop-like conditions in
Special Economic Zones (SEZs). Many others
have lost formal sector jobs as manufactur-
ing units closed down, unable to keep up with
global competition in this free-market regime.
Still others have suffered evictions under city
greening, beautification, and slum demolition
policies.
While annual rates of urban growth have
slowed in the region, massive migrations
of the rural poor to the cities have put tre-
mendous pressure on urban infrastructure.
Increasing urban poverty has been coupled
with an increase in low-paid informal jobs
resulting in visible landscapes of poverty.
Mumbai, the city which best demonstrates the
affluence and consumption noted above, also
presents urban poverty at its most daunting.
Within the city proper, 9 million slum dwell-
ers comprise about 62 percent of the popula-
tion. Across the Mumbai urban agglomeration
these numbers swell further. Dharavi, with
over 800,000 people (and perhaps as many
as 1 million!) crowded into an area of just
under a full square mile (2.6 sq km), is Mum-
bai’s largest slum and perhaps the best known
(though, contrary to rumor, not the world’s
or even South Asia’s largest). Estimates of the
number of “pavement dwellers,” those who
have no shelter at all and sleep on sidewalks,
doorsteps, and the like, range wildly from as
low as 250,000 to over 1 million. Across each
of the region’s megacities, the story is the
same—tremendous numbers of people liv-
ing in conditions of poverty with inadequate
buttons stitched on in Mexico, before it comes back to the American consumer. on the one hand, this represents a job loss from the outsourcing nation and has therefore become the site of political debates in outsourcing nations. on the other hand, corporations outsourcing jobs to cheaper locations are accused of exploiting labor and environment in the outsourced locations. the result is a world of sweat shops and Special Economic Zones (SEZs). Since india’s economic integration, SEZs have expanded at a rapid rate. these SEZs require huge land areas, often a minimum of 1,000 hectares and usually include appropriation of agricul- tural land adjoining major cities to be used for processing export goods. the SEZs are known to employ labor at exploitative rates—wages are 34 percent lower than non-SEZ jobs and the workers are forced to work longer. Women and children bear the brunt of this exploita- tion, because SEZs prefer women and children as they are seen as “nimble” and “compliant.”
City municipalities often encourage corporations like nike, Reebok, and Adidas by pro- viding them land, giving them tax rebates, and relaxing environmental laws, because they look upon outsourced ventures as contributing to the export earnings. Manufacturing hand- stitched soccer balls in South Asia has become a controversial case—5–14 year olds in Pakistani cities are employed by global corporations like nike to work for 12 hours a day in near-slavery conditions. United Students Against Sweatshops (USASS) is an international grassroot organization of students trying to pressure their respective universities to ensure that university clothing is not produced in sweatshop conditions.
Urban Patterns at the Regional Scale 373
shelter, lack of clean water, and filthy living
conditions. Already racked with unemploy-
ment and underemployment, each swells with
new migrants each and every day (Figure 9.2).
This duality of prosperity alongside pov-
erty in the midst of the vibrant mosaic of
language, ethnicity, and faiths of South Asia
is what makes cities in this region unique.
Throughout South Asia, cities remain recepta-
cles of hope and serve as powerful engines of
social and economic change.
URbAN PATTERNS AT THE REGIONAL SCALE
South Asia has 552 million urban dwellers, and
this number will nearly double to over 1.13
billion by 2050. This means that South Asian
cities will expand by more than the popula-
tions of the United States, Canada, and Mexico
combined! Most of the urban population is in
India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, which cur-
rently rank as the world’s second, sixth, and
eighth most populous countries (Table 9.1).
Together, the three comprise 97 percent of
Figure 9.2 As cities fill up with people, streets become more congested with not only cars, but bicycles and camels as well. Source: Photo by George Pomeroy.
Table 9.1 South Asia’s Twelve Largest Urban Agglomerations
City—Country Population (Est. 2014)
Delhi—India 25.70
Mumbai—India 21.04
Dhaka—Bangladesh 17.60
Karachi—Pakistan 16.62
Kolkata—India 14.87
Bangalore—India 10.09
Chennai—India 9.89
Hyderabad—India 8.94
Lahore—Pakistan 8.74
Ahmadabad—India 7.34
Pune—India 5.73
Surat—India 5.65
Source: United Nations. World Urbanization Prospects: 2014 Rev.
374 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
South Asia’s total population; three out of four
live in India alone.
With its immense population, India, at 33
percent urban, largely determines the overall
regional average, which is also about 33 per-
cent. Pakistan and Bangladesh have just over
one in three living in urban areas. The smaller
countries of Afghanistan, Nepal, and Sri Lanka
have less of their populations in cities. Bhutan,
although also small, has demonstrated a bur-
geoning urban expansion in the recent dec-
ades; its cities are growing at an annual rate of
3.7 percent. While most of South Asia has seen
steady urbanization, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka,
Nepal have suffered civil conflict, revolt, or
insurgency, making city growth and develop-
ment more difficult and erratic.
While cities of all sizes in South Asia have
been growing, the six megacities have grown
the most. Delhi in the last two decades has
asserted itself as India’s leading city, eclips-
ing Mumbai by growing at twice the pace of
its rival. Indeed, the growth has been remark-
able to peg Delhi as the second-largest city in
the world with a 2015 population of nearly 26
million. Although just second in the region,
Mumbai ranks fifth in size globally, followed
by Dhaka (11th), Karachi (12th), and, despite
decades of slower growth, Kolkata (14th).
Astonishingly, South Asia now has five of the
fourteen largest cities in the world! Even more
incredible: by 2030, five of the world’s ten
largest cities will be South Asian.
Including cities further down the urban
hierarchy, there are an additional six cities with
between 5 and 10 million people. Altogether,
73 urban centers in South Asia top a million
residents. 58 of those “millionaire cities”—a
term made obsolete by the astounding mag-
nitude of urban populations—are located in
India, ten in Pakistan, three in Bangladesh,
and one each in Nepal and Sri Lanka. If one
takes into consideration all cities of 300,000 or
more in population, the number is 207.
Within India, six megacities dominate the
urban hierarchy. Mumbai, Delhi, and Kolkata
are the anchors of a northern urban triangle.
Chennai, Bengalūru, and Hyderabad form a southern urban triangle. Together, these six
cities make up over one-fifth of India’s urban
population. Cities of the two triangles have
been tied together by a great highway-building
project known as the Golden Quadrilateral
(Figure 9.3). Completed in 2012, the Golden
Quadrilateral is a critical part of India’s ver-
sion of the U.S. Interstate Highway system.
This project is a component of the country’s
most ambitious plan to improve transporta-
tion infrastructure since independence. The
Quadrilateral runs through 13 Indian states
and connects the nation’s 4 largest cities with
3,600 miles (5,794 km) of four- and six-lane
highways. The overall scheme is to widen and
pave an additional 40,000 miles (64,374 km)
of highways over a 15-year period.
Pakistan’s urban hierarchy is dominated by
a pair of cities with a combined population of
over 45 million: Karachi dominates southern
Pakistan, and Lahore (the smaller of the two)
dominates the north. Urban primacy charac-
terizes the remaining countries of the region.
In Bangladesh, Dhaka is nearly four times the
size of second-ranked Chittagong. It is a clear
primate city, with all attendant traffic prob-
lems (Box 9.2). The same holds true for Kath-
mandu and Pokhara in Nepal. Both Kabul,
Afghanistan, and the extended metropolitan
region of Sri Lanka’s capital of Colombo are
over ten times the size of the next largest city
in each country.
South Asian cities may be divided into three
basic types: traditional cities, colonial cities,
and planned cities. Traditional cities are those
which were part of a thriving urban system
Urban Patterns at the Regional Scale 375
prior to Western colonialism, whether as cent-
ers of trade and commerce (such as Surat on
India’s west coast), centers of administration,
or centers of pilgrimage. Varanasi, on the River
Ganges, for example, remains the leading pil-
grimage destination in South Asia for Hindus
and Jains; it attracts millions of pilgrims each
year. Several of the region’s largest cities, most
notably Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, were the
products of British colonialism; but, since
1947, they have evolved further to serve India’s
expanding economy.
South Asia’s third basic urban type is the
new planned city, of which there are two
kinds: (1) political and administrative cent-
ers such as Islamabad, Pakistan, and Chandi-
garh, India; (2) industrial centers for steel and
other related heavy industrial activities, such
as Durgapur, in the state of West Bengal and
Jamshedpur in Bihar, both in India. Islama-
bad was built in the 1960s to take the place of
Karachi as Pakistan’s capital city. Chandigarh
was also built after independence as the new
state capital of India’s Punjab. When a new
state was carved out of Punjab in the 1960s,
Chandigarh found itself on the border and has
since served as capital of both Punjab and the
then newly formed Haryana.
A recent and remarkable change in the
urban fabric of South Asia is in India. With
prosperity and growth has come the devel-
opment of “urban corridors” broadly akin to
Jean Gottmann’s Megalopolis in the United
States. Spurred by the construction of new
express highways, with high-speed rail in the
planning stages, city-regions are emerging
Figure 9.3 the Golden Quadrilateral of express highways links the anchor cities of india’s urban hierarchy: delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai. Source: Compiled from various sources.
376 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
Box 9.2 the Humble rickshaw
Figure 9.4 on a delhi roadside, the driver of a cycle rickshaw takes time for a mid-day nap. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
“overwhelming” may best characterize the assault on the senses when an outsider first encounters traffic in South Asian cities. the congestion, apparent chaos, and dizzying array of transportation modes, accentuated by dust and the incessant beeping of horns, can be intimidating. What probably strikes outsiders most are the modes of transportation rarely seen in the developed world: bullock carts, large numbers of motorcycles and scooters, and, of course, rickshaws in their motorized and non-motorized forms (Figure 9.4). Auto rickshaws are sometimes referred to as tuk-tuks, samosas, bajaj, and other names across Asia and beyond. they are typically small three-wheeled, gas- powered vehicles employed as taxis. battery-powered versions are beginning to appear, and some auto rickshaw drivers are even using apps similar to Uber to secure fares!
Auto rickshaws are the motorized versions of the traditional ones which were pulled or bicycle powered. they are rapidly disappearing in many parts of the world, including South Asia, but they still remain plentiful across selected bits of northern india, nepal, and bang- ladesh. A common perception is that this type of work is inhumane, degrading, and exploita- tive, with drivers being treated as human beasts of burden. however, the reality of bicycle and hand-pulled rickshaws is more complex and nuanced than one initially thinks. Many argue that although the work is arduous and poorly paid, it is often the only opportunity for those with few skills to earn a living. So when the West bengal state government attempted to curtail and even ban human-powered rickshaws, the biggest protesters were the drivers themselves.
Historical Perspectives on Urban Developments 377
along transportation corridors. An example is
the urban corridor that begins in Pune, sweeps
northward through Mumbai, on to Surat, and
thence to Ahmedabad, thus accounting for
four of India’s ten most populous cities.
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON URbAN DEVELOPMENTS
The cultural diversity (Figure 9.5) and urban
fabric of South Asia are derived from five
distinctive influences. Chronologically, these
are (1) the Indus Valley civilization, 3000 to
1500 bce; (2) the Aryan Hindus since 1500 bce;
(3) the Dravidians since about 200 bce; (4) the
Muslims since the eighth century; and (5) the
Europeans since the fifteenth century.
Indus Valley Era
The Indus Valley is one of the “cradles of
civilization” and among the world’s oldest
urban hearths. The preeminent cities of the
Indus Valley civilization, Mohenjo Daro and
Harappa, located in what is now Pakistan, were
established as planned communities as early as
3000 bce. They flourished for about 1,500 years.
Another common perception is that because they are slow moving, these vehicles contrib- ute to road congestion. Advocates argue that rickshaws take less road space, less space for parking and storage, and make fewer demands on infrastructure. Finally, rickshaw advocates claim that with no emissions they are environmentally friendly, provide affordable transpor- tation for those without other options, and are actually safer and often more convenient.
Most bicycle pullers rent their rickshaws. For the most part, they are newer arrivals to the city with no skills and no investment capital. other barriers to ownership are the cost of storage and maintenance, the bureaucratic red tape involved with licensing, and the fact that sometimes the work is seasonal. the typical puller will rent his (very few women pull rickshaws) from a local entrepreneur. Rentals are generally done by referral and application, without collateral or a deposit, since that would make the cost prohibitive. the puller then wades into the sea of competition to secure fares. Fares vary, but a typical one may be the equivalent of 25 cents to a dollar for a distance of perhaps several city blocks. Common tasks include shuttling children to school or office workers to work. Competition for fares may be fierce. At the end of the day, the puller returns his rental to the garage, pays the owner a hiring fee of 50–60 cents, and keeps everything leftover for average daily earnings of $2–$3.
With an estimated 400,000 bicycle rickshaws, dhaka is the undisputed “Rickshaw Capital of the World.” Rickshaws are colorfully decorated, especially those belonging to owner opera- tors. despite being sometimes harassed by police and car owners, they transport nearly half of the city’s passengers. to the narrow lanes and slower speeds of dhaka’s crowded old town they are much better suited. When new transportation projects are being planned, however, it is often with a “bigger is better” mentality that focuses on elevated highways and auto- mobiles. however, there are signs that some transportation planners are taking a new look at this long- underappreciated mode of transportation.
378 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
As the largest urban centers of the region, they
anchored an extensive settlement system that
included at least three other large urban centers
and perhaps over 900 smaller ones. First exca-
vated in 1921, the ruins of Mohenjo Daro reveal
a carefully constructed city reflective of a highly
organized and complex society. No other city
outside the Indus civilization possessed such
an elaborate system of drainage and sanitation,
signifying a generally high standard of living.
This urban civilization came to an end around
1500 bce, when the newly arrived Aryans—less
civilized but more adept in warfare than the
Indus people—overpowered the Indus civiliza-
tion and turned the northern part of the South
Asian realm to a mixture of pastoralism and
sedentary agriculture.
Aryan Hindu Impact
Eventually the demands of trade, commerce,
administration, and fortification gave rise to
the establishment of sizable urban centers,
particularly in the middle Ganges Plains.
Originating from a modest fifth-century
fort, Pataliputra developed into the capi-
tal of a notable Indian empire, the Maurya
(321–181 bce). Its location coincides with that
of present-day Patna. Pataliputra was organ-
ized to conform to the functional require-
ments of the capital of a Hindu kingdom:
residential patterns based on the function-
based, four-caste social system along with the
requisite royal administrative features.
While caste is not as important in determin-
ing contemporary residential patterns in cities
as it was in Pataliputra, it remains socially sig-
nificant today. Caste, the designation of social
status by birth through the caste of one’s
parents, places each person into one of four
broad groups—Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Vaisyas,
and Sudras. Within the Sudra designation are
those of very “low” caste and even those with-
out caste or status. The people “without caste”
Figure 9.5 the Sikhs, neither hindu nor Muslim, are a major part of india’s cultural diversity, seen here in their main gurdwara, the place where they worship. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Historical Perspectives on Urban Developments 379
are today more popularly referred to as Dal-
its. In the past, Dalits were often referred to as
“untouchables” because the touch or even a
shadow cast by one was thought to “pollute”
someone of higher caste. Traditionally, each
caste and its subcastes had certain designated
occupations; for example, “washer-men” or
dhobi-wallahs” (Figure 9.6). Brahmins (priest
caste) are at the top, followed by Kshatri-
yas (warrior caste), Vaisyas (commercial and
agricultural caste), and Sudras (manual labor
caste). Caste still plays a major role in society.
Marriages are generally within caste and there
remain broad connections between the caste
status on one hand and income, quality of
life, and social connections on the other. This
remains true even after years of legal reforms
such as a “reservation system” (similar to
affirmative action in the United States) and
broader social campaigns led by people such
as Mahatma Gandhi, spiritual leader of India’s
independence movement. Even today, urban
land-use patterns and socioeconomic struc-
tures somewhat reflect the caste system.
In ancient Pataliputra, one could clearly
see the spatial distribution of castes. Near the
center and a little toward the east were the
temple and residences of high-ranking Brah-
mins and ministers of the royal cabinet. Far-
ther toward the east were the Kshatriyas, rich
merchants, and expert artisans. To the south
were government superintendents, prosti-
tutes, musicians, and some other members
of the Vaisya. To the west were the Sudras,
including untouchables, along with ordinary
artisans and low-grade Vaisyas. Finally, to the
north were artisans, Brahmins, and temples
maintained for the titular deity of the city. A
well-organized city government, hierarchical
street network, and an elaborate drainage sys-
tem accompanied this functional distribution
of population in Pataliputra.
After the eclipse of the Maurya Empire in
the second century bce, rulers of the Gupta
Figure 9.6 the dhobi-wallahs, or “washer-men” make their living washing (and drying) clothes. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
380 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
Empire (320–467 ce) made it their capital,
but the city lost its importance thereafter and
was eventually buried under the sediments of
the Ganges and Son Rivers. Only small parts
of the old city have recently been excavated.
Other Hindu capitals that developed in both
north and south India changed and modified
the many urban forms used in Pataliputra.
Dravidian Temple Cities
In contrast to the subcontinent’s north, Hindu
kingdoms in India’s south gave rise to dis-
tinctly Hindu forms of city development. The
rulers of south India constructed temples and
water tanks as nuclei of habitation. Around
the temples grew commercial bazaars and
settlements of Brahmin priests and scholars.
The ruler often built a palace near the tem-
ple, turning the temple-city into the capital
of his kingdom; Madurai and Kancheepuram
are examples of such lofty and grand temple
cities. Such city forms were also exported to
Southeast Asia; Angkor Wat in Cambodia is
one example.
Mentioned by Ptolemy, Madurai, the sec-
ond capital of the south Indian Hindu king-
dom of Pandyas, dates to about the beginning
of the Christian era. Though Madurai is now
several times the size of the old walled city,
with imprints from a brief Islamic period
and a longer British dominance, its religious
importance is nearly comparable to Varanasi
in north India, which is the foremost Hindu
pilgrimage center.
Muslim Impact
The first permanent Muslim occupation that
significantly influenced the subcontinent
began in the eleventh century ce and resulted
in adding many Middle Eastern and central
Figure 9.7 the taj Mahal has become the single most recognized icon of india. it was built in Agra as a tomb for Shah Jahan’s wife and is now a UnESCo World heritage Site. Source: Photo by George Pomeroy.
Historical Perspectives on Urban Developments 381
Asian Islamic qualities to the urban land-
scapes of South Asia. Shahjahanabad is a par-
ticularly good example of Muslim impact. The
Moghul emperor Shah Jahan, who planned
the Taj Mahal as a tomb for his wife in Agra
(Figure 9.7), moved his capital from Agra
to Delhi (about 125 miles or 200 km) and
started the construction of a new city, Shah-
jahanabad, on the right bank of the Yamuna
River. The city was built near the sites of sev-
eral previous capital cities and took nearly a
decade to complete (1638–1648). In its archi-
tecture was a fusion of Islamic and Hindu
influences. Though the royal palace and
mosques, with their arched vaults and domes,
adhered to Muslim styles, Hindu styles were
found in combination. The Muslim rulers
were most concerned with the magnificence
of their royal residences and courts, and mas-
siveness of their fortresses. These features are
represented most vividly in Shahjahanabad.
Surrounded by brick walls without a moat, the
city was completely fortified.
Situated at the east end of the city was the
Red Fort (Figure 9.8). Planned as a parallelo-
gram with massive red sandstone walls and
ditches on all sides except by the river, the for-
tress had an almost foolproof defense. Inside
were a magnificent court, king’s private palace,
gardens, and a music pavilion. All were built of
either red sandstone or white marble. The Red
Fort remains a central feature of Delhi today,
serving often as a platform for political procla-
mations and as a well-known tourist destina-
tion. A main thoroughfare, Chandni Chowk
(“silver market”) ran straight westward from
the Red Fort toward the Lahore Gate of the
city. The Chandni Chowk was one of the great
bazaars of what was then called “the Orient.”
Shahjahanabad ceased to be the capital of
India, more precisely north India, when the
British rule started in the eighteenth century,
Figure 9.8 the Red Fort, in old delhi, remains a potent feature of indian nationalism. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
382 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
but it continued to be a functional city. Today,
the area is known as “Old Delhi” and is part
of the Delhi metropolis. Most of the city walls
are gone, though all the basic structures of
the Red Fort and Jama mosque remain intact.
Chandni Chowk continues to be a busy tradi-
tional bazaar. It is very densely populated with
a mixture of Hindus and Muslims (Figure 9.9).
Large parts of Old Delhi are gradually being
transformed into commercial and small work-
shop uses.
Colonial Period
After Vasco de Gama discovered the oceanic
route via Africa’s Cape of Good Hope and
landed on the southwestern coast of India
in 1498, the European powers of Portugal,
Holland, France, and Britain became greatly
interested in developing a firm trade con-
nection with South Asia. Though initially all
four powers obtained some kind of footing in
India, the sagacious diplomacy and “divide-
and-rule” policy of the British succeeded
in ousting the other Europeans from most
Indian soil. Eventually, the British established
three significant centers of operation—Bom-
bay, Madras, and Calcutta, seaports all, for the
convenience of trading and receiving military
reinforcements from Britain. Hence, these
cities were designed as the headquarters for
the three Presidencies into which the British
divided South Asia for administrative pur-
poses. Consequently, the cities are referred to
as the “Presidency towns.” In the 1990s, they
were renamed Mumbai, Chennai, and Kolkata,
Figure 9.9 to the left is a Muslim neighborhood and to the right a hindu one in old delhi. Source: Photo by John benhart, Sr.
Historical Perspectives on Urban Developments 383
respectively, to reflect indigenous cultures and
further downplay India’s colonial heritage.
The Presidency Towns
When Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, and
Colombo were established as Presidency
towns, their nuclei were forts. Outside these
forts were the cities. Inside the cities, two dif-
ferent standards of living were set for two
different classes of residents: Europeans and
“natives,” each with their own parts of the city.
The rich were composed of absentee land-
owners from rural areas, moneylenders, busi-
nesspeople, and the newly English-educated
elite and clerks. The poor comprised servants,
manual laborers, street cleaners, and porters
(Figure 9.10). The rich needed the service
of the poor, and therefore the houses of the
native rich in many instances stood by the
houses of their poor, native service providers.
As local industries grew in the nineteenth
century, a new working class developed. In
Kolkata, the industrial workers worked mainly
for jute mills and local engineering factories;
in Mumbai, for the expanding cotton and
textile-related industries; and in Chennai, for
tanning and cotton textiles. As these trades
grew, the Presidency towns turned from water
to railways and roads for inland transporta-
tion. Train services were started in South Asia
in 1852. The Presidency towns also developed
huge hinterlands that catered to the needs of
the colonial economy. The hinterlands sup-
plied the raw materials to the three seaports
for export to the United Kingdom; in return,
the British sent consumer-type manufactured
goods through the same ports. Thus, the Pres-
idency towns became the main focus of the
colonial mercantile system, and their architec-
ture exhibited the colonial influence of West-
ern Gothic and Victorian styles.
Figure 9.10 Labor is cheap in india, so porters are often called upon to transport bulk goods from one part of the city (in this case, Mumbai) to another. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
384 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
Ta bl
e 9.
2 To
p ol
og ic
al C
h ar
ac te
ri st
ic s
of S
ou th
A si
an C
it ie
s
La nd
V al
ue Po
pu la
ti on
D en
si ty
G
ra di
en t
P hy
si ca
l A sp
ec t
La nd
U se
C om
po si
ti on
of
th e
C it
y C
en te
r H
is to
ri ca
l R oo
ts M
ix tu
re o
f T hr
ee F
or m
s
B az
aa r
C it
y H
ig h
es t
at t
h e
ce n
te r;
d ec
lin es
as
o n
e m
ov es
to
th e
p er
ip h
er y
H ig
h es
t at
t h
e ce
n te
r an
d de
cl in
in g
in ve
rs el
y as
o n
e m
ov es
to t
h e
p er
ip h
er y
N ar
ro w
s tr
ee ts
, c om
m er
- ci
al e
st ab
lis h
m en
ts a
t th
e ce
n te
r oc
cu py
in g
th e
ro ad
; f ro
n t,
ba ck
, an
d se
co n
d- /t
h ir
d- fl
oo r
re si
de n
ti al
; g en
er al
ly
co n
ge st
ed a
n d
di rt
y
R et
ai l a
n d
w h
ol es
al e
bu si
n es
s m
ai n
ly ,
w it
h li
m it
ed
re cr
ea ti
on a
n d
co m
bi n
ed w
it h
h
ig h
-d en
si ty
re
si de
n ti
al
M ay
h av
e or
ig in
s fr
om
an ci
en t,
m ed
ie va
l, or
r ec
en t
ti m
es a
n d
ac co
rd in
gl y
m ay
h
av e
im pr
in ts
fr
om D
ra vi
di an
, H
in du
, M u
sl im
o r
W es
te rn
fo rm
s at
t h
e p
er ip
h er
y
W h
en a
b az
aa r
ci ty
w as
im
pl an
te d
w it
h c
ol on
ia l
as p
ec ts
, g ar
de n
-l ik
e, s
em i-
pl an
n ed
“ ci
vi l l
in es
” w
er e
ad de
d; s
im ila
r ad
di ti
on o
f pl
an n
ed n
ei gh
bo rh
oo ds
m
ay a
ls o
be a
t th
e p
er ip
h -
er y
af te
r in
de p
en de
n ce
C ol
on ia
l C it
y H
ig h
es t
at t
h e
ce n
te r;
g en
er al
ly
de cl
in es
a s
on e
m ov
es to
t h
e p
er ip
h er
y, b
u t
re la
ti ve
ly h
ig h
er
in t
h e
E u
ro p
ea n
to
w n
c om
pa re
d to
t h
e “n
at iv
e”
to w
n
C en
te r
w it
h m
in i-
m u
m d
en si
ty , w
it h
h
ig h
es t
de n
si ti
es
ar ou
n d
th e
C B
D ,
cr ea
ti n
g a
“c ar
te r
ef fe
ct ”
at t
h e
ce n
te r;
t h
er ea
ft er
de
cl in
es a
s on
e m
ov es
to t
h e
p er
ip h
er y
W id
e st
re et
s at
t h
e ce
n te
r an
d th
e E
u ro
p ea
n
to w
n , w
it h
g ar
de n
-l ik
e,
af fl
u en
t ap
p ea
ra n
ce ;
th e
“n at
iv e”
to w
n
ch ar
ac te
ri ze
d by
n ar
- ro
w , s
in u
ou s,
s tr
ee ts
an
d ge
n er
al ly
s h
ab by
co
n di
ti on
O ff
ic es
, b an
ks , m
ai n
p
os t
of fi
ce , t
ra n
s- p
or t
h ea
dq u
ar -
te rs
, g ov
er n
m en
t bu
ild in
gs w
it h
la
rg e
op en
s pa
ce ,
h ot
el s,
r et
ai l a
n d
re cr
ea ti
on al
a ct
iv i-
ti es
, a n
d re
si de
n ti
al
u se
O ri
gi n
s n
o ea
rl ie
r th
an
si xt
ee n
th c
en tu
ry ;
V ic
to ri
an , n
eo -
G ot
h ic
, a n
d ot
h er
W
es te
rn fo
rm s
w id
el y
pr ev
al en
t;
n at
iv e
fo rm
s al
so
im pl
an te
d
Pa rt
s of
c ol
on ia
l c it
y— pa
rt ic
u la
rl y
ad ja
ce n
t to
t h
e C
B D
a n
d so
m e
sp ec
if ic
lo ca
ti on
s in
t h
e “n
at iv
e” to
w n
— ev
ol v-
in g
ch ar
ac te
ri st
ic s
of t
h e
ba za
ar c
en te
r; p
la n
n ed
n
ei gh
bo rh
oo ds
a dd
ed ,
pa rt
ic u
la rl
y ad
ja ce
n t
to t
h e
p er
ip h
er y
of t
h e
E u
ro p
ea n
to w
n a
ft er
in
de p
en de
n ce
P la
n n
ed C
it y
M ay
v ar
y ac
co rd
in g
to p
re de
te r-
m in
ed v
al u
es
fo r
di ff
er en
t lo
ca ti
on s
M ay
v ar
y at
d if
fe re
n t
lo ca
ti on
s of
t h
e ci
ty , b
u t
th e
in it
ia l
pl an
is fo
r lo
w
de n
si ty
O rg
an iz
ed a
n d
ge n
er al
ly
pl ea
si n
g ap
p ea
ra n
ce C
om bi
n at
io n
o f
re ta
il, o
ff ic
e, a
n d
re cr
ea ti
on in
a s
ys -
te m
at ic
fa sh
io n
M ay
h av
e or
ig in
s in
an
y h
is to
ri ca
l p er
io d,
bu
t ov
er t
im e
ba za
ar
as p
ec ts
w ill
b eg
in to
do
m in
at e
th e
ce n
te r
if r
es tr
ic ti
on s
ar e
n ot
st
ri ct
ly a
dh er
ed to
P la
n n
ed to
w n
s w
it h
a dd
i- ti
on o
f “ ci
vi l l
in es
” at
t h
e p
er ip
h er
y an
d ba
za ar
ce
n tr
al fo
rm s
ev ol
vi n
g at
on
e or
m an
y lo
ca ti
on s
So ur
ce : A
. K . D
u tt
a n
d R
. A m
in , “
To w
ar ds
a T
yp ol
og y
of S
ou th
A si
an C
it ie
s,” N
at io
na l G
eo gr
ap hi
c Jo
ur na
l o f I
nd ia
3 2
(1 99
5) : 3
0– 39
.
Models of Urban Structure 385
MODELS OF URbAN STRUCTURE
Early on in the study of South Asian cit-
ies, some theorists would mechanically try
to apply Western models, such as Burgess’s
Concentric Zones, irrespective of their appli-
cability. No comprehensive model explain-
ing the growth patterns of indigenous cities’
structures has been offered, though three basic
models have been proposed to explain the dis-
tinctive form of South Asian cities: the bazaar-
based city model, the colonial-based city model,
and the planned-city model. The basic charac-
teristics of the three types of cities have been
summarized in a matrix (Table 9.2). Which-
ever model is used, however, it is important
to note that two principal influential forces—
colonial and traditional—have combined to
create the existing forms of South Asian cities.
The Colonial-Based City Model
The need to perform colonial functions
demanded a particular form of city growth
that produced the following characteristics
(Figure 9.11).
1. The need for trade and military reinforce-
ments required a waterfront because the
colonial power operated from Europe.
A minimal port facility was the starting
point of the city.
2. A walled fort was constructed adjacent to
the port with white soldiers’ and officers’
barracks, a small church, and educational
institutions. Sometimes inside the fort,
factories processed agricultural raw mate-
rials to be shipped to the mother country.
Thus, the fort became not only a military
outpost but also the nucleus of the colo-
nial exchange.
3. Beyond the fort and the open area, a
“native town” or town for the native peo-
ples eventually developed, characterized
by overcrowding, unsanitary conditions,
and unplanned settlements. It serviced
the fort and the colonial administration.
4. A Western-style Central Business Dis-
trict (CBD) grew adjacent to the fort and
native town, with a high concentration of
mercantile office functions, retail trade,
and low-density residential areas. The
administrative quarters consisted of the
governor’s (or viceroy’s) house, the main
government office, the high court, and
the general post office. In the CBD, there
also were Western-style hotels, churches,
banks and museums, as well as occasional
statues of British royals and dignitaries.
5. The European town grew in a different
direction from the native town. It had
spacious bungalows, elegant apartment
houses, and planned streets with trees
on both sides; clubs for afternoon and
evening get-togethers and with European
indoor and outdoor recreation facilities;
churches of different denominations; and
garden-like graveyards.
6. Between the fort and the European town
(or at some appropriate nearby location),
an extensive open space (maidan) was
reserved for military parades and Western
recreation facilities such as race and golf
courses, soccer, and cricket. On Saturdays,
for instance, whites and a few moneyed
native people frequented the horse races
to gamble.
7. When domestic water supply, electric
connections, and sewage links became
available, the European town residents
utilized them fully; whereas, their use was
quite limited in the native town.
386 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
8. At an intermediate location between
black towns and white towns developed
the colonies of Anglo-Indians. They were
the offspring of mixed marriages, and
they were Christians. Never were they
fully accepted by either the native or the
European community.
9. Starting from the late nineteenth century,
the colonial city became so large that new
living space was necessary, especially for
the native elite and rich people. Exten-
sions to the city were made by reclaiming
the lowland or developing in a semi-
planned manner the existing nonurban
areas.
10. From the very inception of such colonial
cities, population density was very low
at the center, which housed Europeans,
while a much larger group of “natives”
lived outside the colonial center. When the
European center was gradually replaced
by a Western-style CBD during the sec-
ond half of the nineteenth century, there
was a further decline in the population of
the center, giving rise to a density gradient
with a “crater effect” at the center.
As the colonial system became deeply
entrenched in the Indian subcontinent and an
extensive railway network was made opera-
tional, waterfronts accessible to oceangoing
ships were no longer a prerequisite for a colo-
nial headquarters. Kolkata, Mumbai, Chennai,
and Colombo were not the only suitable loca-
tions on the subcontinent for high levels of
administration.
Cantonments, railway colonies, and hill sta-
tions were three other lesser (but numerous)
Figure 9.11 A Model of the Colonial-based city in South Asia. Source: Ashok dutt.
Models of Urban Structure 387
colonial urban forms that were introduced
to the subcontinent to serve very specific
purposes.
Cantonments (from the French word can-
ton, meaning “district”) were military encamp-
ments, some 114 in all by the mid-nineteenth
century, which housed a quarter of a million
soldiers (both European and natives). Strict
segregation by class and ethnicity was prac-
ticed in these camps.
Railway colonies surrounded a railroad
station or a regional headquarters for railway
operation and administration, also with strict
segregation in their design. Often situated
near urban centers, they eventually formed
part of the greater urban area.
Hill stations, at altitudes between 3,500 and
8,000 feet (1,067–2,440 m), served as resort
towns for Europeans to escape hot summers
on the plains and spend time in the midst of
a more exclusive European community. By the
time of independence, there were 80 such sta-
tions, including Simla and Darjeeling.
The Bazaar-Based City Model
The traditional bazaar city is widespread in
South Asia and has certain features that date
to precolonial times. Ordinarily, the city grows
with a trade function originating from agri-
cultural exchange, temple location, transport
node, or various administrative activities
(Figure 9.12). Usually, at the main crossroads
a business concentration occurs where com-
modity sales dominate. In north India such
an intersection is known as Chowk, around
which cluster houses of the rich.
The bazaar, or the city center, consists of
an amalgam of land uses that cater to the
central-place functions of the city. The land
use that dominates the center accommodates
both retail and wholesale activities. Perishable
goods, such as vegetables, meat, and fish—
which are bought fresh daily because many
homes lack refrigeration facilities—are sold
in specific areas of the bazaar. These areas
often lack enclosing walls and instead have a
common roof. In the process of bazaar evolu-
tion, functional separation of retail business
occurs: textile shops stay together, attracting
tailors; grain shops cluster with each other
near the perishable goods market; and pawn-
shops are adjacent to jewelry shops. Sidewalk
vendors are present almost everywhere in the
bazaar.
Wholesale business establishments also
form part of the bazaar landscape (Figure 9.13).
Situated near an accessible location, they tend
to agglomerate according to the commodities
they deal in, with separate areas for vegetables,
grains, and cloth, depending on the size of the
city. Traditionally, public or nonprofit inns
provide modest overnight accommodation
in the bazaar for a nominal fee. However, as a
result of Western impact, some hotel accom-
modations are now available in the medium-
sized and larger cities. Prostitutes or dancing
girls, once a source of evening entertainment
in the bazaar, have been supplanted by cin-
emas that in turn have declined due to the
prevalence of television, VCRs, and DVD play-
ers. Traditionally, shops selling country-made
liquor were never located in the bazaars, prob-
ably because drinking alcohol in public places
was considered ill-mannered by both Hindu
and Muslim societies. Only in recent years
have Western bars and liquor stores started
to appear in city centers. Barbers, who used
to work outdoors, now have regular shops
like those in Western countries, but many still
operate on the sidewalks. Long-distance pri-
vate telephone centers along with internet-
access enterprises have become commonplace
in city centers.
388 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
Figure 9.12 A Model of the bazaar-based City in South Asia. Source: Ashok dutt.
Beyond this inner core, in a second zone,
rich people live in conjunction with poorer
servants, but not in the same structure. The
rich need the poor as domestic servants,
cleaners, shop assistants, and porters. The
residences of the poor surround this second
zone in a third area, where the demand for
land is less and its price low. Beyond the third
zone, Civil Lines were established during Brit-
ish colonial rule. Here, particularly after inde-
pendence, the native rich and middle class
settled in neighborhoods and squatter settle-
ments developed alongside.
As bazaar cites grew, ethnic, religious, lin-
guistic, and caste neighborhoods were formed
in specific areas in accord with the time of
Models of Urban Structure 389
settlement and availability of developable
land. The “untouchables” always occupied
the periphery of the city, although sometimes
other housing developed later beyond their
neighborhoods. In Hindu-dominated areas of
India, Muslims always formed separate neigh-
borhoods. Similarly, Hindu minorities in
Muslim-majority Srinagar and Dhaka lived in
enclaves of the old cities. Often migrants from
other linguistic areas formed specific neigh-
borhoods of their own.
Planned Cities
Although there were several planned his-
toric cities in the subcontinent (Mohenjo
Daro and Pataliputra, for instance), they did
not survive. There were, however, others that
were planned during precolonial, colonial,
and independence periods that not only sur-
vived but also formed nuclei for major urban
agglomerations. Jaipur is an example from
precolonial times, and Jamshedpur from the
British colonial period. Jaipur, India’s tenth
largest city with an estimated 3 million peo-
ple, was founded as a planned city in 1727. A
hierarchy of streets divided it into sectors and
neighborhoods. Though the planned city cov-
ered only 3 square miles (5 sq km) and is now
surrounded by a built-up area of about 22
square miles (35 sq km), an urban morphol-
ogy provided by eighteenth-century planning
has endured.
Similar is the case with Jamshedpur,
planned as a company town for the first steel
mill in the subcontinent by the Mumbai-based
industrial family of the Tatas. Jamshedpur is
about 150 miles (90 km) southeast of Kolkata.
The raw materials for the steel making—iron
ore, coal, and limestone—are found nearby.
The city underwent four different plans dur-
ing colonial times and one after independence.
As the city approaches its 100th anniversary,
the metropolitan population approaches 1.5
million residents and much of the industry
is still part of the Tata conglomerate. True to
Figure 9.13 A produce vendor in Chennai typifies the bazaar-based city. Source: Photo by George Pomeroy.
390 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
the characteristics of the planned-city model,
Jamshedpur (like Jaipur) has a planned cen-
tral core that has undergone modifications
over time and is surrounded by unplanned
traditional developments and semi-planned
postindependence extensions.
Mixtures of Colonial and Bazaar Models
The functional demands created by activities
in colonial, bazaar-type, and planned cities
generated interaction among city types. Brit-
ish administrative requirements in the tradi-
tional cities resulted in the establishment of
Civil Lines, generally on the urban periphery.
The Civil Lines were composed of residential
quarters for high administrative and judicial
officials, a courthouse, treasury, jail, hospi-
tal, public library, police facilities, and club
houses. The streets for the Civil Lines were
well planned, paved, and had trees planted on
both sides.
During the twentieth century, when the
local rich needed to build houses of their own,
many traditional cities developed planned
extensions on their peripheries. For the most
part, however, colonial cities never grew as
conceived by their colonial masters. Tradi-
tional factors played an unavoidable role in
altering colonial forms. The traditional bazaar,
inherent to the indigenous cityscape, always
interacted with other city forms. The bazaar
thrived side by side with the CBD. As a result,
to correctly model classic colonial cities, such
as Kolkata, Mumbai, Chennai, and Colombo,
it is essential to consider the impact on them
by the traditional bazaars. All colonial cities
bear imprints from bazaar forms, just as the
bazaar cities were impacted by colonial func-
tional demands. Planned cities, too, as they
expanded, often added colonial and bazaar
city forms, and sometimes the two latter city
types created new planned entities as their
expanded appendages.
DISTINCTIVE CITIES
Mumbai: India’s Cultural
and Economic Capital
Although the UN recognizes Delhi as South
Asia’s largest urban agglomeration, Mumbai
remains the region’s largest and most cos-
mopolitan city. Two dimensions have been
critical to its rise to preeminence, one com-
mercial and one cultural. The skyscrapers in
the Nariman Point area are the heart of the
city’s—and nation’s—corporate and financial
sectors and signify the city’s role as the single
most important command-and-control point
in the national economy. The two largest stock
exchanges of Mumbai handle an overwhelm-
ing majority of India’s stock transactions and
figure among the world’s largest in volume and
value. In addition, 40 percent of the country’s
foreign trade is conducted through the city.
Mumbai has also emerged as the nation’s cul-
tural capital through its prolific film industry,
which is among the world’s largest: Films pro-
duced in “Bollywood” (over 1,500 each year)
are eagerly consumed not only by the viewing
public in India, but also in Bangladesh, the
Middle East, and Africa (Figure 9.14).
In 1672, Mumbai became the capital of all
British possessions on the west coast of India.
The seventeenth-century British possession of
the seven islands, which now form the oldest
part of this city, initiated the construction of
the fort. Beyond the fort grew a “native town,”
where sanitary conditions were miserably
poor and drainage was a serious problem. The
“European town” grew around the fortress
on higher ground, and protective walls were
erected around it. The native or black town
Distinctive Cities 391
was separated from the European town by an
Esplanade, which was kept free of permanent
houses. A main spur to Mumbai’s develop-
ment occurred when Britain’s supply of raw
cotton temporarily diminished in the 1860s
during the U.S. Civil War. India became an
important supplier of cotton, most of which
moved through Mumbai. This resulted in an
amassing of huge reserves of capital by Mum-
bai-based businessmen, and the city became
the main cotton textile center of the realm. In
1853, the opening of railways eventually con-
nected Mumbai with a hinterland covering
almost all of west India. Mumbai further pros-
pered with the opening of the Suez Canal in
1869, which enhanced the city’s trade advan-
tage by further cutting the distance to Europe.
This closer proximity helped earn the city its
nickname: “Gateway to India.”
When the fort area developed into a West-
ern-style CBD, the British, followed by rich
Indians, moved to Malabar Hill, Cumballah
Hill, and Mahalakshmi on the southwestern
portion of the island. These remain exclu-
sive neighborhoods today. In the 1940s, the
rich settled in another attractive area of the
island, Marine Drive (now renamed) which
lay along the Back Bay (Figure 9.15). Because
of the ever-increasing demand for commercial
and residential land in the fort area and the
lack of land on the narrow peninsula and the
island city, dozens of skyscrapers have been
erected since the 1970s at Nariman Point,
generating a skyline resembling a miniature
Manhattan. The most recent phenomenon
of Mumbai’s commercial land-use change is
the partial shifting of office- and financial-
related activities to the newly built high-rise
buildings of Nariman Point, though the old
Fort area is still considered as the main core
of the CBD. Mumbai is an expensive city
to conduct business in and ranks 6th in the
world with respect to office occupancy costs.
The poor, the middle class, and a few native
Figure 9.14 “bollywood” films are popular all across the indian subcontinent and beyond, including here in Calcutta. Source: Photo by Jared boone.
392 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
businessmen settled mostly at the center and
the north of the island. At present, the colonial
influence created by European settlements can
be observed in the southern part of the city
proper. The more traditional influences have
remained observable in the north. Unsanitary
slums, built of flimsy materials and serving as
poverty-ridden habitat, mushroom all over
the city.
As a state capital and the largest metropo-
lis in South Asia, Mumbai has also become
the largest port of the entire subcontinent;
not only does it handle the largest share of
foreign trade, it collects 60 percent of India’s
duty revenues. Though employment in cotton
textiles manufacturing remains important,
other sectors including general engineering,
silk, chemicals, dyeing and bleaching, and
information technology (IT) are now emerg-
ing as important employment sources. Total
industrial employment has declined and the
service sector is increasingly prominent. Still,
the Mumbai Metropolitan Region accounts
for a disproportionately large share of India’s
industrial employment and fixed capital, and
the Mumbai-Pune corridor is India’s second
most important center of employment for IT.
Mumbai attracts an enormous number of
migrants from the western and central parts
of India, thus giving it a religious and linguis-
tic diversity that surpasses all other cities in
South Asia. Yet, it also shares some religious
characteristics with other South Asian cit-
ies. For example, the decline in the Muslim
population resulted from the partitioning of
British India into India and Pakistan in 1947,
prompting the mass exodus of Hindus and
Sikhs from West Pakistan (now Pakistan) and
Muslims from India. The partition also led to
the flight of many Hindus from East Pakistan
(now Bangladesh) to India. Today, Mumbai’s
population is 67 percent Hindu, 19 percent
Muslim; 5 percent Buddhist; 4 percent each
of Jain and Christian; and smaller popula-
tions of others. Two other minority religious
groups play a socioeconomic role far beyond
their numbers. First, the Zoroastrians, or Par-
sis as they are called in Mumbai, are a very
Figure 9.15 Marine drive, with nariman Point in the background, serves as the setting for the annual Mumbai Marathon. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Distinctive Cities 393
significant minority group. Even though their
numbers in Mumbai are small and declining,
more Parsis live here than anywhere else across
the globe. Also significant are the Jains, mainly
migrant businessmen from nearby Gujarat
State, who were drawn by Mumbai’s increas-
ing commercial attraction. In terms of linguis-
tic characteristics, no other metropolis of the
subcontinent has Mumbai’s uniqueness. The
regional language, Marathi, is spoken by less
than half the population.
Bengalūru and Hyderabad: India’s Economic Frontier
When asked to identify economic success sto-
ries in South Asia, two cities immediately leap
to mind: Bengalūru (Bangalore until 2006) and Hyderabad. Globalization is the vehicle
that both cities have ridden to prosperity, as
each has become a center for IT development
and business process outsourcing. The suc-
cess of each is built upon the country’s supply
of capable, technically skilled, and English-
proficient (but underemployed) college grad-
uates, combined with the forces of technology
and globalization that have reduced distances
and hence costs. Other elements distinctive to
these two cities are the presence of an entre-
preneurial spirit, government flexibility, and
critical investments in infrastructure. Both
cities also serve as state capitals.
Bengalūru’s association with IT dates to the arrival of Texas Instruments in the mid-
1980s. Even before that, however, the city
had become a center of India’s aerospace and
defense manufacturing industries. By the late
1990s, so many multinational firms had estab-
lished operations here that the city had been
christened “India’s Silicon Valley,” an appro-
priate nickname because it accounts for over
one-third of the nation’s software exports. The
concomitant wealth and affluence has given
the city a rather cosmopolitan and trendy
reputation.
Hyderabad’s emergence as an IT center
came in part through the visionary efforts of
the state’s chief minister during the late 1990s.
He pulled out all the stops in providing incen-
tives and infrastructure for high-technology-
related development. Today, the city prides
itself as being referred to as “Cyberabad.” It
hosts a Genome Valley and a Nanotechnol-
ogy park, outgrowths of the city’s leading
role in the nation’s pharmaceutical industry.
Microsoft’s largest development center out-
side Redmond, Washington, is located here, as
are many other multinational firms.
Delhi: Who Controls Delhi Controls India
Delhi, the seat of India’s capital, combines a
deep-rooted historical heritage with colonial
and modern forms (Figure 9.16). The attrac-
tion for Delhi as the capital site was rooted
in South Asia’s physiography, locations of
advanced civilization centers, and migration/
invasion routes. Delhi occupies a relatively flat
drainage divide between the two most produc-
tive agricultural areas of the realm, the Indus
and Ganges plains, where the most notable
centers of civilization and power developed in
the past. The control of Delhi was so vital to
the rule of north India that a popular saying
arose: “Who controls Delhi, controls India.”
Old Delhi (the former Shahjahanabad) is a
traditional bazaar-type Indian city, with Chan-
dni Chowk as the main commercial center.
Here sanitation used to be one of the main
problems, but after independence the area
has been fully provided with underground
sewers and piped water. Rich merchants and
ordinary working people live close to each
other (Figure 9.17). West of the Yamuna,
394 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
Figure 9.16 delhi and Shajahanabad (old delhi). Source: Ashok dutt and George Pomeroy.
connected by bridges with the main city, is a
postindependence semi-planned area as well
as a squatter development, where one-third of
Delhi’s population live—some in unhealthy
slums with very little or no basic facilities of
water, sewer, electricity, or paved roads.
Distinctive Cities 395
New Delhi, situated south of Old Delhi, is
a majestic colonial creation that emerged as a
new city after the capital of British India was
moved from Kolkata. The capital was tempo-
rarily moved to Delhi’s Civil Lines and Can-
tonment in 1911 before being installed in
New Delhi (1931). New Delhi was planned
by a British architect, Edwin Lutyens, in a
geometric form that combined hexagons, cir-
cles, triangles, rectangles, and straight lines.
Spacious roads, a magnificent viceroy’s resi-
dence (now the President’s Palace), a circular
council chamber (which is now Parliament
House), imposing secretariat buildings, a
Western-style shopping center (Connaught
Place) with a large open space in the middle,
officers’ residences in huge compounds, and
a garden-like atmosphere formed the main
elements of New Delhi. The new capital was
separated from the congested, unsanitary, and
generally poor conditions of Old Delhi by an
open space.
The main economic base of New Delhi is
government services. After India’s independ-
ence, an increasing demand for housing was
created by new government employees, which
led to large-scale public-housing develop-
ments around earlier settlements of New
Delhi. The most noticeable feature of such
developments was the segregation of larger
neighborhoods according to the rank of the
government employees and foreign resi-
dents. Class rather than caste determined the
new neighborhood composition. Delhi has
expanded in a planned manner as the Delhi
Development Authority (DDA) has worked
to coordinate the land development process
with an innovative revolving funding scheme.
The dark side of this strategy is that the lower
and middle classes are left without affordable
housing options. That one in five Delhi resi-
dents live in a slum blurs any gains registered.
Delhi’s problems are so intense it is num-
bered among the five worst cities in the world
with respect to air pollution, generated by
motor vehicles (the leading source) and
industrial activities (Box 9.3). Steps taken to
ameliorate the problems over the last decade
include banning leaded gasoline, conversion
to compressed natural gas (CNG) buses, man-
dated use of low-sulfur diesel fuel, and other
tighter emission restrictions. With these steps,
pollution levels have stabilized.
Kolkata: Premier Presidency Town
Kolkata, though time, has inspired a number
of nicknames, including geographer Rhoads
Murphey’s “City in a Swamp,” Dominique
Figure 9.17 Any service you can think of is available on the streets of india’s cities. here in the Karol bagh neighborhood of delhi, for a few rupees, you can get your pants pressed. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
396 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
Box 9.3 two Billion life years lost
to the international observer, this headline may sound familiar: “US Embassy Monitor Meas- ures Air Quality at ‘Very healthy Levels’.” it refers to india’s capital, new delhi, a city whose air quality is, for the most part, worse than China’s capital of beijing. Poor air quality isn’t just a problem for new delhi, either. According to the World health organization, thirteen of the world’s twenty most polluted cities are in india; three others are in Pakistan; and two more in bangladesh. All of these cities are on the Gangetic Plain, making the region notorious for urban air quality. Altogether, the human cost of poor air quality in india alone is a reduced life expectancy of 3.2 years, on average, for the 660 million indians who live in areas with high particulate matter. This grimly translates into two billion life years lost!
Just how bad is the air quality in these cities? Let’s consider one common pollutant, particulate matter (PM), which is a term for the dust, dirt, soot, and smoke in the air. of greatest concern is PM 2.5, which refers to particulates less than 2.5 micrometers in diam- eter, about 1/30 the width of a human hair. these materials are small enough to penetrate deeply into the lungs. Effects include asthma, respiratory disease, stroke, heart failure, and premature death. india, thanks to poor indoor and outdoor air quality, has the world’s high- est death rate from chronic respiratory disease.
For delhi, PM 2.5 levels averaged an outrageous 226 micrograms per cubic meter during december 2014 and January 2015, and over 40 percent higher than the same period the year before. For comparison, this is more than double the “bad” air quality in beijing, nearly 6.5 times the U.S. regulatory standard, and 22 times the World health organization (Who) standard. incredibly, during the first three weeks of 2015, one monitor’s average daily peak reading was 473, with several days of readings above 500! things are not much better in a string of other large cities across northern india.
Sadly, air quality may get much worse before it gets better. traditional fuels of firewood, agricultural waste, and dried cow dung, which are not burned cleanly by less efficient tradi- tional stoves, are still widely used in both urban and rural settings. in addition, cities are now choked with emissions-generating traffic. delhi alone has around eight million vehicles, and india has plans to double the consumption of coal in the next five years to fuel eco- nomic growth. the country has plenty of coal, but little natural gas or oil, and india’s coal is of a poorer quality. And. in dhaka, bangladesh, brick factories proliferate, belching smoke everywhere.
in the past, few seemed especially concerned about air quality. however, with alarming rates of illness and more awareness about the hazards of air pollution, attitudes are begin- ning to shift. Steps are being taken to increase air quality monitoring, to better understand where and how pollutants are being generated, and to consider what remedial steps, regu- latory and otherwise, might be taken. in the meantime, how many more millions, or even billions, of life years will truly be lost before air quality improves?
Distinctive Cities 397
LaPierre’s “City of Joy,” Rudyard Kipling’s
“Cholera Capital of the World,” and “City of
Pavement Dwellers.” As administrative capi-
tal for much of the colonial period and as an
important commercial center since before
then, Kolkata set the tone for urban imagery
in South Asia.
“City in a Swamp” appropriately describes
the city even today. Sited on the levees sloping
east and west from the riverbank, the 40-mile
(64 km) long metropolitan district is for the
most part less than 22 feet (7 m) above sea
level. This flood-prone elevation is further
aggravated by the monsoon, which brings
most of the city’s annual rainfall of 64 inches
(1,600 mm) between June and Septem-
ber, coinciding with the river’s highest level.
Waterlogged soils and extensive flooding sub-
stantially impacts a majority of slum dwellers.
Despite these physical disadvantages, the city’s
location on the River Hugli (a distributary of
the Ganges) provided advantages for indus-
trial growth. Its location 60 miles (97 km)
upriver from the Bay of Bengal allowed access
to nineteenth-century ocean vessels that pro-
vided a populous hinterland with rich mineral
and agricultural resources. The city’s seaport
facilitated the import of wholesale machinery
for the jute industry, which became most sig-
nificant industrial activity of the metropolis.
Finally, the establishment of the trading post
and military garrison by the British in 1756
provided the mechanisms through which
trade was conducted.
Spatial growth of the city, and the business
district in particular, centered on the original
fort and continued from that point even after
its relocation several years later. A European
component grew from the south end and a
native town in the north. The “native town”
included a wealthier and middle-class compo-
nent that resided at the northern edge of the
CBD. This area, the Barabazar, is reminiscent
of traditional bazaars (Figure 9.18). Immedi-
ately to the south is the Western-style CBD,
mainly an office, administrative, and com-
mercial district with a low density of residen-
tial population. As the city grew, its northern
part reflected more traditional characteristics,
while the southern section presented more
of a European look. New areas were later
reclaimed in the southern and eastern por-
tions of the city to be inhabited mostly by
wealthy Bengalis, the native inhabitants of the
state.
Postindependence manufacturing activity
was initially hurt by the partition of the sub-
continent, which severed the jute mills of the
city from their supply areas, contributing to
Figure 9.18 Fishmongers are widespread in Kolkata. not only does the city have a huge consuming population, but it is also along the coast. Source: Photo by ipsita Chatterjee.
398 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
the city’s relative industrial decline. Today it
is the engineering industry that is an impor-
tant component of the local economy. Other
important industries are paper, pharmaceu-
ticals, and synthetic fabrics. Information-
technology firms and related employment
are growing, but Bengalūru and the Mumbai- Pune corridor remain ahead of Kolkata. Com-
mercially, the city serves as the headquarters
of native business firms, banks, and interna-
tional corporations.
Before the partition, Kolkata attracted
migrants from many different parts of north-
eastern India and East Pakistan (now Bang-
ladesh). The city, therefore, demonstrates a
multilingual demography. Two-thirds of the
population speaks Bengali, another one-fifth
speaks Hindi, and one in ten speaks Urdu.
Hindus constitute 83 percent of the popula-
tion; most of the remainder is Muslim.
Karachi: Port and Former Capital
Situated by the western edge of the Indus
River delta and with approximately 16 million
people, Karachi is Pakistan’s largest city and
former capital. It is highly industrialized and
relies upon cotton textiles, steel, and engineer-
ing for its economic base. It remains by far
the nation’s leading port, and has become an
important center for educational and medical
services. Despite its leading role as a vibrant
and cosmopolitan hub of finance and trade,
Karachi has gained a notorious international
reputation for its lawlessness.
Karachi’s job opportunities have long pro-
vided an urban “pull” not only for Pakistanis,
but also for large numbers of Muslim refugees
leaving India, especially in the period imme-
diately following partition. In the 1960s only
16 percent of Karachi’s citizens were native
born, while 18 percent were in-migrants from
different parts of Pakistan, and 66 percent
were Indian Muslim immigrants from the late
1940s.
While the city has become more religiously
homogenous as a result of the in-migration
and the effects of the 1947 partition, it has
also become more linguistically and ethnically
diverse. The partition led to the departure of
all but a few thousand Sindhi Hindus, while
Urdu-speaking Muslim immigrants came in
large numbers from the north and central
parts of India, and there was a preexistent base
of Gujarati Muslim migrants from India since
the pre-partition times. Thus, apart from
English, three languages are prevalent in the
city: Urdu, Sindhi, and Gujarati. A consider-
able influx of Pushtu-speaking Pathans from
the Northwest Frontier Province (NWFP) and
Afghanistan in the 1980s often clashed with
the Urdu-speaking migrants from India. The
combination of linguistic, religious, and eth-
nic differences, exacerbated by ineffective and
corrupt law enforcement and a bureaucratic
judicial system and availability of arms sup-
plied by the United States during the Afghan
War in the 1980s have contributed to an
alarming level of violence. This violence has
escalated and continues today, and, along with
declining employment opportunities and a
crumbling infrastructure, has led to urban
discontent and near anarchy.
The center of Karachi still conforms to a
true bazaar model: high population density,
high intensity of commercial and small-scale
industrial activity, and a relatively higher con-
centration of rich people. Toward the east
from the center of the city were the planned
cantonment quarters that originated during
the British occupation dating back to 1839.
After independence, new suburban residen-
tial developments occurred surrounding the
eastern two-thirds of the colonial city, while
Distinctive Cities 399
planned industrial estates were built mainly
toward the northern and western fringes.
Dhaka: Capital, Port, and Primate City
Dhaka possesses a colorful history of 400
years since it was founded on the left bank of
River Buriganga, a distributary of the Ganges.
Dhaka’s history is routed in two major factors:
one is political power and the other commerce
and industry. From the first decade of the sev-
enteenth century, for a hundred years, Dhaka
served as the capital of the Subah Bangla of
the Mughal Empire; and, it served as the sec-
ondary capital till the end of the eighteenth
century. Under the British, in 1905, Dhaka
regained its status as the capital of Eastern
Bengal and Assam, only to have that status
annulled in 1911. At the end of British rule in
1947, Dhaka became the capital of East Paki-
stan. And, in 1971, Dhaka became the capital
of Bangladesh after it separated from West
Pakistan and took on a new name. Although
its political history has followed an undulating
path, the city has always maintained a connec-
tion with the commercial lifeline of the coun-
try. The geographic location of the city places
it in an advantageous position for trading,
particularly by means of water.
Dhaka, a megacity of 17 million, dwarfs all
others in the country. It accommodates one
out over every ten Bangladeshis and one-third
of the country’s urban population. Over the
last several decades, the city has had some of
the highest growth rates among Asian cities,
with many rural poor migrants being added to
the population. About 95 percent of Dhaka’s
population is Muslim; Hinduism is the sec-
ond-largest religion and compromises 4 per-
cent of the population. People speak Bangla,
and the second language is English, spoken
only by the educated. The literacy rate of
population of Dhaka was about 73 percent in
2010 which was significantly higher than the
national average of 57 percent.
Dhaka is the commercial, administrative,
and educational hub of Bangladesh. Pre-
Mughal Dhaka consisted of 52 bazaars. Dur-
ing the Mughal reign (1606–1764), old Dhaka
continued to flourish. The chawk (square)
was the main market place of Mughal Dhaka.
Though somewhat transformed, it remains a
vibrant major wholesale area of the city.
Major challenges of poverty, pollution,
crime, congestion, and often political vio-
lence face Dhaka today . The city’s population
comprises primarily middle- and low-income
people. About one-third reside in slum areas.
They live in very unhygienic conditions
without proper water and sanitation facili-
ties. Dhaka always attracts a large number of
migrants from all over the country.
Tejgaon and Hazaribagh are the major
industrial areas of Dhaka. The Export Pro-
cessing Zone in Dhaka was set up to encour-
age the export of garments, textiles, and other
goods. Exports from the garments sector in
Dhaka amounted to over 19 billion dollars in
2013. In the last two decades, Dhaka has expe-
rienced booming construction. Over time, the
skyline of this megacity has changed, and it
has begun to take on the some of the flavor of
a world city. But, at the same time, attributes
like pollution, poverty, unplanned growth,
and environmental degradation became char-
acteristic features of Dhaka. The farm land
and low-lying lands in the fringe areas of
Dhaka are converting very fast to urban uses.
Unplanned development has become a major
concern from the environmental and social
perspective. Industrial and domestic wastes
are polluting rivers, canals, and water bodies
of Dhaka. The alarming conversion of water-
bodies is a major threat to the environment.
400 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
Transportation in Dhaka is always identi-
fied as a major problem. Traffic congestion
is diminishing the quality of life of residents.
Both motorized and nonmotorized vehicles
occupy the city’s roads. Absence of an organ-
ized mass transport system is the key reason
for the problem. Even though a large number
of people walk, pedestrian facilities are very
limited. In recent years, investment in road
infrastructure has been significant.
Despite its problems, life in Dhaka is quite
vibrant. The city’s growing economy indicates
the high motivation of its residents. During
the national festivals and occasions, the people
of Dhaka enjoy public life by observing cul-
tural and social events (Box 9.4).
Kathmandu, Colombo, and
Kabul: Cities on the Edge
Colombo, Kabul, and Kathmandu are the pre-
mier cities and national capitals of Sri Lanka,
Afghanistan, and Nepal, respectively. Offi-
cially, however, the capital of Sri Lanka has
moved to Sri Jayawadenepura, located within
the Colombo metropolitan area. As the former
capital, the city of Colombo itself continues
to be the seat of administration and decision
making. These cities on the edge of South Asia
differ greatly in size: Kabul with 4.6 million;
Colombo with 700,000; and Kathmandu with
1.2 million.
Kabul is the oldest of the three cities, even
being referred to in the Rig Veda, a 3,500-year-
old Hindu scripture, and by Ptolemy in the
second century ce. Kabul’s strategic position
by the side of the Kabul River and at the west-
ern entrance to the famous Khyber Pass gave
the city great political and trading significance.
Sited at an elevation of 5,900 feet (1,800 m), it
has served as a regional or national capital for
numerous regimes over the centuries, most
notably for the Moghul Empire (1504–1526)
and, after 1776, for an independent Afghani-
stan. Later attempts by both the Russians and
the British to subjugate the country and its
capital failed. After 1880, modern buildings
and gardens were constructed but these have
not diminished the identity of the old bazaar
city.
The city has suffered greatly since the 1970s
due to international conflicts being played
out on its soil. The overthrow of the king in
1974 initiated a series of events that included
the establishment of a Soviet-backed govern-
ment and subsequently, the U.S. interven-
tion to arm mujahideen (Afghan insurgents)
against the pro-Soviet government (1970s),
the establishment of a weak puppet state
(1989), a period of warlord-dominated chaos
(1992), and establishment of the Taliban
regime (1996). Allegations that Afghanistan’s
difficult physical geography and a sympathetic
Taliban regime provided havens for extremist
elements involved in the World Trade Center
attacks of September 11, 2001, invited retali-
ation by the United States leading to intense
and destructive bombing of Kabul, as well as
Kandahar and other cities. Later that year, the
Taliban regime was toppled, but the post-Tal-
iban government seems to be only nominally
in control of the country beyond the vicinity
of Kabul.
Kathmandu, in a valley of the same name,
lies in the mid-mountain region of the Him-
alayas, at an elevation of about 4,400 feet
(1,350 m). The city occupies a central posi-
tion for most of Nepal and is the most impor-
tant commercial, business, and administrative
center of the country. The Gurkha ethnic
group, after conquering Nepal, made Kath-
mandu its capital in 1768. Reconstruction
efforts after the devastating 1934 earthquake
and post–World War I developments added
Distinctive Cities 401
Box 9.4 Festivals in City life
Even days before a festival begins in dhaka, residents can feel the lively pulse of the city beginning to change. new life comes to public spaces; crowds throng the shopping areas, and colorful dresses worn by young women appear on the streets. they signal a break in mechanical city life. Some will celebrate the best of bangladeshi culture and others will mark religious holidays.
the most widely celebrated cultural festival is Pohela Baisakhi, bengali new year’s day (April 14). People from all walks of life, irrespective of religion, income, gender, or ethnicity come together to celebrate: Women wear sarees, adorn their hair with flowers, and wear local jewelry; men wear paizama. Everyone begins the celebration with songs written to welcome the new year, and musical troupes perform. in dhaka, Ramna Park is the center of festivities, though programs are arranged in open spaces everywhere. the Boishakhi Parade, with its bird and animal figurines and many masks is one of the day’s main events, as are Boishakhi fairs, where small craftsman and food vendors earn a little more than usual. City streets are ornamented with beautiful alpona (painted pavements). the age-old tradition of this day is to observe Haalkhata, the ritual of closing the old Ledger and opening a new one by traders involved in gold, clothing, and food businesses. they invite their customers in their shop and entertain them with sweets.
Perhaps bangladesh is the only country where every religion’s festival days are celebrated as government holidays. Eid-ul-Fitr is the largest religious festival for Muslims, who consti- tute about 90 percent of the population of dhaka. it is celebrated after the fasting month of Ramadan. Large prayers are performed in every mosque, people join the special Eid prayer, and everyone exchanges greetings with others. Good food and new clothing are the major priority of Eid. in recent years, residents of old dhaka have been trying to revive the old cus- tom of the Eid parade. Many of the city’s Muslims, however, leave for their ancestral homes to enjoy the festival with their extended families and old friends.
hinduism is the second religion of bangladesh, and the Durga Puja is the major hindu festival. it is widely celebrated in dhaka. Special puja mandaps (shrines) are established in different locations in addition to the temple sites. the mandaps are nicely decorated and attract Muslims also to share the joy. in addition, Christian and buddhist rituals are per- formed in churches and pagodas, respectively, during Christmas and buddha Purmina. Some national programs are also arranged to observe these religious occasions.
Although the people of dhaka love these celebrations, their enjoyment is often disrupted when they get stuck in horrible traffic jams on days close to the occasion. in fact, people often have a hard time arranging rail, bus, or ferry tickets to reach their friends and families safely. in most of the long holidays, many residents leave the crowded city to enjoy a relaxed vacation elsewhere in the country.
402 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
more buildings. Though the overwhelming
majority of Kathmandu residents are Hindus,
there are also some Buddhists. Autocratic rule
by the king and sporadic violence by Maoist
guerillas made situations unstable; conse-
quently, in 2008, the monarchy was abolished
and a succession of coalition governments has
been democratically elected. The city remains
a major center of South Asian tourism and
is a launching ground for treks in the Hima-
laya Mountains. In 2015, large areas of Kath-
mandu, including the historic center with its
bazaar characteristics, were leveled by two
major earthquakes.
Situated on the west coast of the pearl-
shaped island nation of Sri Lanka (formerly
known as Ceylon to the West), Colombo has
functioned as an important port city since at
least the fifth century. Nonetheless, it was West-
ern contact, beginning with Portuguese settle-
ment in 1517, which really started the growth
of Colombo as the key port for the island. The
Dutch occupied the port in 1656, but the Brit-
ish replaced them in 1796 and turned the city
of Colombo into their main administrative,
military, and trading place in Sri Lanka. After
independence in 1948, Colombo became the
country’s capital, but it has been challenged to
build a single nationality in a country where
the majority Buddhist Sinhalese and minority
Hindu Tamils have been at odds for most of
Sri Lanka’s history and engulfed the country
in a civil war from 1983 to 2009.
Colombo continues to be Sri Lanka’s most
important city in terms of business, admin-
istration, education, and culture. It is a colo-
nial-based city. The CBD-like center, with
high-level government offices situated within
the former colonial fort area, lies by the side of
the old section of the city, Pettah (“the town
outside the fort” in the Tamil language). Pet-
tah represents the characteristics of the Bazaar
city enclave. Cinnamon Gardens, the former
cinnamon-growing area of the Dutch period,
has been turned into a high-class, low-density
residential quarter. The city has expanded sig-
nificantly since independence and has indus-
tries that mainly process the raw materials that
are exported through the port of Colombo.
In order to diversify the national economy
through industrialization, an export-oriented
Free Trade Zone has been established near the
port of Colombo.
GLObALIzATION, CITy MARKETING, AND URbAN VIOLENCE
The contemporary geography of South Asian
cities is defined by globalization and its vari-
ous economic, cultural, and political impacts.
Urban landscapes of South Asia represent
a complex mixture of global influences and
local particularities. Globalization has been
defined as the intensification of interaction
between previously faraway places and peo-
ple so that local happenings are now shaped
by distant events. Economic liberalization,
moves toward free-market reforms, and the
information and technology revolution are
considered to be the main forces propelling
increased spatial interaction. Telemarketing,
electronic banking, plastic money, and high-
speed internet have made national borders
porous. Economic liberalization has encour-
aged the erosion of tariff barriers and the
free flow of investments across national bor-
ders. As a result, the cities in South Asia have
increased abilities to tap global business in the
form of corporate offices, export-processing
endeavors, tourism (spiritual and medical),
and retail industries. Corporations headquar-
tered in advanced nations search for emerging
markets among the growing middle class in
Globalization, City Marketing, and Urban Violence 403
South Asia. Global corporations also look for
cheap pools of unorganized labor in populous
South Asian cities. This give-and-take allows
for “glocalization” as cities engage with global
flows and ground them in locally specific ways
so that both the cities and global flows are
altered. For example, McDonald’s, a global fast
food chain, is localized in Indian cities when
it sells the “no-beef” Chicken Maharaja Mac
because Hindus do not eat beef.
South Asian cities now manifest a hybridi-
zation that symbolizes this tension between
local imperatives and global impetuses. City
municipalities are increasingly urged to “go
global” in their search for funds. This results
in a “new urban politics” of city-versus-city
competition to acquire foreign business and
investments. In the early twenty-first cen-
tury, for instance, India’s, central govern-
ment launched the Jawaharlal Nehru Urban
Renewal Mission (JNNURM). Its purpose
was to select 63 cities, which would be given
funds to “go global” by becoming entrepre-
neurial, profit seeking, and “world class,” like
New York, Tokyo, and London. The JNNURM
urged city governments to shed their pro-
poor social agendas (e.g., providing cheap
infrastructure and slum upgrading), and,
instead, focus on marketability. Redistributive
measures like rent control, which were put in
place to control the concentration of wealth,
were abolished to allow entrepreneurialism
and private investments to flourish. This push
toward urban entrepreneurialism has been
answered differently by different cities, but
the dominant strategy has been “place mar-
keting”—repackaging urban areas to make
them attractive to global capital (Box 9.5).
One place-marketing strategy includes green
entrepreneurialism, which involves greening,
cleaning, and developing urban gardens and
parks, introducing manicured traffic islands,
and switching to CNG instead of gasoline. The
idea is to present a global image of an envi-
ronmentally friendly, sustainable, and smart
city that will be attractive to foreign business
and tourists. This green entrepreneurialism
has become controversial, because greening
is often accomplished by evicting the poor,
and forcing them to adopt the more expen-
sive CNG, while the urban rich are allowed to
own multiple numbers of gasoline-operated
vehicles. Greening also concretizes uneven
geographies within the city where affluent
neighborhoods gain parks and open spaces,
while poor neighborhoods continue to suf-
fer from stagnation. These exclusions brought
about by greening strategies have often been
touted as “bourgeois environmentalism” or
“elitist environmentalism.” For example, in
Ahmedabad, India, greening under the Green
Partnership Program has benefited the more
affluent west Ahmedabad, while the poorer
parts of east Ahmedabad lack open spaces.
The exclusionary politics of enforcing CNG in
Delhi has also been well documented.
Another place-marketing strategy includes
city beautification through urban renewal.
Beautification involves giving the city a facelift
so that it can project the image of an efficient
growth engine—a spruced-up city can poten-
tially outcompete other cities in attracting
investment. City governments therefore, go
out of their way to sell communal or public
land to private construction companies who
are then supposed to “upscale” the city with
promenades, boulevards, water parks, state-
of-the-art offices, malls, parking lots, and
high-speed transit corridors. The cultural
impact is often a homogenization of once
unique landscapes. Mumbai, Delhi, Colombo,
and Karachi demonstrate this growing loss
of cultural diversity as small businesses, local
food cultures, indigenous handicrafts, and
404 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
local embroidery disappear to make way for
the world’s McDonalds and the Benettons.
Delhi, for instance, has seen a growing grass-
roots movement of hawkers challenging the
government’s policy of evicting street vendors
(Figure 9.20). A more problematic dimension
of urban renewal is that it is often achieved
by “liberating” spaces through demolition of
Box 9.5 Devastation in the Kathmandu Valley
Keshav bhattarai, University of Central Missouri
Friction between the Eurasian and tibetan tectonic plates put nepal in one of the world’s most vulnerable seismic zones. over the past 100 years, earthquakes originating in nepal or nearby areas have had disastrous consequences (table 9.3). two temblors, with 400 after- shocks, hit the country in 2015. the highly urbanized Kathmandu Valley was especially hard hit, with the barpak epicenter in the district of Gorkha. Estimated losses included 8,623 deaths, 16,808 injuries, the displacement of 2.8 million people, and $10 billion worth of infrastructure damage (Figure 9.19). Almost half a million buildings fell or were rendered uninhabitable by the earthquakes. thousands of people were forced to live under the open sky in adverse weather conditions, and half a million residents from Kathmandu and its vicin- ity fled the city for the countryside fearing more earthquakes. despite the history of tectonic activity in nepal, the country’s government demonstrated lackluster performance in disaster management and relief. Adding to the tension, coordination among the state agencies in relief distribution and rehabilitation works in the quake-affected areas led to donor fatigue, growing political instability, and anti-government protests.
Table 9.3 Earthquake Occurrences in and near Nepal
Date Place Fatalities Magnitude
June 7, 1255 Kathmandu 30% population N/A
August 26, 1833 Kathmandu/Bihar N/A 8.0 Ms
July 7, 1869 Kathmandu N/A 6.5 Ms
August 28, 1916 Nepal/Tibet N/A 7.7 Ms
January 15, 1934 Nepal/Tibet 10,600 8.0 Mw
June 27, 1966 Nepal /India border 80 6.3 Ms
July 29, 1980 Nepal/Pithouragarh, India 200 6.5 Ms
August 20, 1988 Kathmandu/Bihar, India 1,091 6.6 Ms
September 18, 2011 Sikkim N/A 6.8 Ms
April 25, 2015 Kathmandu/Tibet 8,623 7.8 Mw
May 12, 2015 Chinalkha, Dolakha 157 7.3
Ms, Surface-Wave Magnitude; Mw, Moment Magnitude
Globalization, City Marketing, and Urban Violence 405
Figure 9.19 infrastructure damage resulting from the Kathmandu earthquakes amounted to 10 billion US dollars. Source: Photo by damodar Sharma.
Post-earthquake assessments revealed that excepting a few commercial complexes and apartments, many buildings did not follow the recommended building codes. it was revealed that in urban areas people got government permission to construct two-storied houses and later added more flats not intended for load bearing. in addition, government regulations were ignored while raising multistoried buildings, resulting in tussles between insurance companies and property owners. none of the buildings constructed of brick and mud were spared. detailed inspections revealed that only 40 percent of the houses in Kathmandu Valley were safe to live in, while 60 percent either needed repair or complete rebuilding. over 100 historical and cultural sites were destroyed; the UnESCo World heritage sites in Kathmandu—temples, shrines, and monasteries—were fully damaged. tourism, both cultural and mountain-climbing, which contributed around 10 percent of GdP, was paralyzed in the immediate aftermath of the quakes, and full recovery is uncertain.
in view of the repeated earthquakes in Kathmandu, consideration is being given to shift- ing the federal capital to Chitwan, and building international airports in the nearby districts of bara (nizgarh) and Rupandehi (bhairahwa). Chitwan sits at a lower elevation, is more centrally located, and is already noteworthy as nepal’s medical capital and for nature tour- ism. other countries have relocated their capital cities to avoid disasters, so there would be ample precedent for the move. nevertheless, all nepalis are anxious for Kathmandu to be rebuilt and are calling for a disaster Management national Council to prepare a long-term action plan to mitigate risks and to respond to disasters like earthquakes. Furthermore, disaster risk and response information should be incorporated into school and university curricula.
406 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
slums with little compensation for the slum
dwellers. Mumbai, Delhi, and Ahmedabad
have become dominant sites for massive dem-
olitions. In the post-liberalization era, all of
these cities have become “world class,” and in
a desperate effort to outcompete each other,
have produced various forms of public-pri-
vate partnerships that have engineered violent
evictions. The municipalities in these cities
represent the public entity that maintains
a rhetoric of “liberalization with a human
face,” while an entourage of private construc-
tion companies are given the go-ahead to do
the “needful.” In Ahmedabad, a gigantic pro-
ject called the Sabarmati River Front Project
was launched to develop the riverfront into a
fast track “world-class” corridor. NGOs claim
that over 6,000 families will be evicted by this
project.
City marketing also manifests as gated
communities replete with gyms, sports
facilities, swimming pools, and shopping
complexes, mimicking the “good life” of the
American middle class. In Bengalūru, where a burgeoning group of software profession-
als have quickly become rich in India’s own
Silicon Valley, the gated communities repre-
sent spaces of social mobility. Professional
elites with sizable disposable incomes are
increasingly seduced by the globalization of
home-garage-pool lifestyles. These spaces
of affluence have been touted as spaces of
exception—they geographically materialize
the growing gap between the urban rich and
urban poor. The gated communities also crip-
ple informal economies of vendors and hawk-
ers who are no longer allowed to enter the
“sanitized spaces” of the rich.
The global-local tensions of glocalization
are manifested not only in the uneven geog-
raphies of affluence and deprivation, but also
through violence. Cities in South Asia, there-
fore, not only internalize the daily violence
of exclusion, but are often also the sites of
Figure 9.20 three generations of women position themselves on the curb to sell what produce they can to passersby in Mumbai. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Urban Challenges 407
inter-community riots and global terrorism.
In India, Hindus are the majority religious
group, and Muslims account for the largest
minority community (13 percent approxi-
mately). Hindus and Muslims share a conten-
tious history because of the colonial policy of
“divide and rule,” the partition of India and
the creation of Pakistan, and the horrific vio-
lence that resulted from it. In the postinde-
pendence context, Hindu-Muslim violence
has been concentrated in cities. The Mumbai
riots of 1992–1993 and the Ahmedabad riots
of 2002 were the deadliest in post-partition
India. The Mumbai riots claimed 2,000 lives—
a regional far-right political party is said to
have engineered the riots and was allegedly
responsible for horrific atrocities against
Muslims. Many Muslims were killed along
with Hindus, and many others were displaced.
The 2002 riots in Ahmedabad lasted for two-
and-a-half months and involved systematic
destruction of Muslim homes, property, and
businesses. Mobs led by cultural and political
affiliates of another far-right party engineered
the riots. Victims claim that the rioters came
with lists of addresses of Muslim homes—
2,000 Muslims were killed, 100,000 displaced,
mosques were demolished and replaced with
temples and roads; the displaced now live in
all-Muslim ghettos outside the city. The urban
riot machinery in India is fueled by a politi-
cal ideology that asserts that Indianness equals
Hinduness, and therefore other religious
minorities are considered foreigners; hence,
their patriotism is always suspect. In the post-
September 11 context, the global narratives of
“war on terror” and “terrorism and Islamo-
phobia” are also adopted and localized. This
“golden age of Hindu India” is not envisioned
as isolated from global economic integration
and global discourse of terrorism. A local pol-
itics is creatively juxtaposed with economic
reforms, where non-Hindu foreign capital
and foreign corporations are welcome. Local
“Islamophobia” is also juxtaposed with global
narratives of terrorism—the global-local ten-
sions of glocalization are creatively imprinted
on urban space.
In the Sri Lankan context on the other hand,
the majority Sinhala Buddhist community,
benefiting from small-scale self-enterprises
under a preeconomic liberalization regime,
faced increased hardship due to the crowd-
ing out of indigenous firms in the post-eco-
nomic-liberalization context. Increased urban
hardship led to increased ethnic polarization
in the 1980s when the minority Hindu busi-
ness community was targeted by the majority
Buddhist community in the 1983 ethnic vio-
lence in Colombo and elsewhere. Apart from
intranational conflicts, South Asian cities have
also become a hotspot for international terror.
The Taj Mahal Hotel shootings in Mumbai
in 2008 were touted by the media as “India’s
September 11.”
URbAN CHALLENGES
The euphoria of globalization and economic
growth poorly masks the enormity of the
challenges facing South Asian cities. Most
countries inherited a colonial legacy of poverty
and an extreme rural-urban dichotomy. In
the contemporary context, urban realties
depict a simultaneous juxtaposition of
affluence and poverty. An expanding middle
class, proliferation of malls, extreme pov-
erty, inadequate housing, lack of public ser-
vices, unemployment, and environmental
degradation inscribe the South Asian urban
landscape.
In the postcolonial period, most South
Asian nations pushed for food self-sufficiency
408 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
and basic industrial development subsidized
by the government. The idea was to develop
the villages, with towns and cities acting as
complementary industrial hubs. However,
rural land distribution was extremely unequal
because of a feudal land tenure system that
was never rectified in the colonial era. In the
postindependence period, inability to launch
cohesive land reforms exaggerated rural pov-
erty. In that context, the primate cities, which
had already experienced infrastructural devel-
opment in the colonial period, continued to
attract masses of rural poor in the postin-
dependence period. Although manufactur-
ing received a major boost in most countries
through government-initiated import-sub-
stitution industrialization, the rate of growth
of manufacturing jobs could not keep pace
with rural-to-urban migration. Moreover,
most rural migrants were unskilled and hence
incapable of employment in modern indus-
tries. The result was a swelling informal sec-
tor consisting of low-paid jobs that offered
no security (e.g., porters, rickshaw pullers,
domestic servants, construction workers and
other manual laborers). These informal work-
ers often had to live on pavements, in rail-
way and bus stations, and in other interstitial
spaces. Others were “lucky” enough to find a
one-room home in already overflowing slums.
Estimates of the number of pavement dwell-
ers vary widely. For Mumbai alone, estimates
vary from 250,000 to 2 million. In most places,
they are concentrated in the central areas of
the city and irregularly employed in low-skill
occupations that pay the least. For Kolkata,
about one-half of the pavement dwellers are
employed in transport. They are predomi-
nantly males aged 18–57 years, though nearly
one-third are children, most of whom supple-
ment the family income by working as child
laborers, or by begging and scavenging.
Slums have developed in almost all the
major cities of South Asia. The name bus-
tee is used in Kolkata and Dhaka, jhuggi is
used in Delhi; chawl in Mumbai. The bustee
has been defined by the Indian government’s
Slum Areas Act of 1954 as a predominantly
residential area where dwellings (by reason of
dilapidation, overcrowding, faulty arrange-
ment, and lack of ventilation, light, or sani-
tary facilities—or any combination of these
factors) are detrimental to safety, health, and
morals. Moreover, the slums mainly consist of
temporary or semi-permanent huts with min-
imal sanitary and water supply facilities and
are usually located in unhealthy waterlogged
areas. Although they can be found throughout
any metropolitan area, there is always a greater
concentration of large slums away from the
CBD. They begin with temporary settlements,
sometimes started by landlords, but often-
times by illegal squatting on public lands,
sides of railroad lines or canals, unclaimed
swamp-like lands, public parks, and vacant
lots. In Mumbai, it is estimated that nearly 60
percent of the population lives in slums; this
proportion is representative of most large cit-
ies in South Asia.
South Asian nations were forced to
embrace structural adjustment programs at
the behest of the World Bank and the Inter-
national Monetary Fund. These programs
forced open their economies under the
policies of free-market liberalization. Gov-
ernments were supposed to roll back their
control over the economy and to stop subsi-
dizing industries and other sectors like health
and education: The task of development was
to be left in the hands of the market. Open-
ing up markets brought foreign corporations,
their Toyotas and Macs, their call center
jobs, and dreams of a consumptive lifestyle.
The English-educated, computer-literate
Suggested Readings 409
middle class took advantage of the economic
reforms; many acquired jobs with salaries
equal to their First-World counterparts. These
inflated salaries in poor countries afforded
conspicuous consumption and life in bunga-
lows and gated enclaves. More consumption
drew more global business. Construction
companies, encouraged by the boom in for-
eign investment and domestic consumption,
pushed for renewal of the cities. The old,
ugly, and poor gave way to gloss and glitter.
City municipalities were often incentivized
by the central government to decentralize
and become market oriented. Place mar-
keting and urban renewal were adopted to
achieve world-class urban status. This trend
has been described as “Manhattanization”
or “Shanghaization”; others have called it
“bourgeois urbanism.” Place marketing calls
for greening, cleaning, and beautifying the
city to create affluent spaces so that the rising
middle class and global business and service
industries can find their niche. Culturally,
this means that cities lose their personality
and uniqueness, homogenized through the
impact of “McDonaldization.” Politically, this
means that South Asian cities are increas-
ingly acquiring symbolic capital and are more
integrated into the global geopolitics of vio-
lence, often becoming prominent targets for
extremist groups. Socially and economically
it means an increased gap between the rich
and poor and the places that they occupy. The
poor find themselves increasingly pushed
out through urban renewal, greening, and
beautification schemes that demolish their
already flimsy bustees, jhuggis, and chawls
without any promise of relief or rehabilita-
tion. Right-to-the-city struggles of the poor
are rising in many cities of South Asia. These
struggles aim to reclaim the city, alter the
vision of urban development, and push for a
more inclusive urbanism. South Asian cities
therefore embody the tensions between local
imperatives and global push.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Ahmed, Waquar, Amitabh Kundu, and Rich-
ard Peet. 2010. India’s New Economic Policy: A
Critical Analysis. New York and London: Rout-
ledge. A critique of the economic forces that are
reshaping India’s cities.
Boo, Katherine. 2014. Behind the Beautiful Forevers:
Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity.
New York: Random House. Embedded journal-
istic account of life and survival in a Mumbai
slum based on the author’s three years among
the residents.
Chapman, Graham P., Ashok K. Dutt, and
Robert W. Bradnock. 1999. Urban Growth and
Development in Asia: Making the Cities. 2 vols.
Aldershot, England: Ashgate. Includes chapters
devoted to cities, urbanization, development,
and planning.
Gayer, Laurent. 2014. Karachi: Ordered Disorder
and the Struggle for the City. Oxford and New
York: Oxford University Press. Chronicles the
criminality and violence of Karachi.
Hossain, Shahadat. 2010. Urban Poverty in Bangla-
desh: Slum Communities, Migration, and Social
Integration. London and New York: I.B. Tauris.
Provides an examination of the understudied
slums of Dhaka.
King, Anthony D. 1976. Colonial Urban Develop-
ment: Culture, Social Power, and Environment.
London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. A compre-
hensive analysis of colonial urban forms of New
Delhi, the hill station of Simla, and cantonment
towns.
Nair, Janaki. 2005. The Promise of the Metropo-
lis: Bangalore’s Twentieth Century. New York:
Oxford University Press. A timely, well-written,
informed, and empirically rich case study of the
South Asian city most closely associated with
globalization.
410 CITIES OF SOUTH ASIA
Press, 1989. Straight-forward and comprehen-
sive treatment of urban India.
Turner, Roy, ed. 1962. India’s Urban Future.
Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of
California Press. Of particular interest in this
classic collection of articles is the contribution
by John E. Brush, “The Morphology of Indian
Cities.”
Noble, Allen G., and Ashok K. Dutt, eds. 1977.
Indian Urbanization and Planning: Vehicles of
Modernization. New Delhi: Tata McGraw-Hill.
A classic work containing more than 20 chap-
ters contributed by leading geographers and
planners.
Ramachandran, R. 1989. Urbanization and Urban
Systems in India. New Delhi: Oxford University
Figure 10.1 Major Urban Agglomerations of Southeast Asia. Source: United nations, department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population division (2014), World Urbanization Prospects: 2014 Revision, http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/
10
Cities of Southeast Asia JAMES TYNER AND ARNISSON ANDRE ORTEGA
KEy URbAN FACTS
Total Population 626 million
Percent Urban Population 47%
Total Urban Population 294 million
Most Urbanized Countries Singapore (100%)
Brunei (77%)
Malaysia (74%)
Least Urbanized Countries Cambodia (21%)
Timor-Leste (32%)
Myanmar (34%)
Number of Megacities 2
Number of Cities of More Than 1 Million 25 cities
Three Largest Cities Manila (13 m), Jakarta (10 m),
Bangkok (9 m)
Number of World Cities (Highest Ranking) 6 (Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta, Bangkok,
Manila, Ho Chi Minh City)
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. Urban landscapes of Southeast Asia have been shaped by Chinese, Indian, Malay, and inter-
national influences, especially colonialism and more recently globalization.
2. All of the world’s major religions are represented in the landscapes of Southeast Asia’s cities.
3. All of the major cities of the region have experienced rapid population growth and ris-
ing environmental challenges, including problems of water quality and quantity, since
independence.
4. Primate cities (notably Manila, Jakarta, and Bangkok) dominate the region, but the key
urban center of Southeast Asia is the city-state of Singapore.
5. Foreign influences, especially through foreign direct investment, play a critical role in
Southeast Asian cities today.
414 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
Towering glass-encased skyscrapers, flashing
Coca-Cola signs, McDonald’s restaurants—
the increasingly universal symbols of central
cities around the world—are very evident
in the cities of Southeast Asia, especially the
larger ones, giving the cities a deceiving sense
of familiarity. Closer examination, however,
reveals many subtle, and sometimes not-so-
subtle, differences. Southeast Asia as a whole
is a cornucopia of cultures, with hundreds of
different languages and many distinct reli-
gions. Nestled between two dominant cultural
hearths, China and India, and exhibiting a
storied colonial past, Southeast Asia is a blend
of indigenous and foreign elements. This
diversity, not surprisingly, has been and con-
tinues to be inscribed on the region’s urban
landscape, from the lotus-blossom-shaped
stupas of Buddhist temples in Bangkok, to the
brightly colored Hindu temples in Singapore;
and from the golden-domed Muslim mosques
of Kuala Lumpur to the Roman Catholic
cathedrals of Manila and Ho Chi Minh City.
Yet for many travelers, the extent of South-
east Asia’s urban regions comes as a surprise.
The typical image of the region is agrarian:
thatched huts perched atop stilts and brilliant
green rice paddies with water buffalo. The
reality is very different. Flying over Manila,
Bangkok, or Ho Chi Minh City is like flying
over Los Angeles, New York, or Tokyo. The
landscape reveals not a dense green three-
tiered canopied jungle but instead a dense
concrete jungle of apartment complexes,
shopping malls, financial districts, and amuse-
ment parks.
Southeast Asia’s major cities are focal points
of political and cultural activity and centers
of commercial circulation and exchange
(Figure 10.1). Some, such as the “post-socialist”
cities of Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, and Phnom
Penh are undergoing phenomenal political
and economic changes; others, such as Ran-
goon (Yangon) remain aloof from broader
global trends. The cities of Southeast Asia are
also sites of vast inequalities between the rich
and the poor as well as the healthy and the mal-
nourished. In Bangkok, Manila, and Jakarta,
Toyota Land Cruisers and Louis Vuitton
designer stores are as much a part of the urban
landscape as are shantytowns and raw sewage.
Beyond the limits of Southeast Asia’s pri-
mate cities are a host of medium, or inter-
mediate, cities. Many, such as the Philippines’
Cebu and Thailand’s Chiang Mai and Chiang
Rai, are fast becoming important regional
urban centers in their own right. And still
other, predominantly rural areas, such as the
Central Highlands of Vietnam, are sites of
contestation and conflict resulting from indig-
enous land-use practices and national urban
policies.
The urban and urbanizing areas of South-
east Asia are more than just containers of
people and commodities. They are agents in
their own right and, in the coming years, will
6. Land reclamation is increasingly used in port areas to provide space for urban expansion.
7. Land-use patterns in the cities are very similar throughout the region.
8. Many cities are restructuring their economies to become IT (“information technology”)
cities.
9. Some of the world’s largest cargo ports—notably Singapore—are located in this region.
10. Transnational cities, which reach across international boundaries in their influence, are
becoming more important.
Urban Patterns at the Regional Scale 415
continue to influence, and be influenced by,
local, national, and global affairs.
URbAN PATTERNS AT THE REGIONAL SCALE
Downtown Phnom Penh, the capital of
Cambodia, is dominated by the mustard-
colored Central Market (Figure 10.2). Built in
the Art Deco style of the 1930s, the market is
cruciform in design, with four halls radiating
out from a central, cavernous dome. Inside,
hundreds of venders ply their wares. Care to
buy handwoven silks or a traditional Khmer
scarf (known as krama)? Perhaps you’re in the
mood for some fresh vegetables or pork? No
matter your taste, whatever you seek can prob-
ably be found at Phnom Penh’s Central Market.
And if not, it is but a short journey by motor-
bike to visit the city’s Russian Market. On the
surface, the two markets are very much alike,
with many of the same fruits, vegetables, and
souvenirs found in each. However, the sweep-
ing arches and vaulted ceilings of the Central
Market give way to the Russian Market’s dimly
lit and claustrophobic feel. The Russian Mar-
ket is a rabbits-den of activity, as shoppers
jostle elbow-to-elbow with merchants and
tourists. Inside, the air is stifling, a sweltering
mix of too many people and too many cook-
ing pots bubbling stews of fish and vegetables.
Figure 10.2 the Central Market in downtown Phnom Penh was built in 1937 in art deco style. it is the soul of the city, a place where you can purchase just about anything. Source: Photo by James tyner.
416 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
Stepping inside any of Southeast Asia’s
historic (and even new) markets is like Alice
stepping into Wonderland. Whether you find
yourself wandering the stuffy aisles of Binh Tay
Market in Ho Chi Minh City, window shop-
ping in Bangkok’s upscale River City shop-
ping complex, or sipping an iced coffee while
shopping along Orchard Road in Singapore,
you are guaranteed to be dazzled with new
sights, sounds, and smells. The intoxicating
aroma of sandalwood incense combines with
the smells of fresh fruits, vegetables, and spices
to provide an aromatic bouquet that is found
nowhere else. And unlike the sedate, antiseptic
shopping malls of North America (which are
increasingly popping up in Southeast Asia), the
labyrinthine markets of Cambodia, Thailand,
Vietnam, and elsewhere seem to embody
much of the region’s urban geography.
As a whole, Southeast Asia remains one
of the least urbanized regions of the world.
Only four countries—Singapore, Brunei,
Malaysia, and the Philippines—are more than
50 percent urban. Other states are consider-
ably more rural in character: Cambodia, Laos,
Burma, and Vietnam, for example, are all less
than 30 percent urbanized. However, recent
years have seen many countries registering
startling urban population growth rates in
excess of 3 percent per year; and Cambodia
and Laos stand at more than 6 percent.
Such urban growth is not new to Southeast
Asia (Figure 10.3). Before the Portuguese ever
arrived in Malacca, or the Spanish landed in
Figure 10.3 “Plan of the Angkor Complex, ca. A.d. 1200.” Source: t. G. McGee, The Southeast Asian City (new york: Praeger, 1967), 38.
Urban Patterns at the Regional Scale 417
the Philippines, Southeast Asia was home to
some of the world’s most impressive cities:
Angkor in Cambodia, Ayutthaya in Siam
(now Thailand), and Luang Prabang in Laos.
Their names continue to evoke rich histories
of commerce and conquest. For it was through
Southeast Asia that the fabled spice trade
coursed. And it was through Southeast Asia
that ships laden with goods from China, India,
and beyond sailed. Then and now, the cities of
Southeast Asia were centers of economic, reli-
gious, and cultural exchange.
Historically, one or two urban areas would
dominate the region. The Kingdom of Ang-
kor, for example, exerted its influence between
the ninth and fourteenth centuries over much
of present-day Cambodia, Laos, and Thai-
land (Figure 10.4). Centered on the city-
state of Malacca, the Srivijayan empire ruled
much of insular Southeast Asia from the late
fourteenth century to the early sixteenth cen-
tury. And today, most countries in Southeast
Asia continue to exhibit phenomenally high
levels of urban primacy. In Thailand, the capi-
tal city of Bangkok stands as second to none.
Not to be outdone, both Jakarta and Manila
exert their dominance over Indonesia and the
Philippines, respectively.
But Southeast Asia’s urban patterns of the
twenty-first century reveal many remark-
able differences from previous eras. Whereas
many earlier cities were densely populated and
compact, the cities of Southeast Asia today
are densely populated and sprawling. Rapid
urban growth is occurring on the peripher-
ies of Manila, Bangkok, Phnom Penh, Jakarta,
and Ho Chi Minh City. This growth, some
planned, some not, has led to conflicts over
land use; it has threatened once-prime agri-
cultural lands; and it has spurred attendant
Figure 10.4 Angkor Wat, built between 1113 and 1150 by Suryavarman ii, is one of but hundreds of wats spread throughout Cambodia. because it symbolizes Cambodia’s golden age, its image can also be found on the nation’s flag. Source: Photo by James tyner.
418 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
economic problems of land speculation and
landlessness (Figure 10.5).
In the light of persistent problems of
over-urbanization—traffic congestion, pol-
lution, unemployment—local government
officials throughout Southeast Asia have ini-
tiated regional economic development pro-
jects. Often these projects are multipurpose
in scope: promoting economic growth and
development in more peripheral regions (i.e.,
northeast Thailand) and lessening the burdens
of primate cities. Still other governments have
relocated entire cities for unknown reasons.
The always-secretive leaders of Burma, for
example, relocated in 2005 its capital from
Rangoon (Yangon) to the interior, semi-rural
district of Pyinmana. The few western jour-
nalists who have been fortunate enough to
visit the new Burmese capital—named Nay-
pyidaw (“Seat of Kings”)—write of expansive
residential areas, reminiscent of any suburban
development found in North America, and
Figure 10.5 new residential, leisure, and commercial developments rise on the outskirts of Manila, taking the place of former sugar cane plantations. Source: Photo by Arnisson Andre ortega.
Figure 10.6 in Pleiku, Vietnam, a woman makes a living by selling fresh fruits and vegetables—proudly displayed as in an American supermarket—to shoppers in the early morning hours. Source: Photo by James tyner.
Historical Geography of Urban Development 419
impressive office buildings. But hardly any one
lives there! Indeed, most Burmese are denied
access to the new city, thus lending credence
to the new capital’s unofficial designation as a
“ghost city.”
Similar to Phnom Penh, the cities of South-
east Asia reflect the past and the future. They
are centers of intense commercial activity and
cultural exchange (Figure 10.6), and, while
sharing many commonalities, they—like
Phnom Penh’s Central and Russian Markets—
exhibit remarkable differences.
HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHy OF URbAN DEVELOPMENT
Precolonial Patterns of Urbanization
Southeast Asia is characterized by more coast-
line than perhaps any other major world
region, and much of this coast is accessible
to sea traffic. It is understandable, therefore,
that maritime influences have contributed sig-
nificantly to the Southeast Asian urbanization
process.
The region, but most especially mainland
Southeast Asia, also contains many fertile river
valleys, which gave rise to densely populated
settlements. These include the Chao Praya,
Irrawaddy, Mekong, and Red Rivers, along
with their tributaries. Bangkok, Phnom Penh,
Hanoi, and Ho Chi Minh City all continue to
reflect the importance of these highways of
water.
Southeast Asia’s physical geography, its
complex environment of river systems and
coastlines, contributed to the region’s impor-
tance as a crucial crossroads of commerce
between China, India, and beyond. And it was
this factor that precipitated the urbanization
process of Southeast Asia. Although it is com-
monplace to speak of the global economy as
beginning in the sixteenth century, it is impor-
tant to recognize that international trade
existed long before European states like Eng-
land and Spain began colonizing the Americas,
Africa, and Asia. Indeed, long-distance trade
existed between China and India, and linked
these areas with places as far afield as Africa, as
far back as the early centuries of the first mil-
lennium ce. The importance of long-distance
trade in the eastern Indian Ocean and South
China Sea regions, in fact, led to the appear-
ance of a series of cities and towns along
the coast of the Malay Peninsula and on the
islands of Sumatra and Java. In time, South-
east Asia would be home to some of the larg-
est urban centers in the world. Indeed, prior
to the era of European colonialism (from the
early sixteenth to the mid-twentieth century),
Southeast Asia was one of the world’s most
urbanized regions. As late as the fifteenth cen-
tury, for example, the population of Angkor
(in present-day Cambodia) had a population
in excess of 180,000; Paris, in contrast, had a
population of only 125,000.
Southeast Asia’s geographical location
made it a natural crossroads and meeting
point for world trade, migration, and cultural
exchange. A century before the Christian era
began, seafarers, merchants, and priests tra-
versed the region, contributing to the urbani-
zation process. In turn, the nascent towns
and cities of Southeast Asia became cent-
ers of learning through the diffusion of new
religious, cultural, political, and economic
ideas. Most Southeast Asian societies (with
the exception of Vietnam and the Philippines)
were influenced primarily by India, and this is
most pronounced in the religious and admin-
istrative systems of the region. The process of
“Indianization,” however, was not marked by a
mass influx of population like the movement
of Europeans into North America. Neither
420 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
was this a process of replacing indigenous
Southeast Asian culture with Indian elements.
Rather, the influence of India on Southeast
Asia represented a more gradual and uneven
process of exposure and adaptation. China
provided the other major cultural impetus,
although this impact was greatest in Vietnam
and through tributary arrangements with
various maritime Southeast Asian kingdoms
bordering the South China Sea.
Two principal urban forms emerged in
precolonial Southeast Asia: the sacred city and
the market city. Although both types of cit-
ies performed religious as well as economic
functions, the two exhibited many differences.
First, sacred cities were often more populous;
wealth was gained from appropriating agri-
cultural surpluses and labor from the rural
hinterlands. Market cities, in contrast, were
supported through the conduct of long-dis-
tance maritime trade. Through the market cit-
ies passed the riches of Asia, including pearls,
silks, tin, porcelain, and spices. Second, sacred
cities were sprawling administrative, military,
and cultural centers, whereas market cities
were mostly centers of economic activity. In
physical layout, sacred cities were planned and
developed to mirror symbolic links between
human societies on earth and the forces of
heaven. Monumental stone or brick temples
commonly occupied the city center. Market
cities, in contrast, tended to occupy more
restricted coastal locations, and thus had more
limited hinterlands. These cities were more
compact in their spatial layout, with much
activity associated with the port areas. Lastly,
compared to sacred cities, market cities were
ethnically more diverse, populated by traders,
merchants, and other travelers from all parts
of the earth.
The earliest city to emerge in Southeast
Asia was apparently Oc Eo, located along the
lower reaches of the Mekong Delta, in present-
day Vietnam. Flourishing between the first
and fifth centuries ad, Oc Eo was an important
center for the exchange of cargo, ideas, and
innovations. It served as an important city for
both Chinese and Indian traders, as well as
other seafarers from as far away as Africa, the
Mediterranean, and the Middle East.
After the decline of Oc Eo, Srivijaya emerged
as an important maritime empire, flourishing
between the seventh and fourteenth centu-
ries. It depended on international maritime
trade and China’s sponsorship through a
tributary system, which meant paying tribute
(goods and money) to the Chinese emperor
in exchange for independence. Located on the
straits of Malacca on the island of Sumatra,
Srivijaya controlled many important sea lanes,
including the Sunda Strait. Evidence suggests
that the Srivijayan Kingdom had numerous
capitals, one of which was Palembang, located
on the southern end of Sumatra. Palembang
provided an excellent, sheltered harbor and
served as an important Buddhist pilgrimage
site. To this day, Palembang remains an impor-
tant port city and marketplace in Indonesia.
Another example of a market city is
Malacca (Figure 10.7). Founded around 1400
on the western side of the Malay Peninsula,
Malacca was a counterpart to Palembang and
emerged as an important entrepôt and a key
node in the spice trade. Although Malacca
never had a permanent population of more
than a few thousand, it was an extremely
vibrant city, inhabited by many foreigners as
well as indigenous Malays. In recognition of
its multicultural heritage and its role in blend-
ing cultures from east and west, Malacca was
recently named a UNESCO World Heritage
Site. Other important market cities located
throughout Southeast Asia included Ternate,
Makasar, Bantam, and Aceh.
Historical Geography of Urban Development 421
Sacred cities often occupied more inland
locations. One of the earliest was Borobudur,
situated on the island of Java. It is at Borobu-
dur that the world’s largest Buddhist temple
is located. Built between 778 and 856 ce, the
ten-level Borobudur temple corresponds to
the divisions within the Mahayana Buddhist
universe and is one of the great cultural treas-
ures of Southeast Asia. A UN-sponsored pro-
gram rebuilt the complex several decades ago
to preserve the site for future generations.
Arguably, the best known and most famous
of all inland sacred cities is Angkor. Centered
at the northern end of the Tonle Sap basin, the
Angkorian Empire, at its peak, included pre-
sent-day Cambodia and parts of Laos, Thai-
land, and Vietnam. The Angkor Kingdom was
founded in 802 ce and by the twelfth century
contained a population of several hundred
thousand. According to some historians, it may
even have exceeded 1 million. The temples at
Angkor—there are more than 70 recognized
sites—were designed to mirror the complex
Hindu and, later, Buddhist cosmologies.
By the sixteenth century, many of the
once-prosperous inland sacred cities were in
decline. In part, internal factions, economic
collapse, and foreign intervention hastened
the collapse of Angkor and other empires.
Coastal market cities, however, continued to
thrive on maritime trade. For the region as a
whole, the coming years of European colonial
dominance would irrevocably alter the course
of urbanization in Southeast Asia.
Urbanization in Colonial Southeast Asia
Nutmeg and cloves, cinnamon and sandal-
wood—these were the prized commodities
that drove the world’s economy for hundreds
of years. And these were the goods that spurred
European colonial activity in Southeast Asia.
Figure 10.7 For 130 years, Malacca was a Portuguese colony. today, a miniature version of the fort has been rebuilt, primarily to enhance Malacca’s status as a World heritage City. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
422 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
Five hundred years of colonial and postco-
lonial influence dramatically affected cities
in Southeast Asia. Compared to other world
regions, Southeast Asia was relatively urban-
ized by the time of European colonialism. By
the sixteenth century, there were at least six
trade-dependent cities that had populations
of more than 100,000: Malacca, Thang-long
(Vietnam), Ayutthaya (Siam, present-day
Thailand), Aceh (Sumatra), and Bantam and
Mataram (both on Java). Another half-dozen
cities had at least 50,000 inhabitants. Only the
Philippines, because of its more peripheral
location vis-à-vis the major sea lanes, lacked
an urban tradition. But even there, by the
early sixteenth century, the seeds of urbaniza-
tion had been planted. The sultanate of Brunei
had extended his authority into the Philippine
archipelago and with this came the spread of
Islam.
In 1511, however, a Portuguese fleet cap-
tured the port city of Malacca, thus ushering
in nearly 500 years of European colonial-
ism. The Portuguese came primarily to gain
access to and control of the lucrative spice
trade. They were soon followed by the Spanish
(1521), the British (1579), the Dutch (1595),
and the French (mid-seventeenth century).
Other colonial activities, such as religious con-
version, were present but less important at this
time.
The early years of European colonialism
in Southeast Asia were similar to the colo-
nial practices found in Africa and the Ameri-
cas. Europeans captured or built garrisons in
coastal cities, established treaties with local
rulers, and thus brought about a transforma-
tion of the urbanization process in Southeast
Asia. Many former empires and kingdoms
and their cities suffered tremendous popula-
tion declines. Malacca, for example, once the
premier entrepôt on the strait that shares its
name, declined in size and importance after
its capture by the Portuguese. From a peak of
over 100,000 inhabitants, its size dwindled to
30,000 inhabitants in a very short time.
During the first three centuries of colo-
nialism, European influence was most pro-
nounced in two regions: in Manila (the
Philippines) under the Spanish and in Jakarta
(Indonesia) under the Dutch. The first perma-
nent Spanish settlement, Santisimo Nombre
de Jesus (Holy Name of Jesus), was established
in 1565 on the Philippine island of Cebu.
Five years later, the Spanish occupied a site
on the northern island of Luzon, situated on
the Pasig River and proximate to Manila Bay
(Figure 10.8). Two existing fishing villages
known as Maynilad (from which the present
city takes its name) and Tondo were occu-
pied and expanded. Apart from accessibility,
defense was often an important considera-
tion in early city planning. In the Philippines,
for example, the Spanish had to contend with
European rivals, namely the Dutch and Por-
tuguese, as well as Chinese pirates. Conse-
quently, after 1576, construction began on a
fortified structure known as the Intramuros
(walled city). In time, Manila would become
the commercial hub of the Philippines and
a key node in the Spanish galleon trade that
stretched from India to Mexico.
The early European presence was also pro-
nounced on the island of Java in Indonesia.
The Dutch East India Company during the
seventeenth century established a few per-
manent settlements, one of which, Batavia,
would become the largest city in the region.
It is now known as Jakarta. From its incep-
tion, Batavia exhibited numerous situational
advantages. Geographically, it was located
near both the Sunda Strait and the Strait of
Malacca, thus allowing easy access to maritime
trade. The first Dutch building, a combination
Historical Geography of Urban Development 423
warehouse and residence, was built in 1611,
and by 1619 a plan was laid out for the city.
Much of early Batavia was modeled after the
cities of Holland; canals were dug; and the
narrow, multistoried Dutch residences were
also copied. However, the architecture found
in Europe was not functional in hot, humid
locations such as Java, so building styles were
altered to better fit the tropical environment.
Batavia would emerge as the preeminent city
of Java and serve as the key node of the Neth-
erland’s Southeast Asian empire.
Many of the great cities of Southeast Asia
today trace their roots to European colonial-
ism (Figure 10.9). Singapore (from the Malay
words singa, lion, and pura, city), for exam-
ple, began as a small trading post located on
an island south of the Malay Peninsula at the
southern entrance to the Strait of Malacca.
The town was known as Temasek (Sea Town)
before 1819, when Sir Stamford Raffles of the
British East India Company signed an agree-
ment with the Sultan of Johor allowing the
British to establish a trading post at the site.
Benefiting from its strategic location and deep
natural harbor, the incipient Singapore began
to attract a large number of immigrants,
merchants, and traders. As a British colony,
Singapore emerged as one of the paramount
trading cities of the world—a role it has main-
tained to this day.
Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City), which
became the capital of French Indochina, like-
wise began as a small settlement, one that
included a citadel and fortress, surrounded by
a Vietnamese village (Figure 10.10). Saigon’s
location in the Mekong delta region—one of
the world’s great rice granaries—provided the
city with an important function as an agricul-
tural collection, processing, and distribution
Figure 10.8 A statue in Manila honors Raja Solayman, the city’s Muslim prince, who defended the town against the Spaniards in the 1500s. Source: Photo by Arnisson Andre ortega.
424 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
center. The French, also, were intent on refash-
ioning their colonial capital as a microcosm
of French civilization. In 1880, the French
erected Notre Dame Cathedral in the heart
of Saigon. Stones were imported. Ten years
later saw the completion of Saigon’s French-
built Central Post Office. This latter structure,
complete with an iron and glass ceiling, was
designed by Gustave Eiffel.
Bangkok, the current capital of Thailand, was
never colonized by the European powers, yet
it still reflects considerable Western influence.
Bangkok proper is a relatively new city; it was
not founded until 1782. Prior to this date the
capital of Siam, as Thailand was then known,
was located at Thon Buri along the Chao
Phraya River. Beginning in the 1780s, however,
construction began on an easily defensible but
Figure 10.9 Urban Growth in Southeast Asia, 1900–2005. Source: Compiled by authors from various sources.
Historical Geography of Urban Development 425
swampy site located opposite Thon Buri, on
the east bank of the Chao Phraya. Later, major
public works were initiated, often with West-
ern advice and assistance. This is particularly
evident in the expansion of rail and road net-
works, port facilities, and telegraph services.
The most significant impact of colonialism
was the establishment of urban nodes, such as
Bangkok, Manila, Batavia, Saigon, and Ran-
goon (Yangon), that would grow into primate
cities. Geographically, these cities were located
at sites that provided access to seas or rivers.
They afforded the European colonizers easy
access, so that their ships could export primary
products from the region and import secondary
products from Europe and elsewhere. Depend-
ence on maritime trade, and the subsequent
concentration of political and economic func-
tions in these selected cities, contributed to the
decline of other, inland cities. In this manner,
the urban system of Southeast Asia was turned
inside out, as development was encouraged on
the coast and suppressed inland.
The primate cities also served multiple
functions. Thus, political, commercial, finan-
cial, and even religious activities were con-
centrated in these urban areas. Saigon, for
example, was an administrative and manu-
facturing center, as well as the dominant
trading port of Indochina. Primate cities also
became exceptionally large. Stemming from
the increased concentration of economic
and political functions, these cities served as
magnets for both internal and international
Figure 10.10 Fast food—or “good food fast”—is widely available on the streets of Southeast Asian cities. here, early morning breakfast is served in ho Chi Minh City (Saigon). Source: Photo by James tyner.
426 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
migration. Moreover, their populations were
characteristically diverse. In many colonies,
the colonizers encouraged contract labor.
The British, for example, actively encouraged
the importation of labor from China and the
Indian subcontinent (Figure 10.11). By the
nineteenth century, immigration facilitated
the establishment of Chinese communities in
cities such as Singapore, Manila, and Bang-
kok, and an Indian community in Singapore.
As a result, segregated foreign quarters and
Chinatowns emerged, for example, Cholon
in Saigon and Binondo in Manila. It was not
uncommon for these segregated areas to arise
as a result of European force and prejudice.
In Manila, for example, the Spanish govern-
ment issued a series of decrees that required,
with few exceptions, all Chinese, Japanese, and
even Filipinos to leave the Intramuros section
of Manila before the closing of the city gates
at nightfall. Additionally, Spanish authorities
enacted regulations enforcing ethnic segrega-
tion and commercial activity.
Apart from the establishment of primate
cities, a second impact that European colo-
nialism had on Southeast Asian cities was the
establishment or transformation of smaller
cities. This included the establishment of min-
ing towns, such as Ipoh in Malaysia, or regional
administrative centers such as Medan on the
island of Sumatra and Georgetown on the
Malay Peninsula. Also notable was the emer-
gence of upland resort centers or hill stations.
To escape the oppressive heat and humid-
ity of the lowlands, colonial powers would
erect cities high in the mountainous regions.
Bandung, for example, a small city located in
a deep mountain valley on the island of Java,
was established by the Dutch. The cool cli-
mate of Bandung served as a welcome relief
Figure 10.11 bricktown is one of the historic, and now gentrified, neighborhoods of Kuala Lumpur. it was settled by indians, mostly tamils, brought in by the british to make bricks. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Recent Urbanization Trends 427
from the tropical climate and also facilitated
the cultivation of coffee (still known as “Java”
worldwide), cinchona (for quinine), and tea.
Other examples of hill stations include Dalat,
a French-built city located 4,800 feet (1,463
m) above sea level in the Central Highlands of
Vietnam; Baguio City, a mountain resort atop
a 4,900-foot (1,493 m) plateau in the Philip-
pines, developed by the Americans in the early
twentieth century; and the Cameron High-
lands of peninsular Malaysia.
Lastly, European colonialism significantly
affected the development of regional trans-
portation and urban systems within Southeast
Asia. Along the Malay Peninsula, for example,
the British-built railways ran from the Perak
tin-mining areas to the coast and were later
expanded along a north-south axis to provide
access to the ports and tin-smelting facilities
in Penang and Singapore. Consequently, the
major urban areas along the western coast of
the Malay Peninsula—Kuala Lumpur, Ipoh,
Seremban, and Singapore—formed an inter-
connected urban system that remains evident
today. Similar patterns are also visible in Indo-
nesia, where road and rail networks reflect access
between sites of resource extraction (planta-
tions and mines) and ports. To a lesser extent, a
similar colonial-derived infrastructure remains
in the Philippines and the former French Indo-
china. Colonial powers also exploited river
systems (such as the Irrawaddy in Burma, now
Myanmar) for internal transportation systems,
to exert political and economic control, to link
administration functions, and to provide access
to sites of resource extraction.
RECENT URbANIzATION TRENDS
In 1940, no city in Southeast Asia registered a
population of more than a million; by 1950,
just two cities had surpassed this mark. By
the twenty-first century, however, 13 cities
exceeded the 1 million threshold. Three meg-
acities—Jakarta, Manila, and Bangkok—have
also emerged. These massive urban agglomer-
ations contain a disproportionate share of the
region’s urban population and stand as exem-
plary primate cities. Bangkok, for example,
contains more than 54 percent of Thailand’s
urban population, while Manila accounts for
nearly a third of the Philippines’ urban popu-
lation. Such growth is indicative of the pattern
of urbanization that has characterized South-
east Asia throughout the past century.
Recent urban growth in Southeast Asia is
the result of three basic demographic pro-
cesses. First, urban areas in Southeast Asia have
increased in population size resulting from
the excess of births over deaths. In general,
this natural increase accounts for about one-
half of urban population growth in Southeast
Asian countries. It is important to remember,
however, that while overall natural increase
may contribute to urban growth, it may not
contribute significantly to urbanization, that
is, the increasing proportion of people living
in urban areas relative to rural areas. Such
urban growth has dramatically altered count-
less lives throughout the region (Box 10.1)
Second, cities in Southeast Asia have
increased through a net redistribution of
people from rural-to-urban areas through
migration. Studies reflect that, overall, rural-
to-urban migration has resulted from larger
regional and global economic transformation,
and subsequently has played a major role in
both the rapid urbanization and urban growth
in Southeast Asia over the past two decades.
Internal migration is extremely important to
urban growth in Thailand, for example. In
1990, the Thai census recorded more than
1.5 million rural-to-urban migrants, although
428 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
Box 10.1 a Geography of everyday life
Mong bora is a 12-year-old boy. he lives in a stilt-house with his mother, father, and four sisters. the village in which he lives is approximately one hour north of Phnom Penh, Cambo- dia. during the rainy season much of the area is inundated with water, hence the necessity to live in houses perched on stilts. in the surrounding vicinity of bora’s village are acres of rich fields and fish ponds. his diet is typical of many Khmers: a staple of rice and fish, coupled with fresh fruits and vegetables. bora is particularly fond of ripe mangoes, watermelon, and papayas.
increasingly, bora’s village is being encroached upon by urban sprawl from Phnom Penh. this is considered both a blessing and a curse. on the one hand, villagers are concerned about maintaining their way of life. on the other hand, they recognize that urban growth may translate into better economic opportunities. Many residents of Phnom Penh, for exam- ple, visit the area for Sunday picnics, seeking a respite from the chaotic hustle-and-bustle of the capital. And many villagers are able to supplement their incomes from these weekly picnickers. Villagers, like bora’s mother, sell lotus-blossom seeds as snacks, or bottled water. others rent “cabanas” or tent awnings, under which the visitors can escape the intense heat.
bora’s house sits near the base of two hills, the larger of which is called Phnom Reach throp, or “hill of the royal treasury.” in part, it is because of this hill that people, both locals and international travelers, come to the area. between 1618 and 1866, Cambodia’s capital was located at this site. Known as Udong (meaning “victorious”), the former capital once dominated the landscape. today, however, little remains of Udong’s former glory. the passage of time, but mostly the effects of armed conflict, has devastated much of Udong’s former architectural greatness. Several stupas remain at the site, as does a colossal buddha figure. Many of these are currently in the process of being restored, as the site is widely acknowledged as a key piece of Cambodia’s cultural heritage.
on any given morning bora walks 2 km (1.2 miles) to the other side of Phnom Reach throp to attend school. Among his favorite classes is English. he also enjoys learning about Cambodia’s ancient history and geography. it is bora’s dream that these subjects will help him in his chosen career. you see, when bora is not attending school, or playing soccer with his friends, he is informally working as a tour guide for the many visitors who travel to Udong. Walking step-by-step with tourists, bora happily details the specifics of the former capital: how many stairs from one stupa to the next, the height of the buddha, the dates of former kings. in this way bora gets to practice English and earn some extra money to help his family.
Perhaps, if your future travels include the ancient site of Udong, you may be approached by a young man by the name of bora who will offer to guide your tour. be sure to accept, for Udong is bora’s home.
Recent Urbanization Trends 429
there were more than twice as many rural-
to-rural migrants. Currently, approximately
one out of every seven urban residents in
Thailand is classified as a recent migrant. In
Malaysia, with economic growth concentrated
in Kuala Lumpur and Johor Bahru, the city
closest to Singapore, these cities have attracted
sizable numbers of migrants in recent years.
The Central Highlands of Vietnam have also
experienced rapid urban growth through
both government-sponsored and sponta-
neous migration. At the beginning of the
twentieth century, for example, the four prov-
inces that comprise the Central Highlands
(Kontum, Gia Lai, Dak Lak, and Lam Dong)
had a population of approximately 240,000;
today, the region’s population exceeds 4 mil-
lion residents. The majority of these inhabit-
ants, approximately 75 percent of the total, are
lowland migrants, their children, or refugees.
Unfortunately, such remarkable urban growth
has resulted in an escalation of land conflicts
and political violence.
Third, immigration has contributed to the
growth of urban areas in Southeast Asia. This
occurs because, in general, overseas migrants
tend to move to urban areas as opposed to
rural areas. Singapore and, to a lesser extent,
Kuala Lumpur, are two of the major immi-
grant receivers in Southeast Asia. That said,
many governments (including Singapore’s)
often try to prevent immigrants from settling
permanently. Overall, however, urban growth
in Southeast Asia through international
migration remains a relatively insignificant
component. Emigration also is inscribed on
the urban landscape.
A final component of urban change that
must be introduced is “reclassification.” As a
result of bureaucratic decisions, urban popu-
lations may change simply through admin-
istrative acts. In Malaysia, for example, the
number of people needed for an area to be
classified as urban changed from 1,000 to
10,000 in 1970. Such statistical changes reflect
the changing perception of urbanization by
people and their governments.
Within Southeast Asia, over the past two
decades, the combined components of migra-
tion and reclassification account for the larg-
est portion of urban growth (Table 10.1).
There was also considerable variation among
countries. Urban growth in Burma, the Philip-
pines, and Vietnam, for example, has occurred
primarily through natural increase; whereas,
natural increase has assumed a lesser role in
Cambodia, Thailand, Malaysia, and Indo-
nesia. The importance of internal migration
to the urbanization process of Cambodia, of
course, is a consequence of the forced dis-
placement of urban-based people during
the murderous Khmer Rouge regime. At 100
percent urban already, the Republic of Singa-
pore’s population growth consists mostly of
natural increase.
Aggregate numbers such as these mask sig-
nificant social and economic changes that are
occurring. Internal migration in Southeast
Asia, for example, is increasingly dominated
by female migrants, a process that mirrors
that occurring elsewhere in the world, such
as China. In Thailand, for example, the share
of female migrants increased to more than 62
percent of all Bangkok-bound migrants in the
1980s. The increased feminization of internal
migration in Thailand is related to structural
changes occurring in both rural and urban
areas. The majority of these women—most of
whom are in their early twenties—originate
in northeastern Thailand, one of the most
impoverished regions in the country. Faced
with minimal prospects in the rural areas, these
women are increasingly moving to Bangkok
to obtain employment in factories, the service
430 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
sector, or the informal sector. Also, a certain
number of these migrants find employment
in the sex trade and end up working in broth-
els, massage parlors, or strip clubs. Likewise,
internal migration to Jakarta, Manila, and
Phnom Penh has also become more feminized
in response to the structural transformations
occurring in these cities.
Not all internal migration is permanent.
Indeed, many cities in Southeast Asia, but
especially Bangkok and Ho Chi Minh City,
are impacted by daily or seasonal circular
migration. Three factors are readily identifi-
able. First, circulation is highly compatible
with work participation in the urban infor-
mal sector. Migrant laborers are able to cir-
culate between rural villages and urban sites
depending on the season. Circulation thus
offers a flexible solution to the seasonality of
labor demands; laborers are able to work on
the nearby farms during the peak agricultural
period, while during downtimes these same
workers are able to participate in the infor-
mal economy in the city. Second, circular
migration diversifies families’ income-gen-
erating activities. Depending on the relative
economic strength of urban and rural areas,
workers may alternate their activities accord-
ingly. Third, circular migration has, with
advances in transportation systems, become
a more viable option. Improvements in mass
transportation systems, such as paved roads
and mass-transit bus lines, have permitted
people to move with greater ease, thus con-
tributing to the growth of suburban residen-
tial areas. The spectacular urban growth to the
south and west of Ho Chi Minh City is indica-
tive of this process.
Globalization, Urbanization,
and the Middle Class
The most significant development in the
world economy during the past few decades
has been the increased globalization of eco-
nomic activities. The transnational operations
of multinational firms have given rise to a new
international division of labor, one that has
Table 10.1 Components of Urban Growth in Southeast Asia (percentage of urban growth)
1980–1985 1990–1995 2000–2005
Natural Increase
Migration and Reclassification
Natural Increase
Migration and Reclassification
Natural Increase
Migration and Reclassification
Southeast Asia 49.1 80.9 44.9 55.1 41.7 58.3
Cambodia 70.9 29.1 49.5 50.5 30.6 69.4
Indonesia 35.2 64.8 37..0 63.0 36.7 63.3
Laos 43.8 56.2 44.7 55.3 43.8 56.2
Malaysia 22.0 78.0 38.0 62.0 40.0 60.0
Myanmar 110.0 -10.0 63.2 36.8 44.5 55.5 Philippines 66.0 34.0 62.4 37.6 57.0 43.0
Singapore 100.1 -0.1 100.1 -0.1 98.9 1.1 Thailand 39.6 60.4 31.4 68.6 31.2 68.8
Vietnam 71.7 28.3 50.5 49.5 38.1 61.9
Source: Graeme Hugo, “Demographic and Social Patterns,” in Southeast Asia: Diversity and Development, edited by Thomas R.
Leinbach and Richard Ulack, 74–109 (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2000), table 4.17.
Recent Urbanization Trends 431
witnessed a shifting of manufacturing sec-
tor enterprises from developed to developing
economies, and the emergence of new corpo-
rate headquarter activities, producer services,
and research/development sites. Final assem-
bly and testing of audio-video equipment
are located in Singapore and Penang, Malay-
sia; the assembly and packaging, low-skilled
and labor-intensive, in Bangkok, Jakarta, and
Manila; and marketing and sales functions,
mid- to high-end manufacturing, in Singa-
pore. In Southeast Asia, these far-reaching
changes are evidenced by the spectacular
growth of assembly plants in Phnom Penh as
well as the emergence of Cyberjaya, Malaysia’s
high-technology city (the “Silicon Valley of
the East”) that forms the hub of that country’s
Multimedia Super Corridor.
Shifts in the structure of Southeast Asia’s
economies have led to remarkable societal and
occupational changes. Declines in agricul-
tural workers are matched by increases in the
number of workers employed in the service
and manufacturing centers. Consequently,
the increasing portion of clerical, sales, and
service workers, in particular, has translated
into redefined social categories. One change
that is especially salient is the emergence of
a new middle class. And given that many of
the economic transformations have occurred
disproportionately within the urban areas of
Southeast Asia, it should come as no surprise
that the emergent middle class in Southeast
Asia is likewise urban based.
The rise of Southeast Asia’s new urban
middle class has drastically altered the urban
landscape. Demographically, Southeast Asia’s
middle class tends to have smaller families;
economically, it tends to have high and rising
levels of consumption and to spend money
on nonessential items, such as luxury cars.
Many members of this emergent class express
“Western” middle-class fantasies to materi-
ally project their newfound social status. In
terms of housing, Southeast Asia’s middle
class demands more space and more privacy
(hence leading to demand for Western-style
housing in the form of detached and semi-
detached single-family dwellings). Having the
ability to purchase an automobile, the middle
class is able and willing to commute longer
distances to work, thus fueling the sprawl of
cities into traditional agricultural hinterlands.
Others prefer to live closer to the traditional
downtown districts, fueling the proliferation
of condominiums and apartment complexes.
The emergence of the middle class, and its
growing spending power, is likewise reflected
in the mushrooming of shopping malls and
country clubs and in the proliferation of lei-
sure activities and nightclubs. It is seen in the
growth of gourmet restaurants, coffee bars
(Starbucks are becoming all too pervasive),
theaters, galleries, and boutiques.
Cities in Southeast Asia have historically
been segregated. During the colonial years,
British, French, Spanish, and America author-
ities often restricted residential and commer-
cial activities by ethnic classification in their
respective colonies. The Spanish, for example,
disallowed Filipinos from living in Intramuros
Manila; the French restricted Vietnamese set-
tlements in Saigon. Today, segregated areas
remain, but these often reflect class differences
as much as anything. This segregation is epito-
mized by the rise of gated communities.
The desire among the new middle class for
gated communities results from demands for
privacy, security, and prestige. Many of these
new housing developments are equipped with
strictly controlled gates that are fully secured
by armed private guards and monitored by
CCTV. In exclusive villages, entrance is per-
mitted only to residents with proper photo
432 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
ID or to their friends and acquaintances.
Also, many of these villages carry Western-
themed names and architecture and are fully
equipped with top-notch amenities such as
tennis courts, club houses, golf courses, swim-
ming pools, and spacious houses; some even
provide heliports for their residents. Everyday
life in these communities is heavily controlled
by home-owner association rules from the
kinds of designs permitted for houses to cur-
few hours.
The growth of Southeast Asia’s middle class
is a major contributor to the sprawl of its cit-
ies. A key prerequisite for the construction of
gated communities, for example, is land. In
Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh City, and Manila, local
governments have allowed the spread of new
middle-class enclaves on their peripheries and
the conversion of old land uses for middle-class
condominiums in the cities. Many lower-cost
housing units in Phnom Penh, for example,
have been razed in order to erect higher cost
apartments and condominiums for the middle
class. In Manila, informal settlement commu-
nities have been demolished or were dubi-
ously destroyed by fire to make way for new
mixed-use commercial business districts. Such
changes have resulted in conflict.
Often, these new middle-class enclaves
sit side by side with ever-rising numbers of
the urban poor, who continue to migrate
toward cities in search of jobs. Displaced by
land scarcity and the mechanization of agri-
culture, these rural-to-urban migrants must
compete with the wealthy, and now with the
middle class, for limited resources in the cities.
The poor provide their own housing, usually
makeshift structures of corrugated tin, card-
board, or plywood. Often, these structures sit
in sharp contract next to the golf courses and
gated, elitist communities of the better-off.
The urban landscape of Southeast Asia thus
reflects the social and economic transforma-
tions of a region enmeshed in much broader
changes; the growing disparity between the
“haves” and the “have-nots” is all too apparent.
MODELS OF URbAN STRUCTURE
For more than three decades, thinking about
Southeast Asian urbanization has developed
out of T. G. McGee’s model of city structure
(Figure 10.12). Building on a long tradition of
urban modeling in North America, McGee’s
model presumed, first, that no clear zoning
characterizes land use of the large cities of
Southeast Asia. Instead, he proposed that only
two zones of land use remained relatively con-
stant, these being the port district and, on the
periphery of the city, a zone of intensive mar-
ket gardening. In between were areas of mixed
economic activity and land use with other
areas of dominant land use, such as spines
of high-class residential areas and clusters of
squatter settlements.
As cities in Southeast Asia have experi-
enced rapid urban growth, in part associated
with more intense integration into the global
economy, our understanding of these places
has changed considerably. While remnants
of McGee’s initial model are still visible, for
example, a central port zone and mixed land-
use patterns, other aspects of Southeast Asian
cities have been radically transformed. Urban
scholars now speak of extended metropolitan
regions (EMRs). This distinctive form of Asian
urbanization has its origins in the way in which
Asian cities (not limited to Southeast Asia)
have been incorporated into the global econ-
omy. The colonial-influenced primate cities
are increasingly penetrating their surrounding
hinterlands, urbanizing the countryside, and
drawing rural populations deeper and deeper
Models of Urban Structure 433
into the urban economy. In certain respects,
EMRs are similar to metropolitan regions in
the United States. However, EMRs in South-
east Asia differ from their North American
counterparts in that the former exhibit a
greater population density in both the urban
cores and surrounding rural periphery.
EMRs may be differentiated into three basic
forms. The first is the expanding city-state. Sin-
gapore provides the only example. In recent
decades, Singapore has extended its political
and economic influence into the territory of
its neighbors, Indonesia and Malaysia. A sec-
ond type is the low-density EMR, exemplified
by Kuala Lumpur. These EMRs have been able
to maintain relatively low population densities
through the successful development of satel-
lite cities that form a fringe around the domi-
nant urban area. In other words, low-density
EMRs reflect controlled and managed growth,
as opposed to the more rapid and unplanned
growth of other cities. Ho Chi Minh City like-
wise reflects aspects of a low-density EMR.
The third and most prevalent type is the high-
density EMR. This form, epitomized by the
massive cities of Jakarta, Manila, and Bangkok,
exhibits a chaotic spillover of urban economic
functions into the rural hinterland, with an
accompanying conversion of agricultural land
to residential and industrial development.
Related to extended metropolitan regions
is a new urban form, identified by McGee as
a desakota. The term itself is derived from the
Indonesian words for village (desa) and town
(kota) and is meant to capture the process
whereby urbanization overtakes its surround-
ing hinterland. A number of elements have
been associated with desakotas. First, these
cities exhibit considerable diversity in their
land use. Characteristically, a desakota region
encompasses cities with mixed residential
and industrial land uses, as well as a densely
Figure 10.12 A Generalized Model of Major Land Use in the Large Southeast Asian City. Source: t. G. McGee, The Southeast Asian City (new york: Praeger, 1967), 128.
434 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
Box 10.2 From Hacienda to Mixed-use Suburbia
“you don’t have the right!” (“Wala kayong karapatan!”), shouted the lead architect of a development firm to a large group of farmers on the picket line. on May 21, 2010, violence erupted between a group of pro-development supporters (including the architect, surveyors, and members of both the military and the local police) and resisting farmers in buntog, an upland community in Canlubang, Laguna, Philippines. during the incident, around a hundred farmers and activists were hurt. Eleven people, including a pregnant woman and a 70-year- old grandmother, were illegally jailed, two other people were badly beaten by the police, and an elderly man suffered a heart attack. this is just one of the many cases of violence faced by farmers resisting urban development in the past decade.
buntog is part of the former Canlubang Sugar Estate, or hacienda yulo. the 7,200-hectare (17,800-acre) estate is owned by one of the Philippines’ most powerful elite families, but the farmers of buntog have been living in the area since the early 1900s when the region was still an unoccupied forest. the farmers cleared the forest and planted coconut trees and other crops. in the ensuing years, the vast tract of land near buntog was purchased by an American conglomerate, Ehrman-Switzer, who established the Calamba Sugar Estate. nationalist calls for independence and World War ii provided an effective context that transferred the estate to the hands of Filipino elite families. thus it was that Jose yulo purchased the estate using a war reparation loan and renamed the hacienda “Canlubang Sugar Estate.” Local farmers, deprived of access to lands that they historically farmed, were forced to find employment as sugarcane plantation workers. Later, many of these farmers filed a formal petition to acquire the title of their land; but, surprisingly, found out that yulo’s sugar estate had extended into their community.
in 1988, the Philippine government enacted the Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program that sought to redistribute large landholdings to tenant farmers. but the yulos of Canlubang had different plans. in fact, they had been converting parcels of the whole estate into indus- trial sites and golf courses a decade prior to land reform. they successfully reclassified the area as industrial and therefore received an exemption to redistribute their lands to farmers in the area. in 1996, the sugar estate closed and farming was prohibited in large sections of the estate. through their many corporations, the yulo family entered into joint-venture agreements with top real estate firms to develop mixed-use urban projects that combined gated communities, golf courses, and commercial districts. the most ambitious of these development projects is nuvali, a 1,700-hectare (4,200-acre) joint-venture master-planned township project with Ayala Land Corporation. this “city of the future” is promoted as the Philippines’ first “eco-community” and boasts of blend of “environmentally sustainable” resi- dential, commercial, and recreational developments.
not all is what is seems, however. numerous cases of military intimidation and illegal cutting of coconut trees have been reported. the entire estate has been littered with secu- rity posts that serve to control the movement of residents in the area. Famers have been prohibited from taking their produce to nearby markets and from bringing in much-needed
Distinctive Cities 435
populated wet-rice agricultural area. Within a
desakota, moreover, there is significant inter-
action between village and town. This is made
possible by an integrated transportation sys-
tem that permits high levels of population
mobility. Indeed, the increased daily commut-
ing patterns seen in Bangkok testify to this
increased circulation within that desakota. Sec-
ond, these regions also are strongly integrated
into the global economy. Foreign investment
is generally important in these areas, as mul-
tinational corporations tap into large and
readily available labor surpluses. Lastly, it is
the process of formation of the desakota that
is perhaps more important than the result-
ing pattern itself, because surrounding rural
areas become urbanized without the transfer
of population that occurs in, say, rural-to-
urban migration. On many occasions, urban
transformation of rural areas involves dispos-
session and displacement of farmers and other
rural residents. For example, there has been a
large-scale conversion of agricultural lands
in provinces adjacent to Metro Manila into
industrial parks, ecotourism developments,
and gated communities. These developments
have effectively displaced many farming com-
munities and often involve violence between
resisting farmers, the military, and landlords’
security forces (Box 10.2).
DISTINCTIVE CITIES
Singapore: World City of Southeast Asia
There is truly no other city in the world quite
like Singapore (Figure 10.13). Its striking
modernity, orderliness, and Disneyland-like
cleanliness seem unreal, especially if one has
just arrived from the sprawling, chaotic, and
noisome cities of Bangkok, Jakarta, or Manila.
To some, Singapore is a model of efficiency,
a mosaic of well-manicured lawns, efficient
transportation, and planned development.
To others, Singapore represents a draconian
police state masquerading as utopia. The real-
ity, of course, lies somewhere in between, and
depends on one’s personal tastes and values.
Singapore is unique within Southeast Asia,
and in the world, in that it is both a city as
well as a sovereign state. And it is small. At just
246 sq miles (640 sq km), it is one-fifth the
area of Rhode Island. But despite its size, Sin-
gapore is also very prosperous. In per-capita
income, the city-state is second only to Japan
in all of Asia. In part, Singapore’s economic
success has been tied to its geography. Both
historically and now, the city benefits from
its strategic location and superb natural har-
bor. Furthermore, effective government poli-
cies and dynamic leadership have propelled
Singapore into its role as Southeast Asia’s
materials for house repair. in addition, a water tank facility project in the community was halted by the landlords, who argued that the whole area is their “private” property.
the contestation over land in buntog is not isolated. For many former haciendas in the Philippines, land-use conversion and urbanization have become effective means by landlords to circumvent land reform and to squeeze land for profit. Around Manila and its hinterlands, many new mixed-used urban developments are built on lands with painful histories of dis- possession and violence.
436 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
leading port and industrial nexus, as well as
a leading banking and commercial center.
Indeed, Singapore ranks along with Tokyo and
Hong Kong as one of Asia’s three key urban
centers in today’s global economic system.
Singapore’s economy is based on a strong
manufacturing sector (initially processing raw
materials such as rubber, but more recently
electronics and electrical products), oil refin-
ing, financial and business services, and tour-
ism. The economic success of Singapore has
translated into a very favorable quality of life.
Singapore registers the region’s lowest infant
mortality rate and the lowest rate of popula-
tion increase, in addition to the highest per-
capita income. This quality of life is facilitated
through subsidized medical care and compul-
sory retirement programs.
Singapore is a truly cosmopolitan world
city. The affluence of Singapore is vividly seen
along the city-state’s major shopping and
tourist corridor, Orchard Road. In the 1830s,
this area was home to fruit orchards, nutmeg
plantations, and pepper farms. Now, the man-
goes, nutmeg, and peppers are gone, replaced
by jeweled necklaces, designer clothes, and
perfumes. Orchard Road currently extends 1.5
miles (2.4 km) and is lined with major shop-
ping centers, upscale boutiques, luxury hotels,
and entertainment centers such as the Raffles
Village (built around the carefully restored
classic Raffles Hotel, one of the great hotels of
the past).
True to its place at the center of South-
east Asia, the urban landscape of Singapore
reflects its rich ethnic heritage. Approximately
75 percent of Singapore’s population is eth-
nic Chinese; Malays and Indians constitute
15 percent and 7 percent of the population,
respectively. Consequently, Singapore has four
official languages: English, Mandarin Chinese,
Malay, and Tamil, a language of southern
Figure 10.13 the Singapore River was at the very heart of commercial life in Singapore. A hundred years ago, it would have been packed with junks, with wharves and warehouses along both sides. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Distinctive Cities 437
financial district now eclipse Chinatown’s
oceanfront view.
Given the large number of historical tem-
ples and monuments, urban preservation is
important in Singapore, although this has not
always been the case. During the 1960s and
1970s, for example, many older buildings were
demolished to make room for a more mod-
ern infrastructure. However, a movement to
preserve Singapore’s urban history was initi-
ated, both for reasons of national prestige and
tourism. Today, many areas, such as the water-
fronts along Collyer Quay and Boat Quay,
have been renovated.
Singapore is also instructive for its public-
housing programs. Beginning in the 1960s, the
Singaporean government, primarily through
the efforts of the Housing Development Board
(HDB), moved to ensure adequate housing for
its population. The result was the establish-
ment of numerous new towns and housing
estates. The Queenstown housing estate, for
example, located in the central region of Singa-
pore, was one of the earliest estates developed
by the HDB. Tao Payoh New Town and Ang
Mo Kio New Town, both located within the
Northeastern Region, were initiated in 1965
and 1973, respectively. A more recent develop-
ment is Woodlands New Town, located on the
northern coast of Singapore. These new towns
are designed to be self-sufficient communities
of many thousands of residents. Moreover, in
recognition of Singapore’s ethnic diversity, the
government has mandated ethnic-based occu-
pancy rates to offset the emergence of hyper-
segregated enclaves. By 2000, nearly 90 percent
of Singaporeans lived in one of the high-den-
sity housing estates built by the HDB.
Despite these successes, urbanization in Sin-
gapore remains, and will continue to remain,
hindered by two physical obstacles. First, Sin-
gapore cannot readily—or cheaply—expand
Figure 10.14 this colorful and finely detailed indian temple in Singapore is one of the best- known cultural landmarks of the city. Source: Photo by James tyner.
India and Sri Lanka. The immigrant history of
Singapore, moreover, is well preserved in the
city-state’s architecture (Figure 10.14). The
Chinatown area of Singapore, for example,
located at the mouth of the Singapore River,
began in 1821, when the first junk load of
Chinese immigrants arrived from Xiamen, in
Fujian province. In 1842, these Chinese immi-
grants completed the Thian Hock Keng Tem-
ple and dedicated it to Ma-Chu-Po (Matsu),
the goddess of the sea. Nearby is the Nagore
Durgha Shrine, built by Muslim immigrants
from south India, and further down the road
is the Al-Abrar Mosque, also known as Indian
Mosque, which was built between 1850 and
1855. Because of land reclamation projects,
the ultramodern skyscrapers of Singapore’s
438 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
Box 10.3 a thirsty Singapore
Water is arguably the single most critical site-need for a city to survive and prosper. Singa- pore provides a surprising illustration of this need. Given that Singapore occupies an island located in the tropics and receives an average of 240 cm (95 in) of rainfall per year, it is ironic that water constitutes one of the greatest obstacles to the city-state’s future. Resi- dential and industrial water consumption amounts to approximately 1.3 million cubic meters per day.
Water is a serious problem for Singapore because the island contains no significant riv- ers or lakes to collect freshwater and so must rely on reservoirs and storm-water collection ponds to provide freshwater for its 5.4 million inhabitants. Approximately 40 percent of Singapore’s water, however, is supplied by Malaysia. historically, the provision of water by Malaysia to Singapore was guaranteed by two bilateral agreements, although one of these expired in 2011 and was not renewed. the second is set to expire in 2061, providing a sense of urgency for Singapore to become self-sufficient in its water needs.
Singapore has initiated a series of conservation measures. these include public education and publicity programs advocating the rational use of water. Significantly, many of these water-oriented initiatives are coupled with broader environmental campaigns. thus, public awareness campaigns are directed not simply at the conservation of water, but also toward issues of pollution, hygiene, infectious diseases, and sanitation.
the installation of water-saving devices, such as flow regulators and low capacity flush- ing systems, is also mandatory. this latter measure is especially significant since household water-use—and particularly the flushing of toilets—accounts for more than 50 percent of water consumption. Within the industrial sector, the recycling of water and the substitution of non-potable water (e.g., sea water, rain water) for potable water has also been encour- aged. other measures, including water consumption taxes, have been implemented.
Aside from the conservation of water, Singapore has pursued other strategies to provide more water, such as the construction of desalinization plants. in total, these plants may pro- vide 40 percent of Singapore’s water needs. however, energy requirements are enormous for these plants, making desalinated water exceptionally expensive. Additional reservoirs may also help ease Singapore’s thirst, although the development of these projects is hindered by land shortages. Lastly, Singapore has looked beyond its immediate geographic surroundings to obtain sources of water. in 1991, for example, Singapore signed a memorandum of under- standing with indonesia to draw water from bintan island in the Riau Archipelago and from the Kampar River in Sumatra. this solution, though, simply replaces Singapore’s dependency on Malaysia with one on indonesia.
one thing is certain: a glass of drinkable water in Singapore will cost more in the future than it does today.
Distinctive Cities 439
preeminent commercial centers on the pen-
insula. In 1972, however, Kuala Lumpur
gained city status and was declared a Federal
Territory (similar to Washington’s District of
Columbia).
Kuala Lumpur experienced tremendous
population growth throughout the late
twentieth century. Currently, the population
is approximately 2 million. However, unlike
Bangkok and Manila, Kuala Lumpur has
made a more concerted effort to manage
urban growth. Planned satellite cities, for
example, were designed to the urban conges-
tion of the capital. In the 1950s, the satellite
city of Petaling Jaya was established; it is now
home to more than 500,000 residents and a
major industrial center. Nearby, the satellite
town of Shah Alam, initially planned to be
half residential and half industrial, was built
in the 1970s. Although shantytowns are visible
in parts of Kuala Lumpur, as a whole the city
exhibits a sedate orderliness more reminiscent
of Singapore than of other Southeast Asian
cities.
The economy of Kuala Lumpur is an excep-
tionally diverse mix of manufacturing and
service activities. Many of these industries are
clustered within the Klang Valley conurba-
tion, an urbanized corridor stretching from
Kuala Lumpur westward through Petaling
Jaya and Shah Alam to the port city of Klang.
Also, indicative of the information economies
emerging in Southeast Asia, Kuala Lumpur is
a key anchor in Malaysia’s “Multimedia Super
Corridor” (MSC). Planned to be a setting
for multimedia and information-technology
companies, the MSC is seen as the catalyst in
propelling Malaysia’s economy into the global
information age. In related developments, two
new cities have been constructed to the south
of Kuala Lumpur: Putrajaya, the “new” admin-
istrative capital of Malaysia, and Cyberjaya,
its area because it occupies only a small island.
In response, the Singaporean government has
utilized land reclamation schemes and has
also been working to expand its economic
growth beyond its own political boundaries
into neighboring Malaysia and Indonesia. In
this manner, the government hopes to exploit
the comparative advantages of Singapore and
neighboring countries. A second, and perhaps
more immediate, obstacle confronting Singa-
pore is that of water (Box 10.3).
Kuala Lumpur: Twin Towers and Cyberspace
The skyline of Kuala Lumpur is one of the most
recognizable sights in all of Southeast Asia.
While Paris has its Eiffel Tower and Shanghai
its futuristic TV tower, Kuala Lumpur has the
88-story Petronas Twin Towers. Standing like
a giant double-barreled beehive, the Petronas
Towers dominate the capital city of Malaysia
(Figure 10.15). They are Kuala Lumpur’s sig-
nature landscape and are symbolic of the lofty
goals set by the Malaysian government.
Kuala Lumpur is a relatively young city,
having been founded only in 1857 by Chi-
nese tin miners at the swampy confluence of
the Klang and Gombak rivers (Figure 10.16).
In fact, the name “Kuala Lumpur” translates
as “muddy confluence.” The settlement grew
rapidly, however, and by 1880 had become the
capital of the state of Selangor on the Malay
Peninsula.
Despite its growing political importance,
Kuala Lumpur throughout much of the early
twentieth century was still overshadowed in
population by other cities along the Malay
Peninsula, including Georgetown to the
north and Singapore to the south. Although
it was designated capital of the Federated
States of Malaysia in 1963, Kuala Lumpur
trailed both Singapore and Georgetown as
440 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
billed as an “intelligent city,” complete with a
state-of-the-art, integrated infrastructure that
attracts multimedia and information-technol-
ogy companies.
Putrajaya is especially notable as a planned
city. Ambitious in scope, Putrajaya has become
a national symbol, reflecting the country’s
determination to become a regional if not
global power. Consisting of scores of monu-
mental office buildings, modern shopping
malls, convention centers, and private colleges,
Putrajaya has become the face of twenty-first-
century Malaysia.
Jakarta: Megacity of Indonesia
Most visitors to Indonesia arrive first in
Jakarta, a sprawling metropolis situated on
the north coast of Java. At two-and-a-half
times the size of Singapore, Jakarta is the larg-
est city in population and land area in South-
east Asia. From its origins as a small port
Figure 10.15 When Kuala Lumpur’s Petronas towers opened in 1999, they became the world’s tallest, a title they held until 2004. Source: Photo by Jared boone.
Distinctive Cities 441
town called Sunda Kelapa, the Special Capital
Region of Jakarta (Daerah Khusus Ibukota,
or DKI Jakarta) has experienced phenomenal
growth over the past five decades. From fewer
than 2 million in 1950, Jakarta’s population
had swollen to more than 13 million by 2000.
As with many primate cities in Southeast
Asia, urban growth has sprawled into the hin-
terland. In recognition of this sprawl, in the
mid-1970s officials began to refer to the entire
region as Jabotabek, an acronym derived from
the combination of Jakarta and the adjacent
districts of Bogor, Tangerang, and Bekasi.
When the entire Jabotebek region is consid-
ered, the population of the Jakarta metropoli-
tan area includes a mind-boggling 20 million
people. Similar to other major cities in the
region, Jakarta’s population is also impacted
by seasonal and daily commuting. Hundreds
of thousands of workers, the majority of
whom live in new residential communities
in the Jabotabek region, commute daily to
Jakarta.
Jakarta is Indonesia’s largest and most
important metropolitan area. It is the national
capital and the principal administrative and
commercial center of the archipelago. The
city also plays a vital role in Indonesia’s inter-
national and domestic trade and receives a
disproportionate share of foreign direct invest-
ment. This investment, focused primarily on
manufacturing but also on the construction
and service sectors, operates as a multiplier
effect for Jakarta’s economy. It also accounts
for a rapid rise in the middle class, with a cor-
responding impact on the urban landscape. In
some respects, though, Jakarta has undergone
a period of deindustrialization similar to that
of other cities in the world, such as London.
Thus, although the city remains an impor-
tant manufacturing center, economic growth
has been accounted for largely by increases in
Figure 10.16 A mosque, Jamek bandaraya, backed by the downtown skyline, now occupies the original site of Kuala Lumpur, a “muddy confluence” of two streams seen in this picture. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
442 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
both tertiary and quaternary sectors (espe-
cially financial services, communications, and
transportation).
Economic and social changes have also con-
tributed to changing land-use patterns. The
central core of Jakarta has experienced signifi-
cant changes over the past decade, such as a
conversion from residential to higher-inten-
sity commercial and office land use, as well
as the emergence of luxury high-rise apart-
ments. In the Jabotabek region, the develop-
ment of new towns (e.g., Lippo City, Cikarang
New Town, and Pondok Gede New Town) and
corresponding large-scale residential subdivi-
sions has also transformed previously agricul-
tural land into urban spaces. Indeed, upwards
of eighty thousand new housing units are
added each year to the Jabotabek region.
Other changes include the emergence of larger
industrial estates as well as leisure-related land
uses (e.g., golf courses).
Jakarta also reflects the urban woes char-
acteristic of primate cities, including a lack of
adequate public housing, traffic congestion,
air and water pollution, sewage disposal, and
the provision of health services, education, and
utilities. Because of the megacity’s sheer size,
not to mention the heightened political, social,
and economic instability of Indonesia, Jakarta’s
problems are magnified to dangerous levels.
Manila: Primate City of the Philippines
Unlike walking the regimented, disciplined
streets of Singapore and Kuala Lumpur, trave-
ling within Manila is an experience unto
itself. Indeed, with the possible exception of
Bangkok, no other city in Southeast Asia is as
famous—or infamous—as Manila for its traf-
fic. Throughout the day, and frequently well
into the night, traffic grinds slowly through
the rabbit-den of highways and alleyways that
constitute Manila’s overburdened road net-
work. Diesel-spewing jeepneys, rickety buses,
and luxury sports utility vehicles all compete
in bumper-car-like fashion. Turn lanes and
stoplights are largely ignored. Yet beyond the
chaos and congestion that puts the freeways of
Los Angeles to shame, Manila exhibits its own
charm and appeal. Indeed, much of Manila’s
charm stems precisely from its outwardly con-
fusing appearance.
Politically, socially, economically, and in
terms of total population, Manila far sur-
passes all other cities in the Philippines
(Figure 10.17). Indeed, with the exception
of Thailand, no other major country in the
region has a higher primacy rate than the
Philippines. Currently, Manila is approxi-
mately nine times as large as the Philippines’
second-largest metropolitan area, Cebu. And
similar to Jakarta’s Jabotabek, Metro Manila
is composed of many different political units.
In 1975, Metro Manila was formed through
the integration of the four preexisting, politi-
cally separate cities of Manila, Quezon City,
Kaloocan, and Pasay, plus 13 municipalities.
The nature of governance and administration
of the metropolitan region has changed over
the years since its original inception, from a
more centralized Metro Manila Commission
(MMC) headed by Imelda Marcos as gover-
nor to its current monitoring and coordinat-
ing form as the Metro Manila Development
Authority (MMDA).
The Metro Manila region, reminiscent of
Harris and Ullman’s multiple nuclei model, is
a polynucleated area with many distinct per-
sonalities. Binondo, for example, located next
to the Pasig River, was originally a Christian
Chinese commercial district during the Span-
ish colonial period and to this day remains
the heart of Manila’s Chinatown. Nearby
is Tondo, today an impoverished, densely
Distinctive Cities 443
populated district of rental blocks; prior to
the arrival of the Spanish, it was a collection
of Muslim villages. To the south, abutting
Manila Bay, is Ermita. Once a small fish-
ing village, the area developed into a prime
tourist destination, packed with bars, night-
clubs, strip shows, and massage parlors. In
recent years, however, these establishments
were closed down in Ermita and many have
since relocated to other areas of Manila. As a
final example, Makati, originally a small mar-
ket village, is now Manila’s major financial
center, occupied by banks and multinational
and national corporations. Makati also con-
tains some of Manila’s most expensive hous-
ing subdivisions, sprawling box-like shopping
centers, and five-star hotels.
Within the greater Manila Metropolitan
region is Quezon City. Named after Manuel
Quezon (president of the Commonwealth of
the Philippines from 1934 to 1946), Quezon
City was the Philippines’ national capital
from 1948 to 1976. Now it is home to many
important government buildings, medical
centers, and universities, including the main
campuses of the University of the Philippines
and Ateneo de Manila University. Quezon City
also consists of upscale, gated residential com-
munities patrolled by armed guards. These
estates, home to middle- and upper-class resi-
dents, are equipped with luxurious air-con-
ditioned homes, tennis and basketball courts,
golf courses, and swimming pools. However,
reflective of Manila’s complex land usage, as
well as the highly polarized nature of Philip-
pine society, just outside of these gated com-
munities are numerous squatter settlements.
Characteristic of large cities in Southeast
Asia, Manila exhibits an increasing number of
consumer spaces. In recent years, large shop-
ping malls have been built, catering to a ris-
ing middle class. For many visitors, these malls
are remarkably similar to those found in the
United States and Europe. Major department
stores anchor the malls, while in between are
dozens of specialty stores, food courts, and
Figure 10.17 Motorbikes are one way of breaking through traffic jams on bangkok’s overcrowded streets. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
444 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
entertainment. The SM Megamall, for exam-
ple, in addition to its numerous stores and res-
taurants, contains an ice skating rink, bowling
lanes, a 12-screen cinema, and an arcade room.
Meanwhile, multiple high-end condominium
projects have been built in many parts of
Metro Manila that cater to returning Overseas
Filipinos and urban professionals. In many
cases, these condominium projects were devel-
oped beside malls and shopping complexes.
For example, the proposed Entertainment City
in Manila, a mixed-use leisure complex of casi-
nos, condominium units, and shopping malls,
is planned for development on a previously
reclaimed area near Manila Bay.
Similar to both Jakarta and Bangkok, the
increased concentration of foreign direct
investment into the Philippines has translated
into rapid changes in the economy of Manila,
as well as in land use. During the 1990s, the
greater Metro Manila region and the sur-
rounding provinces experienced remarkable
industrial and manufacturing growth. This
expansion, however, occurred at the expense
of Manila’s rural and agrarian hinterland.
Metro Manila is, in fact, located toward the
center of the Philippines’ major rice-produc-
ing region, and continued urban sprawl is rap-
idly encroaching on these agricultural areas.
Urban poverty and landlessness continue
to be major problems in Manila. The extent
of these problems, however, remains a con-
tested issue. Estimates of the number of poor
vary widely, ranging from 1.6 million to more
than 4.5 million. What is certain, however,
is that landownership in Manila is decidedly
uneven, with the majority of its population
being landless. High urban land values mean
that the majority of residents are unable to
obtain legal housing, a situation exacerbated
by continued high rates of in-migration. Their
recourse is to resort to illegal housing and to
settle in urban fringe areas, such as along rail-
road tracks and in vacant lots. Residents of
squatter settlements are subject to deplorable
health conditions and pollution problems,
stemming from inadequate access to sanitary
and plumbing facilities. They often must pur-
chase fresh water from itinerant water ven-
dors. Historically, squatter settlements have
been demolished and their residents evicted.
More recently, the Philippine government has
attempted to provide low-cost housing for its
urban poor through joint-venture agreements
with private developers. But with relocation
sites that are far away from the city and insuf-
ficient facilities in many of the housing pro-
jects, many settlers end up returning to the
metropolis.
Aside from poverty, Manila faces other seri-
ous problems. Accessibility to water, for exam-
ple, looms large. Manila is also confronted
with serious air and water pollution problems,
as well as an inadequate sewerage system.
Indeed, during the rainy season many streets
throughout Manila, such as those in the port
district and Tondo, become impassable due to
flooding.
Bangkok: The Los Angeles of the Tropics
Bangkok, at 34 times the size of Thailand’s
second-largest city, is the textbook example
of urban primacy. While only one-fifth of the
country is urbanized, fully two-thirds of this
urban population is concentrated in the Bang-
kok Metropolitan Region (BMR). Currently,
the core of Bangkok has a population of about
6 million; when the entire BMR is considered,
the region’s population is more than 10 mil-
lion. Furthermore, like the ocean’s tides, Bang-
kok’s population ebbs and flows, both daily
and seasonally. An estimated 1 million people
commute daily into Bangkok, while hundreds
Distinctive Cities 445
of thousands of other workers seasonally cir-
culate throughout the city in search of tempo-
rary jobs in the informal sector. This seasonal
migration is particularly acute in the hot, dry
months of February and March, a slack agri-
cultural period.
The official name of Bangkok is Krung
Thep, which translates as “The City of Angels”
(the same meaning as Los Angeles). And in
many respects, notably traffic, pollution, and
urban sprawl, Bangkok might be considered
the Los Angeles of Southeast Asia. For that
matter, Los Angeles may be considered the
Bangkok of the United States of America.
Currently, Bangkok remains poised to
become an international communications
and financial center, as well as a major trans-
portation hub in Asia. Initially, much of Bang-
kok’s growth was tied to massive amounts
of investment brought about by the United
States’ involvement in the Vietnam War. Dur-
ing the 1960s, in particular, Bangkok served as
a major military supply base. In subsequent
decades, it continued to attract large sums of
foreign investment. Between 1979 and 1990,
nearly 70 percent of all foreign investment
projects in Thailand were concentrated in
the BMR. Economically, Bangkok has capital-
ized on its reserves of cheap labor, favorable
tax incentives, and (until recently) political
stability.
Similar to Jakarta and Manila, Bangkok is
a multinucleated city. And while the “old city”
remains the principal administrative and reli-
gious core of Bangkok, considerable expan-
sion has occurred into surrounding districts.
Bangkok has also experienced a rapid conver-
sion of land use, with many residential areas
in the city being converted to commercial use
and former small shop houses being trans-
formed into high-rise office buildings and
large shopping complexes.
The over-urbanization of Bangkok has
resulted in serious environmental problems.
Air and water quality have deteriorated in
recent years, while the disposal of solid waste
is an ongoing problem. Also, Bangkok is sink-
ing. Due to the overdrawing of well water, the
city suffers from land subsidence, as its eleva-
tion drops at a rate of about 10 cm (3.9 in)
per year. Indeed, some areas have subsided
by more than 3 feet (0.91 m) since the 1950s.
Global warming should be firmly on the
minds of Bangkok’s urban planners!
Bangkok is also plagued by severe transpor-
tation problems (Figure 10.18). The number
of motor vehicles (excluding the ubiquitous
motorbikes) increased from 243,000 in 1972
to more than a million in 1990; concurrently,
only about 50 miles of primary roads were
added. As a result, the average speed on most
roads in Bangkok is less than six miles per
hour. Numerous proposals and strategies have
been advanced to rectify traffic congestion,
including increased road capacity measures,
improvements in public mass-transit systems,
improvements in the traffic control system,
and strategies to control the volume of traffic
(e.g., staggered employment hours to reduce
peak commuting traffic). The government is
also encouraging the growth of satellite cities
as a means of promoting regional economic
growth and to the congestion of Bangkok.
Phnom Penh, Ho Chi Minh City,
Hanoi: Socialist Cities in Transition
In the early morning, the dusty streets of
Phnom Penh are alive with swarms of noisy
motorbikes that surge like schools of fish. Lux-
ury cars and sports utility vehicles compete
for limited space with the motorbikes. Plod-
ding along the roadsides, in a vain attempt
to escape the mechanized frenzy of Phnom
446 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
Penh’s traffic, are converted tractors with
wooden trailers that ferry scores of young
women—all dressed in identical green-and-
white uniforms—to the foreign-owned assem-
bly plants that ring the periphery of the city.
Such is Phnom Penh in the twenty-first cen-
tury: a frantic, disorderly city that is rebuild-
ing after decades of tumultuous revolutions
and genocide. The experience (and landscape)
of Phnom Penh, combined with those of Ho
Chi Minh City and Hanoi, provide vivid proof
that urbanization is intimately associated with
broader social movements.
On April 17, 1975 the Khmer Rouge
marched through the hot and dusty streets
of Phnom Penh, bringing to an end years of
armed conflict tied to the broader Indochina
Wars. Their arrival marked also the begin-
ning of a four-year period known today as
the ‘Cambodian genocide’. During the Khmer
Rouge-era, upwards of one-quarter of Cam-
bodia’s population—approximately 2 million
men, women, and children—died from tor-
ture, execution, famine, and lack of medical
care. Today, Phnom Penh still bears the scars
of its genocidal past, although these are slow-
ing being repaired. The streets of Phnom
Penh, unpaved and pockmarked with potholes
in 2001, now shimmer darkly with fresh albeit
cracked asphalt. Where once stood hollowed-
out buildings, destroyed by war and neglect,
now stand freshly painted apartment buildings
Figure 10.18 traditional Manila contrast with modern Manila as the city attempts to accommodate the rapidly expanding population by going up and spilling out onto the city’s streets. Source: Photo by Arnisson Andre ortega.
Distinctive Cities 447
and shopping complexes. Phnom Penh is
indeed rebuilding, though not without diffi-
culties; and this urban growth reflects a new
orientation toward the global economy. For
example, along the major road linking Phnom
Penh and Cambodia’s Pochentong Interna-
tional Airport, multinational corporations
have established a visible presence, in the form
of assembly plants and factories. Also notable
are the myriad satellite cities developed or in
the process of development (Box 10.4).
In Vietnam, similar changes are under-
way. The population of Saigon (now Ho Chi
Minh City), like that of Phnom Penh, had also
increased dramatically through in-migration
and refugee flows. By 1975, Saigon had an esti-
mated 4.5 million people. Following the com-
munist victory, the new government of the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam relocated
about 1 million people.
The process of deurbanization in these
socialist countries was often accompanied
by a refashioning of the cities. Initially, West-
ern-style establishments and customs were
replaced with a Spartan milieu. Cities, most
notably Hanoi, were drab and monotonous,
composed of row upon row of uniform, box-
like buildings. Conforming to socialist ide-
ology, the new governments attempted to
eliminate the private sector; and shops, restau-
rants, hotels, and services were generally run
by government enterprises or cooperatives.
Consequently, cities were typically devoid of
the mass advertising and consumer spectacles
that are commonplace in capitalist cities. The
new governments fostered symbolic changes as
well. The renaming of Saigon to honor Ho Chi
Minh, who led the fight against the French and
established communism in Vietnam, provides
the clearest illustration. Another visible differ-
ence between socialist and capitalist cities was
the traffic. In Hanoi, the streets were practically
empty of motor vehicles, save for an occasional
Soviet-era limousine and a few battered and
decrepit buses. Instead, bicycles thronged the
streets, especially during peak hours, when
residents cycled to and from work and school.
Following this initial stage, socialist gov-
ernments entered into a second, bureaucratic
stage wherein longer-term strategies of social-
ist urbanization were implemented. Especially
in Vietnam, the socialist government devel-
oped spatial strategies to ameliorate the prob-
lems of large cities, including the provision
of adequate food, employment, and housing.
Policies were enacted to restrict population
mobility, thereby affording relief to the infra-
structure of large urban areas, such as Ho Chi
Minh City and Da Nang.
Although economic reforms were first
introduced in Vietnam in 1979, it was not
until 1986, with the initiation of doi moi
(renovation), the slogan for the government’s
new development strategy, that substantial
economic improvement occurred and with it,
rapid changes to the urban landscape. Doi moi
entails the gradual introduction of capitalist
elements, including private ownership, foreign
investment, and market competition. Vietnam
remains politically committed to socialism,
but economically the country is exhibiting a
shift toward capitalism and a greater level of
integration into the global economy.
Geographically, economic reforms initially
focused on the southern region of Vietnam,
and especially Ho Chi Minh City, because of
that city’s much longer tradition with free-
market economics and linkages with the
outside world. Approximately 80 percent of
all foreign investment flowing into Vietnam
was directed toward the south. Investments in
tourism, assembly, and manufacturing were
concentrated in the larger urban areas. Ho
Chi Minh City (still called Saigon by many
448 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
Box 10.4 Satellite Cities in Southeast asia
Located on the peri-urban fringe of ho Chi Minh City, Phu My hung (“Saigon South”) is a newly developed satellite city covering over 3,300 hectares of prime real estate. it is also a highly circumscribed and contradictory space. When fully built, it will include exclusive resi- dential areas, university centers, high-tech zones, and innumerable parks, golf courses, and sports centers. however, surveillance is pervasive, with watchful closed-circuit television monitors, patrolling armed guards, and countless security gates. Visitors are even restricted, if not prohibited, in their ability to take photographs of the new city.
Phu My hung is one of many new satellite cities being planned or developed throughout Southeast Asia. Ranging in size from a few hundred to several thousand hectares, these mod- ern monuments to the power of money are a both a legacy of past practice and a harbinger of things to come. on the one hand, the development of satellite cities is a continuation of the growth of “new towns” that sprouted up throughout the region in the aftermath of World War ii. in Singapore and Malaysia, for example, many new towns were constructed in response to increased population pressures resulting from rapid industrialization and high- levels of rural-to-urban migration. on the other hand, these satellite cities reflect a very different process, symptomatic of deeper neoliberal changes underway throughout Southeast Asia. notably, the satellite cities of the twenty-first century are being developed mainly by private companies, many of which are located throughout East and Southeast Asia, on a for-profit basis. Phu My hung, for example, is financed by taiwanese developers; Camko City, proximate to Phnom Penh, is being constructed by a South Korean firm; and Grand Phnom Penh international City is being developed by an indonesia Company.
Satellite cities are by their very nature exclusive developments. Marketed to a growing upper-middle-class as well as wealthy expatriates, these cities boast all the amenities of urban living with (supposedly) none of the associated problems. Camko City, for example, is being constructed at an estimated cost of US$2 billion. Set to be completed in 2018, Camko City will host private villas, townhouses, and several high-rise condominiums, all serviced by high-speed information and telecommunication lines, electronic security systems, and sustainable environmental systems. its commercial area will include a convention center, exhibition center, financing center, and trade center, all served by top-of-the-line hotels.
the governments of Vietnam, Cambodia, and other recipient countries have been hugely supportive of these private initiatives. on the one hand, it is thought (or hoped!) that satel- lite cities will relieve the congestion of primate cities and, on the other hand, the peri-urban fringe is increasingly viewed as a key site for revenue generation. in this respect, the growth of satellite cities constitutes a twenty-first century landgrab that will irrevocably alter the urban and rural landscape of Southeast Asia.
the rapid and pervasive growth of satellite cities throughout Southeast Asia is not unique, in that it mirrors the growth of similar mega-cities throughout the Middle East and other parts of the world. termed “dubaisation,” after the monumental growth projects of dubai on the Persian Gulf, the establishment of satellite cities threatens the urban and cultural heritage
Urban Challenges 449
residents) soon returned to its prewar capi-
talist character, with luxury hotels—Hyatt,
Ramada, and Hilton—competing side by side
with government-run hotels.
Hanoi, once the sedate, regimented, and
subdued political capital of Vietnam, has itself
undergone significant economic transforma-
tions. By the twenty-first century, Hanoi was
increasingly showing the effects of globaliza-
tion and now exhibits much of the color and
dynamism of its rival to the south. Hanoi con-
tinues to showcase the symbols of Vietnamese
nationalism, such as the Ho Chi Minh Mau-
soleum and the Ho Chi Minh Museum. But
it also has become a bustling metropolis, an
urban forest of hotels, restaurants, bars, night-
clubs, and discotheques. Tourism, with thou-
sands of global visitors interested in seeing the
heart of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam,
is leading the change.
URbAN CHALLENGES
Cities in Southeast Asia are not immune to
serious problems. Challenges run the gamut
from health issues to environmental concerns.
Arguably, though, the inability of urban resi-
dents to obtain adequate employment and
housing looms among the most serious issues
faced by Southeast Asia’s cities. For example,
in the early 2000s in Manila, approximately
40 percent of the urban population was esti-
mated to be living in squatter settlements, with
another 45 percent of the population living in
slum conditions. In Bangkok, 23 percent of the
population was estimated to be living in slum
and squatter settlements; and in both Kuala
Lumpur and Jakarta, squatters constituted
approximately 25 percent of the population. It
should be noted, however, that most estimates
on slum residents are measured at the national
level and that there are, not surprisingly, con-
flicting numbers of squatter/slum residents.
The rise of squatter settlements is explained
by factors other than population increase.
Escalating land prices, compounded by real
estate speculation, for example, exacerbate the
problem of housing. So, too, does the creation
of artificial land scarcity. In Metro Manila, for
example, large tracts of land, even within the
central business district of Makati, remain
of Southeast Asia. Simply put, these satellite cities are in many respects “non-places”. they are distinguished primarily by their non-distinction. often modeled on plans evocative of American suburbs, there is a remarkable un-remarkability to these developments. Western- based chains, including Mcdonald’s, Starbucks, Pizza hut, and Kentucky Fried Chicken inter- mingle with imposing, glass-enclosed shopping centers and massive, cookie-cutter homes and condominiums.
the establishment of satellite cities has also come with a significant human and environ- mental cost. Countless hundreds of thousands of families throughout Southeast Asia have been dispossessed, often forcibly, of their lands and livelihoods. Within existent urban areas, less profitable apartment buildings are being demolished to make way for upscale condomini- ums and exclusive villas. in the peri-urban areas, prime agricultural lands likewise are being lost, paved over to make way for high-rise apartment and concrete highways—some of which are not even open to the general public!
450 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
vacant. And lastly, the demolition of low-cost
housing units, replaced by more affluent con-
dominiums and gated communities, results in
the rise of squatter settlements.
Sadly, many governments continue to view
eviction and demolition as the most effective
means of confronting squatter settlements.
In the Philippines, for example, more than
100,000 people were evicted from Manila each
year between 1986 and 1992. Not surprisingly,
a policy of relocating squatters to sites 20–50
miles (32–80 km) outside the city and plac-
ing them in high-density residential apart-
ments proved ineffective. Only Singapore has
achieved substantial results in the provision of
public housing. Other cities, especially Manila,
Bangkok, and Phnom Penh, trail woefully
behind. While many of these governments
have agencies charged with developing pub-
lic housing, most lack the required economic
resources and political resolve to be effective.
Many Southeast Asian governments also
are unable to provide adequate services, such
as clean water, sewerage, and other utilities.
Only about 7 percent of Burma’s urban popu-
lation, for example, has access to piped water.
In Jakarta, only a quarter of the population
has solid-waste collection; in the remainder of
the city, it is collected by scavengers. One effec-
tive strategy has been Indonesia’s Kampung
Improvement Program (KIP). This program is
a far-reaching initiative that concentrates pri-
marily on the improvement of infrastructure
and public facilities. Specific projects include
footpaths, secondary roads, drainage ditches,
schools, communal bathing and shower facili-
ties, and health clinics. Since its inception,
the KIP has been expanded to more than two
hundred cities throughout Indonesia and has
benefited more than 3.5 million people.
Both air and water pollution pose serious
health hazards to residents and visitors alike
in Southeast Asian cities. Jakarta, for example,
exceeds the health standards for ambient levels
of airborne particulate matter on more than
170 days of the year. Moreover, topographic
features may augment pollution problems.
The surrounding hills of the Klang Valley
around Kuala Lumpur, and the mountains
ringing Manila, for example, confine pollut-
ants and thus exacerbate air quality problems.
Water pollution, likewise, remains a major
obstacle to the quality of life in Southeast
Asian cities (Box 10.5). Many rivers, includ-
ing the Pasig in Manila, the Chao Phraya in
Bangkok, and the Ciliwung in Jakarta, are
considered biological hazards. The canals and
waterways in Bangkok, especially, are highly
polluted from a combination of industrial
and household discharge. Only 2 percent of
the city’s population is connected to Bang-
kok’s limited sewerage system. Consequently,
most solid waste is discharged into waterways.
Compounding the problem is the fact that
more than 15 percent of the garbage disposed
of daily is left uncollected.
An additional problem is traffic conges-
tion. The traffic problems of Bangkok and
Manila were discussed previously. In Jakarta,
likewise, private car ownership has outpaced
road construction. Similar problems of con-
gestion and pollution are being felt in Ho Chi
Minh City, which is currently home to more
than 2.5 million motorbikes, and, increasingly,
in Phnom Penh as well. Some governments,
including those of Malaysia and Indone-
sia, have utilized toll roads to reduce traffic
congestion. Other efforts concentrate on the
development of mass-transit systems, such as
the construction of light-rail transit systems
in both Manila and Kuala Lumpur. These pro-
jects, however, are extremely expensive and
many have been temporarily halted. To this
day, half-completed overpasses and bridges
Urban Challenges 451
Box 10.5 Water Security and urban Wastewater
Water security is emerging as a key risk factor throughout Southeast Asia. on the one hand, water security is intimately connected to broader economic and geopolitical relations. ongoing development projects, including the construction of mega-dams along the Mekong River and its tributaries, threaten the livelihood of millions of farmers who depend on the rivers for fish- ing and irrigation needs. on the other hand, water security is tied to a host of public health issues, namely access to clean, nonpolluted water for drinking, cooking, and cleaning. here, water security overlaps with myriad other issues related to urban infrastructure, including the collection of solid waste, inadequate flood-control systems, and the treatment of wastewater. in Phnom Penh, for example, studies indicate that upwards of 20 percent of all locally grown vegetables are irrigated with untreated wastewater. Consequently, many of the city’s 1.3 mil- lion residents are susceptible to untold diseases, such as cholera, typhoid, and shigellosis.
throughout Southeast Asia, upwards of 40 million men, women, and children are at risk of serious health issues resultant from drinking untreated water, as well as cooking and clean- ing in untreated water. People are also at risk of disease through the consumption of fish caught in polluted waterways and of fruits and vegetables grown in wastewater-fed farm- lands. indeed, the threat of urban wastewater is part-and-parcel of a “water-food-energy” nexus, whereby water availability is a serious constraint both on the growing of food—via agriculture and aquaculture—and the preparation of food. For many farmers, such as those living around Phnom Penh’s boeung Cheung Ek Lake, untreated wastewater is a preferred source of irrigation, in that the water is laden with nutrients that serve as a natural fertilizer. however, this same source of energy poses significant health problems. this is but one of the many challenges confronting Southeast Asia’s urban and peri-urban areas.
Governments and other stakeholders throughout the region recognize the complexity of solving urban wastewater problems. however, the scale and scope of the bureaucratic response varies greatly, ranging from those governments that exhibit effective and compres- sive monitoring of the quality and quantity of water resources to other governments that are woefully deficient. Singapore provides the most wide-ranging water-management plan, whereas in indonesia there is no consolidated water policy for urban areas.
the provision of clean, safe water is an expensive prospect. Water treatment plants are expensive to build and to maintain. So are necessary infrastructural improvements, for example, those designed to control urban flooding and thus minimize contamination of water supplies. there are, however, success stories. in the mid-1990s Metro Manila’s water-management was in disarray. decades of underinvestment had led to poor water and wastewater services that contributed, not surprisingly, to numerous health problems throughout the city. in recognition of this problem, in 1995 the national Water Crisis Act was passed, ushering a new era of govern- ment-private partnership that enabled revenues to flow to needed infrastructural development. in turn, this led to improvements both in access to water for millions of residents and—equally important—greater efficiencies in wastewater treatment. Although not a panacea, the efforts of numerous stakeholders throughout Metro Manila provide hope that solutions are possible.
452 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
Potential violence in cities of Southeast
Asia comes in other forms. According to some
scholars and regional experts, the main “ter-
rorist” threat to urban life in many Southeast
Asian cities is linked to radical Islamist groups,
such as Jemaah Islamiah (JI), a group that
has links to Al-Qaeda and Abu-Sayyaf. Over
the past decade, JI has been linked to bomb
attacks in many major Southeast Asian cities.
In Manila, the Abu-Sayyaf has also been linked
to several bombing incidents. In response to
such terrorist threats, many cities in Southeast
Asia have established security programs and
policies. In Singapore, a large-scale prepared-
ness exercise, named Exercise Northstar V, was
conducted. The exercise involved simulated
terrorist bomb attacks in multiple locations
and included the participation of thousands
of government personnel and civilians. In
Manila, malls, MRT, and other establishments
are guarded by armed security personnel who
control the entrance of people.
AN EyE TO THE FUTURE
Like Gregor Samsa in Franz Kafka’s novella
The Metamorphosis, the cities of Southeast
Asia have awoken from unsettled dreams
to find themselves changed into something
potentially monstrous: agglomerations of
skyscrapers and street vendors, palatial resi-
dential neighborhoods and impoverished
squatter settlements, overburdened utilities,
and underdeveloped transit systems.
What does the future hold for the cities of
Southeast Asia? Three themes come to mind.
First, continued population pressures and
environmental degradation will most likely
accelerate rural-to-urban migration, thereby
exacerbating over-urbanization problems.
Consequently, the cities of Southeast Asia will
in Bangkok, and incomplete rail systems in
Manila, stand as silent reminders of continued
underdevelopment.
Amid all these problems, there are efforts
by governments, along with local businesses,
to promote sustainable urban development.
For instance, several environmental laws
have been passed in different countries seek-
ing the reduction of pollution or to respond
to issues of climate change. In some cities,
city planning programs pertaining to urban
renewal and the promotion of sustainable
urban life have recently been put in place.
In Singapore, for example, the Ministry of
National Development has actively directed
the planning and implementation of policies
and infrastructure projects that aim to create
a sustainable city of knowledge, culture, and
excellence. In other cities, new development
projects are advertised as being constructed
to satisfy global environmental standards. The
real challenge, however, lies in the enforce-
ment of these programs and policies so that
they may truly contribute to a sustainable
urban life. In fact, many residents are actu-
ally displaced in the name of urban renewal
projects. Despite the emergence of new urban
developments that are intended to promote
“urban sustainability,” many inhabitants of
these cities remain mired in poverty.
Rampant poverty contributes to other seri-
ous problems, including political unrest, vio-
lence, and terrorist activity. In recent years,
Southeast Asian cities have witnessed class-
based political tensions and demonstrations.
In Bangkok, “red shirt” protesters loyal to
the government clashed with “yellow shirt”
demonstrators composed of people from the
urban middle class. Meanwhile, in Manila,
ongoing unrest, reflecting the country’s socio-
economic inequalities and class-based politi-
cal tensions, continues to pose serious threats.
Suggested Readings 453
continue to expand geographically. How this
development occurs, however, and how gov-
ernments respond or manage this growth, will
greatly affect the livability of these cities. Will
growth continue unabated, in an unplanned,
haphazard manner, or will decentralization
strategies and growth-diversion measures
effect desired changes? In economically poor
countries, and those saddled with massive
foreign debts, fiscal capacity, management,
and political motivation may hinder these
attempts.
A second theme is that these cities will
continue to be incorporated into the global
economy. This holds true especially for the
socialist cities of Phnom Penh, Ho Chi Minh
City, and Hanoi. Consequently, manifesta-
tions of globalization processes at the local
scale will become more apparent. For exam-
ple, the mushrooming of McDonald’s, Star-
bucks, and Kentucky Fried Chicken franchises
will continue (Figure 10.19). But apart from
these superficial changes lie deeper, structural
transformations resulting from the infusion
of foreign capital. Just as political revolutions
had impacts on urban areas in the socialist
countries, social changes, such as the emer-
gence of a new urban middle class, are likely
to stem from and reflect back on urban
transformations.
Southeast Asia, because of its strategic loca-
tion and long-standing ties to the global econ-
omy, is destined to grow ever more important
in world affairs. The cities of Southeast Asia
will continue to transform, and be trans-
formed by, broader global changes.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Berner, E. 1997. Defending a Place in the City: Local-
ities and the Struggle for Urban Land in Metro
Manila. Quezon City, Philippines: Ateneo de
Manila University Press. An examination of the
complex issues of land rights and squatters in
overburdened Manila.
Bishop, R., J. Phillips, and W. W. Yeo. 2003.
Postcolonial Urbanism: Southeast Asian Cities
and Global Processes. New York: Routledge. A
collection of essays that explores topics such as
sexuality, architecture, cinema, and terrorism
within the context of global urbanism.
Dale, O. J. 1999. Urban Planning in Singapore:
The Transformation of a City. Oxford: Oxford
University Press. A study of the process of urban
planning in Singapore from its early growth on
the banks of the Singapore River to the present.
Figure 10.19 if Ronald Mcdonald wants to sell fast food in bangkok, he must adapt to thai culture. Globalization is not a one-way street. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
454 CITIES OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
DeKoninck, R., J. Drolet, and M. Girard. 2008.
Singapore: An Atlas of Perpetual Territorial
Transformation. Singapore: National University.
A historical geography of Singapore laid out on
a series of maps.
Ginsburg, N., B. Koppel, and T. G. McGee, eds. 1991.
The Extended Metropolis: Settlement Transition
in Asia. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.
A variety of authors look at various aspects of
some of the key cities in Asia.
Logan, W. S. 2000. Hanoi: Biography of a City. Seat-
tle: University of Washington Press. An explo-
ration of Hanoi’s built environment and how
the shape of the city reflects changing political,
cultural, and economic conditions.
McGee, T. G. 1967. The Southeast Asian City:
A Social Geography of the Primate Cities of
Southeast Asia. New York: Praeger. An urban
geography classic.
Ostojic, D. R., et al. 2013. Energizing Green Cities
in Southeast Asia. Washington, DC: The World
Bank. Covers urbanization and sustainable
energy use, with case studies of Cebu City,
Philippines, Surabaya, Indonesia, and Da Nang,
Vietnam.
Sahakian, M. 2014. Keeping Cool in Southeast
Asia: Energy Consumption and Urban Air-
Conditioning. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. An
investigation of energy used for air-conditioning
against the backdrop of climate change.
Fi gu
re 1
1. 1
M aj
or U
rb an
A gg
lo m
er at
io ns
o f
Ea st
A si
a. S
ou rc
e: U
ni te
d na
ti on
s, d
ep ar
tm en
t of
E co
no m
ic a
nd S
oc ia
l A ff
ai rs
, Po
pu la
ti on
di
vi si
on (
20 14
), W
or ld
U rb
an iz
at io
n Pr
os pe
ct s:
2 01
4 Re
vi si
on , ht
tp :/
/e sa
.u n.
or g/
un pd
/w up
/.
11
Cities of East Asia KAM WING CHAN AND ALANA BOLAND
KEy URbAN FACTS
Total Population 1.6 billion
Percent Urban Population 59%
Total Urban Population 960 million
Most Urbanized Country Japan (93%)
Least Urbanized Countries China (54%)
Number of Megacities 8
Number of Cities of More Than 1 Million 123 (China has 103)
Three Largest Cities (Metacities) Tokyo (38 m), Shanghai (23 m),
Osaka (20 m)
Number of World Cities (Highest Ranking) 6 (Tokyo, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Beijing, Seoul,
Taipei)
Global City Tokyo
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. China is one of the original centers of urban development in history and has some of the
oldest continuously occupied cities in the world.
2. Colonialism had a less important role in urban development in East Asia compared with
world regions, even though many large Chinese cities were treaty ports under colonialism.
Hong Kong and Macau were entirely creations of colonialism, which formally ended on the
eve of the twenty-first century.
3. Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong/Macau, and Taiwan are already highly urbanized and deeply
involved in the global economy, a status reflected in cities that are already in a “postindus-
trial” phase, with predominantly service-based economies and major high-tech sectors.
4. Since the late 1970s, China has been rapidly industrializing and urbanizing and is now the
“world’s factory” and a major player in the global economy.
458 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
East Asia exudes power and success. Emerg-
ing in the past half century to rival the old
power centers of the world in North America
and Europe, East Asia’s cities have been the
command centers for the prodigious eco-
nomic advances across the region. The region
houses two of the world’s largest economies,
China and Japan, and is also the world’s major
exporter. Nowhere is this more evident than in
East Asia’s great cities, such as Tokyo, Beijing,
Shanghai, Seoul, Hong Kong, and Taipei
(Figure 11.1). They are among the largest cit-
ies in the world; indeed, Tokyo has been rec-
ognized as the world’s largest metropolis for
the last three decades, and Shanghai is now
the world’s largest cargo port. Compared with
often-struggling urban agglomerations found
in other world regions, especially in develop-
ing countries, East Asia’s cities have been rela-
tively more successful in coping with rapid
growth and large size. Wealth does make a
difference.
The region remains fairly sharply split
between mainland China and North Korea,
both of which are under a one-party system,
and the rest, which is not. This dichotomy is
reflected in many ways, including the char-
acter of the cities and their policies and pro-
cesses, both past and present, which have
shaped them. In the recent two decades, the
region has witnessed a rapid rise in China’s
economic power and in South Korea’s tech-
nological prowess, while Japan has suffered
a series of fiscal and financial problems and
was devastated in many ways by the 2011
earthquake-tsunami.
THE EVOLUTION OF CITIES
The Traditional or Preindustrial City
East Asia, especially China, is one of the origi-
nal centers of urbanism in world history.
Many cities here trace their origins back two
5. China is unique in size, being the country with the largest total population, the largest urban
population, and the greatest number of million-plus cities in the world. The population is
divided into rural and urban citizens with different types of social welfare and opportunities.
6. Some of the world’s most important world cities are in East Asia, especially Tokyo and
Hong Kong. Cities such as Shanghai, Beijing, Seoul, and Taipei are in the second tier. The
larger cities especially reflect the wealth of the region.
7. North Korea is the lone holdout in East Asia in clinging to a rigid, isolationist, orthodox
socialist system, somewhat different from China and Mongolia, which have many market-
oriented policies in the last three decades.
8. Urban development was heavily influenced by the Cold War, which lingers in the Korean
Peninsula and in the ongoing tensions between Taiwan and mainland China. International
trade has become another major driver of development of large cities in the last two decades.
9. Most major cities of the region show evidence of the concentric zone and multi-nucleic
models of urban land use.
10. Most cities of East Asia have experienced the usual urban problems: environmental pollu-
tion, income polarization, and migration. Recent attention to environmental concerns in
the region has reduced pollution, especially of air and waterways.
The Evolution of Cities 459
millennia or more. One can see interesting
parallels with the earliest cities in other cul-
tural realms, with their focus on ceremonial
and administrative centers planned in highly
formal style to symbolize the beliefs and tradi-
tions of the cultures involved.
In its idealized form, the traditional city
reflected the ancient Chinese conception of
the universe and the role of the emperor as
intermediary between heaven and earth. This
idealized conception was most apparent in
national capitals, but many elements (grid lay-
out, highly formalized design, a surrounding
wall with strategically placed gates, etc.) could
be seen in lesser cities at lower administrative
levels. The Tang Dynasty (618–906 ce) capi-
tal of Chang’an (present-day Xi’an) was one
of the best expressions of the classic Chinese
capital city. Inevitably, the demands of mod-
ern urban development have necessitated, in
the eyes of planners, at least, the destruction
of most city walls, thereby removing a color-
ful legacy of the past. The sites of old walls
commonly become the routes of new, broad
boulevards. One of the few cities whose origi-
nal wall has been retained almost entirely is
Xi’an, because of its historic role.
Of all the historic, traditional cities, none is
more famous than Beijing, the present national
capital of China. Although a city had existed
on the site for centuries, Beijing became sig-
nificant when it was rebuilt in 1260 by Kublai
Khan as his winter capital. It was this Beijing
that Marco Polo saw. The city was destroyed
with the fall of the Mongols and reestablished
by the Ming dynasty in 1368. The Ming capi-
tal was composed of four parts: the Imperial
Palace (or Forbidden City), the imperial city,
the inner city, and the outer city, like a set of
nested boxes. The former Forbidden City can
still be partially seen within the walls of what
is today called the Palace Museum.
The Chinese City as Model: Japan and Korea
Chang’an was the Chinese national capital at
a time when Japan was a newly emerging civi-
lization adopting and adapting many features
of China, including city planning. As a result,
the Japanese capital cities of the period were
modeled after Chang’an. Indeed, the city as
a distinct form first appeared in Japan at this
time, beginning with the completion of Keijo-
kyo (now called Nara) in 710. Although Nara
today is a small prefectural capital, it once
represented the grandeur of the Nara period
(710–784). Keiankyo (modern-day Kyoto) has
survived as the best example of early Japanese
city planning. Serving as national capital from
794 to 1868, when the capital was formally
shifted to Edo (now Tokyo), Kyoto still exhib-
its the original rectangular form, grid pattern,
and other features copied from Chang’an.
However, modern urban/industrial growth has
greatly increased the city’s size and obscured
much of the original form. Moreover, Chinese
city morphology, with its rigid symmetry and
formalized symbolism, was alien to the Japa-
nese culture. Even the shortage of level land in
Japan tended to work against the full expres-
sion of the Chinese city model.
Korea also experienced imported Chinese
city planning concepts. The Chinese city
model was most evident in the national capi-
tal of Seoul, which became the premier city of
Korea in 1394. The city has never really lost its
dominance since. Early maps of Seoul reveal
the imprint of Chinese city forms. Those forms
were not completely achieved, however, in
part because of the rugged landscape around
Seoul, which is located in a basin north of
the lower Han River. Succeeding centuries of
development and rebuilding, especially in the
twentieth century during the Japanese occu-
pation (1910–1945) and after the Korean War
460 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
(1950–1953), obliterated most of the original
form and architecture of the historic city. A
modern commercial and industrial city has
arisen on the ashes of the old city, reinforc-
ing the popular name for Seoul, the “Phoenix
City,” after the mythological bird that symbol-
izes immortality.
Colonial Cities
The colonial impact on East Asia was nota-
ble though relatively less intrusive than what
occurred in Southeast and South Asia.
First Footholds: The Portuguese
and the Dutch
The Portuguese and the Dutch were the first
European colonists to arrive in East Asia; the
Portuguese were much more important in
their impact in this region, the Dutch largely
confining themselves to Southeast Asia. Seek-
ing trade and the opportunity to spread
Christianity, the Portuguese penetrated part
of southern Japan via the port of Nagasaki
in the sixteenth century. Their greatest influ-
ence was indirect, with the introduction of
firearms and military technology into Japan.
This led to the development of stronger pri-
vate armies among the daimyo (feudal rulers)
of Japan, which in turn led to the building
of large castles in the center of each daimyo’s
domain. These castles, modeled after for-
tresses in medieval Europe, were commonly
located on strategic high points, surrounded
by the daimyo’s retainers and the commercial
town. These centers eventually served as the
nuclei for many of the cities of modern Japan
(see Figure 11.4).
The Portuguese also tried to penetrate
China. Reaching Guangzhou (Canton) in
1517, they attempted to establish themselves
there for trade purposes, but were forced by
the Chinese authorities to accept the small
peninsula of Macau, near the mouth of the
Pearl River, south of Guangzhou. Chinese
authorities walled off the peninsula and rent
was paid for the territory until the Portuguese
declared it independent from China in 1849.
With only 12 square miles (30 km2) of land,
Macau remained the only Portuguese toe-
hold in East Asia, especially after the eclipse
of their operations in southern Japan in the
seventeenth century. Macau was important as
a trading center and haven for refugees. Estab-
lishment of Hong Kong in the nineteenth cen-
tury on the opposite side of the Pearl River
estuary signaled the beginning of Macau’s
slow decline, from which it has never fully
recovered (Figure 11.3).
In the post-1950 era, Macau survived
largely on tourism and gambling (a down-
scale Asian version of Las Vegas, gangsters
and all). In the 1990s, Macau attempted some
modest industrialization, as it integrated eco-
nomically with the Zhuhai Special Economic
Zone across the border. Since reversion to the
People’s Republic of China (PRC) in 1999,
emphasis has been on gambling and tourism,
with additional investments made by Nevada
gambling interests and by the construction of
a number of new, gaudy casinos around the
reconstructed harbor front that pull in large
numbers of gamblers, especially nouveau
riche from mainland China. Right next to the
emerging casino quarter lies the historic heart
of old Macau whose colonial-era architecture
is now restored and is a pedestrian-only tour-
ist destination.
The Treaty Ports of China
It was the other Western colonial powers,
arriving in the eighteenth and nineteenth
The Evolution of Cities 461
centuries, which had the greatest impact on
urban growth in modern China. The most
important were the British and Americans;
but the French, Germans, Belgians, Russians,
and others were also involved, as were the Jap-
anese, who joined the action toward the close
of the nineteenth century.
It all began officially with the Treaty of
Nanjing in 1842, which ceded to Britain the
island of Hong Kong and the right to reside
in five ports—Guangzhou, Xiamen, Fuzhou,
Ningbo, and Shanghai. Further refinements of
this treaty in succeeding years gave to the other
powers the same rights as the British. A second
set of wars and treaties (1856–1860) led to the
opening of additional ports. By 1911, approxi-
mately 90 cities of China—along the entire
coast, up the Changjiang (Yangtze) River val-
ley, in North China, and in Manchuria—with
a third of a million foreign residents, were
opened as treaty or open ports (Figure 11.2).
The treaty ports introduced a new order
into traditional Chinese society. The West-
erners were there to make money, but they
also had the right of extraterritoriality, which
meant that they were not subject to Chinese
laws. Gradually taxation, police forces, and
other features of the municipal government,
including infrastructure, were developed by
the colonial countries controlling the treaty
ports. China’s sovereignty thus was supplanted
in the concession areas of treaty ports, as for-
eigners for modest rents paid to the Chinese
government leased these areas in perpetuity.
The most important treaty port was Shang-
hai (“On the Sea”), which had existed as a
small settlement for two millennia. By the
eighteenth century, the city was a medium-
sized county seat with a population of about
200,000 and built in traditional city style, with
a wall. The deposition of silt by the Changji-
ang River over the centuries, however, made
Shanghai no longer a port directly fronting
the sea. The town was now located about 15
miles (24 km) up the Huangpu River, a minor
tributary of the Changjiang.
Shanghai profited from its natural loca-
tional advantage near the mouth of the
Changjiang delta for handling the trade of
the largest and most populous river basin in
China. During the twentieth century, Shang-
hai’s manufacturing competed successfully
with other manufacturing centers emerging in
China, despite the absence of local supplies of
raw materials, because of the ease and cheap-
ness of water transport. This was achieved in
spite of a relatively poor site—an area of deep
silt deposits, a high water table, poor natural
drainage, an insufficient water supply, poor
foundations for modern buildings of any great
height, and a harbor on a narrow river that
required dredging to accommodate oceango-
ing ships. Shanghai became one of the best
examples worldwide of how a superb relative
location can trump a poor physical site to cre-
ate a great city.
The Japanese Impact
The Japanese also greatly influenced the urban
landscape in their two other colonies in East
Asia. During their rule of Taiwan (1895–1945)
and Korea (1910–1945), the Japanese intro-
duced Western-style urban planning prac-
tices, filtered through Japanese eyes, that they
later brought to Manchuria’s cities. Taipei was
made the colonial capital of Taiwan and trans-
formed from an obscure Chinese provincial
capital into a modern city. The city wall was
razed, roads and infrastructure were improved,
and many colonial government buildings were
constructed. The most prominent was the for-
mer governor’s palace, with its tall, red-brick
tower, which still stands in the heart of old
462 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
Taipei, and is now used as the Presidential
Office and executive branch headquarters for
Taiwan’s government. Like Taipei, Seoul was
also transformed to serve the needs of the Jap-
anese colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula. In
Seoul’s case, however, this meant deliberately
tearing down traditional palaces and other
structures to be replaced by Japanese colonial
buildings as part of a brutal effort to stamp
out Korean resistance to Japanese rule.
Figure 11.2 Foreign Penetration of China in the nineteenth and Early twentieth Centuries. Source: Adapted from J. Fairbank et al., East Asian Tradition and Transformation (boston: houghton Mifflin, 1973), 577.
The Evolution of Cities 463
Hong Kong
Hong Kong (“Fragrant Harbor”) differed from
other treaty ports in that there was little pre-
tense of Chinese sovereignty there (though the
Chinese government insisted after 1949 that
Hong Kong was part of China). Hong Kong
was ceded to Britain at the same time Shang-
hai was opened up in the early 1840s. Hong
Kong became second only to Shanghai as the
most important entrepôt on the China coast
during the following century of colonialism.
The importance of Hong Kong was not
difficult to discover. In 1842, the city began
with the acquisition of Hong Kong Island
(Figure 11.3), a sparsely populated rocky
island some 70 miles (113 km) downstream
from Guangzhou. The Kowloon peninsula
across the harbor was obtained in a separate
treaty in 1858. Then, in 1898, the New Ter-
ritories—an expanse of islands and land on
the large peninsula north of Kowloon—were
leased from China for 99 years (hence, rever-
sion to China took place in 1997), creating a
total area of about 400 square miles (1040 sq
km) for the entire colony. The site factor that
so strongly favored its growth was one of the
world’s great natural harbors (Victoria Har-
bor), between Hong Kong Island and Kow-
loon. Indeed, the advantages of the harbor
Figure 11.3 Map showing urbanized areas in Pearl River delta and hong Kong. Pink represents urban areas. Source: based on 2015 Landsat data.
464 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
outweighed the disadvantages—limited level
land for urban expansion, inadequate water
supply, and insufficient adjacent farmland
to feed the population. The city’s location at
the mouth of southern China’s major drain-
age basin gave Hong Kong a large hinterland,
which greatly expanded when the north-south
railway from Beijing was pushed to Guang-
zhou in the 1920s. Thus, for about a century,
Shanghai and Hong Kong, two great colonial
creations, largely dominated China’s foreign
trade and links with the outside world.
Japan: The Asian Exception
Following the classic capitals of Nara and
Kyoto around the eighth century, other cities
followed in Japan, principally the centers of
feudal clans. Most of these were transitory, but
a sizable number have survived today.
Japan is referred to as the “Asian excep-
tion” because it had only a minor colonial
experience internally. Indeed, Japan was itself
a major colonial power in Asia. Hence, the
urban history of Japan involved an evolu-
tion almost directly from the premodern, or
traditional, city to the modern commercial/
industrial city. Japan did have treaty ports and
extraterritoriality imposed on it by the Treaty
of 1858 with the United States, which led to
foreigners residing in Japan as they did in
China. However, this colonial phase was short-
lived. Japan was able to change its system and
reestablish its territorial integrity by emulat-
ing the West. Extraterritoriality came formally
to an end in 1899, as Japan emerged an equal
partner among the Western imperial powers.
Gradual political unification during the Toku-
gawa period (1603–1868) led to the establish-
ment of a permanent urban network in Japan.
The castle town served as the chief catalyst
for urban growth. One of the most important
of these new castle towns to emerge at this
time was Osaka. In 1583, a grand castle was
built that served as the nucleus for the city to
come. Various policies stimulated the growth
of Osaka and other cities, including prohibi-
tions on foreign trade after the mid-1630s,
the destruction of minor feudal castles, and
prohibitions on building more than one castle
in each province. These policies had the effect
of consolidating settlements and encouraging
civilians to migrate to more important castle
communities.
The new castle towns, such as Osaka,
were ideally located (Figure 11.4). Because
of their economic and administrative func-
tions, they generally were located on level land
near important landscape features that were
advantageous for future urban growth. Thus,
Osaka emerged as the principal business,
financial, and manufacturing center in Toku-
gawa Japan. The Japanese cities of that period
were connected by a highway network that
stimulated trade and city growth. The most
famous of these early roads was the Tokaido
Highway, running from Osaka to Nagoya,
which emerged as another major commercial
and textile manufacturing center to the most
important city of this period and after—Edo
(Tokyo).
Among the major cities of Asia, Tokyo was
a relative latecomer. It was founded in the fif-
teenth century, when a minor feudal lord built
a rudimentary castle on a bluff near the sea,
about where the Imperial Palace stands today.
The site was good for a major city—it had a
natural harbor, hills that could easily be forti-
fied, and room on the Kanto Plain for expan-
sion. Tokyo really began a century later, when
Ieyasu, the Tokugawa ruler at that time, made
Edo his capital. Part of Tokyo still bears the
imprint of the grand design that Ieyasu and
his descendants laid out. They planned the
Internal Structure of East Asian Cities 465
Imperial enclosure, a vast area of palaces,
parks, and moats in the heart of the city. Much
of central Tokyo’s land was reclaimed from the
bay, a method of urban expansion that was to
typify Japanese city-building from then on,
reflecting the shortage of level land and the
need for good port facilities. By the early sev-
enteenth century, Edo had a population of
150,000 surrounding the most magnificent
castle in Japan. By the eighteenth century, the
population was well over 1 million, making
Edo one of the world’s largest cities.
Edo’s growth was based initially on its
role as a political center, tied to the other cit-
ies by an expansive road network. An early
dichotomy was established between Osaka,
as the business center, and Tokyo. With the
restoration of Emperor Meiji in 1868, Japan’s
modern era began. The emperor’s court
was moved from Kyoto to Edo, which was
renamed Tokyo (“Eastern Capital”) to signify
its role as national political capital. This trans-
fer of political functions, plus the great indus-
trialization and modernization program that
was undertaken from the 1870s, gave Tokyo
the boost that began its growth that continues
into the twenty-first century.
INTERNAL STRUCTURE OF EAST ASIAN CITIES
It is not easy to generalize about the internal
structure of cities in East Asia. This is partly
because of the basic division between social-
ist and non-socialist urban systems that has
characterized the region. It also is because of
the lack of fit of Western urban models even
for non-socialist cities of the region. In most of
East Asia, and increasingly also in China after
1979, the forces that produced and continue
to shape cities are similar to those in the West,
but with a major difference: China and North
Korea remain under a one-party authoritar-
ian system and a highly state-controlled econ-
omy. These forces include: (1) rapid urban
industrialization combined with increasing
urban-rural inequalities, leading to high rates
Figure 11.4 the osaka castle in the center of osaka city played a major role in the unification of Japan during the sixteenth century. Source: Photo by Kam Wing Chan.
466 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
of rural-to-urban migration, rates which have
now decreased in more developed economies
(Japan, South Korea, Taiwan), but that are
still high in China and Mongolia; (2) private
ownership of property and dominance of pri-
vate investment decisions affecting land use;
(3) high-density development and heavy reli-
ance on public transport systems despite rising
car ownership rates; and (4) significant strati-
fication of socioeconomic classes, especially
between locals and migrants. These and other
factors impact urban growth, how space is used
in cities, and the types and severity of problems.
DISTINCTIVE CITIES
With the exception of British Hong Kong and
Portuguese Macau, the colonial era in East
Asia ended with the defeat of Japan in 1945.
The emergence of communist governments
in the late 1940s in China and North Korea,
joining the already communist government
of Mongolia (established in the 1920s), split
the region into two distinctly different camps:
the socialist cities of China, North Korea, and
Mongolia, versus the market-economy cities
of Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong,
and Macau. This affected Cold-War era align-
ments. In the late 1970s, China entered the
post-Mao or Reform Era, in which market
forces began to play a more significant role
in the economy and urban development.
Only North Korea remained wedded to rigid,
orthodox “socialism.”
One can also classify the major cities of
the region on the basis of function and size.
From this perspective, several cities are dis-
tinctive: megalopolises or super-conurbations
(Tokyo); recently decolonized cities (Hong
Kong); primate cities (Seoul); and socialist cit-
ies (Beijing and Shanghai) and regional cent-
ers (Taipei) undergoing rapid transformation
(Figure 11.5).
Figure 11.5 With taipei 101, taiwan’s capital reaches for new skylines, in stark contrast to twentieth-century socialist-era development. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Distinctive Cities 467
Tokyo and the Tokaido Megalopolis:
Unipolar Concentration
Japan illustrates especially well the phenom-
enon of super-conurbations or megalopolises.
A distinctive feature of Japan’s urban pattern is
the concentration of its major cities into a rel-
atively small portion of an already small coun-
try. Despite over a century of industrialization,
Japan was not more than 50 percent urbanized
until after World War II. By 2010, Japan’s rate
of urbanization had reached over 90 percent,
making it the most urbanized country in the
region. As the urban population grew dramat-
ically, so did the number and size of Japan’s
cities. Small towns and villages (those with
fewer than 10,000 people) declined sharply in
numbers and population, while medium and
large cities grew rapidly, all due to Japan’s phe-
nomenal economic postwar growth.
Almost all major cities are found in the
core region, which consists of a narrow band
beginning with the urban node of the tri-cit-
ies of Fukuoka, Kitakyushu, and Shimonoseki
at the western end of the Great Inland Sea.
Within this core is an inner core, containing
more than 50 percent of Japan’s total popu-
lation of 128 million, known as the Tokaido
Megalopolis, a 300-mile long regional urban
belt connecting the Tokyo and Osaka met-
ropolitan areas. Rapid growth from the late
1950s to the early 1970s occurred through
the migration of millions of youth from rural
areas. Since then, migration and growth have
increased toward Tokyo at the expense of the
rest of the country, including Tokyo’s long-
standing rival, Osaka, a phenomenon dubbed
unipolar concentration (i.e., urban primacy).
Tokyo continues to expand, draining people
and capital investment from other regions,
many of which are stagnating. The Osaka
region has not seen much industrial growth
to replace the smokestack industries, such as
steel and shipbuilding, and Osaka businesses
continue to relocate to Tokyo. This encour-
ages out-migration and depresses personal
consumption. Nagoya has fared better than
Osaka by maintaining employment and cen-
tral city vitality. However, for young people
especially, the economic and cultural pull of
Tokyo shows little sign of dissipating.
With over 36 million people, Tokyo’s nearly
30 percent share of Japan’s total population
is concentrated on 4 percent of the nation’s
land area. Tokyo has a disproportionate share
of workers, factories, headquarters of major
corporations, financial services, institutions
of higher education, industrial production,
exports, and college students. Tokyo is the
center for major governmental functions and
all 47 prefectural governments have branch
offices in Tokyo to liaise with the national
government, further bolstering its national
dominance.
During the late twentieth century, Tokyo’s
city core hollowed out due to suburbanization
and deindustrialization (Figure 11.6). There
was an increase in office and commercial
buildings for business, government, and retail,
while residential areas lost numbers, with
many elders living alone while children started
their families in the suburbs (Box 11.1). A
reversal of this migration pattern began in
the early 2000s after land prices bottomed out
during Japan’s recession. People were again
able to afford living in Tokyo’s central city dis-
tricts, which were being reshaped by a surge
in condominium developments targeting sin-
gles, working couples, and wealthier retirees.
Government policies promoted conversion of
former industrial lands and waterfront devel-
opment to accommodate housing, research
institutions, business and commercial use, and
light industry. These changes in Tokyo’s urban
468 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
Figure 11.6 tokyo Metropolitan Area and change in population density, 1970–2005. Source: Adapted from h. bagan and y. yamagata, “Landsat Analysis of Urban Growth: how tokyo became the World’s Largest Megacity during the Last 40 years,” Remote Sensing of Environment 127 (2012): 218.
Distinctive Cities 469
Box 11.1 Japan’s aging Cities
Japan’s aging cities are facing a looming crisis. the most serious challenges ahead are not, however, associated with aging buildings and infrastructure, but rather the country’s aging population. Japan faces an unprecedented drop in population related to gains in longevity and declining fertility, both occurring without large-scale in-migration to help counteract these trends, like what is happening in other countries facing a similar demographic shift. Projections suggest that close to 30 percent of Japan’s population will be 65 and over by 2030. in a country where 90 percent of the population is urbanized, this has profound impli- cations for cities.
the migration out of the central districts of cities like tokyo that occurred in the 1970s and 1980s was driven primarily by younger couples, many who left their parents to live in the old family home. this made good sense. older urban neighborhoods offered small-scale streets, local shopping, access to public transit, stronger social ties, and familiarity of place. but this also caused the urban cores to be populated disproportionately with older residents, many living alone in small houses or low-rise apartments. Such a concentration creates problems for governments in terms of social services and health-care provision, but also cre- ates challenges for older inner-city redevelopment. Conflicts often emerge around planning of high-rise condominium construction. neighbors come together to protest the diminished sunlight for houses surrounding the proposed high-rises. they worry also about changes to the social mix of neighborhoods and loss of intimacy that has developed between people who have lived together for decades. in some cases, these protests against high-rise projects lead also to calls on governments to improve livability in the older areas of the city. Sadly, however, these efforts are sometimes hindered by the very composition of the participants; in what can be quite protracted struggles against large property developers, some elderly activists are unable to sustain their fight to protect the community. And in a sad irony, while local governments have begun to pay greater attention to quality of life issues, in so far that this shift is linked to a global city agenda, the people that tokyo and other cities are trying retain and attract are not necessarily the elderly.
if one considers metropolitan areas as a whole, including the extended suburbs, the problems of Japan’s rapidly aging population become more complex. While inner suburbs have seen some increase in density, especially along commuter rail lines, the outer suburbs have experienced an exodus of younger people wishing to live closer to the city center for economic and social reasons. this is creating a high concentration of elderly living alone in certain suburban areas, mirroring the aging process in the inner-city neighborhoods. how- ever, unlike in the more dynamic and densely populated city center, local governments in the suburbs generally have fewer financial resources—and anticipate fewer resources as their populations decline. it will be difficult to meet the needs the elderly, who are also at greater risk of social isolation given their more dispersed residential patterns. these conditions have many now wondering about the social and economic sustainability of the “graying” suburbs outside of tokyo and other large cities of Japan.
470 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
landscapes mirror recent trends elsewhere: the
city is following the path of a global city mod-
eled on vertical, compact, and multifunctional
urban features.
Tokyo’s expansive transport system has
played a decisive role in development of the
metropolitan area. Commuter rail lines serv-
ing the suburbs were initially privately run
and the rail companies owned and developed
much of the surrounding land for housing
and commercial use. The lines did not run
through the city core. Terminal stations were
located along a 20-mile loop line that encir-
cled the city’s historical central districts and
remain the connection points between sub-
urban commuter trains and the subway, bus
and other rail cutting through the city center.
Many of these stations have developed into
major commercial districts with shopping,
entertainment, and restaurants, surrounded
by large building complexes for office and resi-
dential use. Shinjuku is the busiest of these sta-
tions, with over 3 million passengers per day.
The upscale shopping district Ginza is another
famous commercial district that developed
near the Yamanote Loop. Such nodes of high-
density development give Tokyo elements of
a multi-nucleic model intermixed with the
radial and concentric ring patterns of com-
muter rail and freeways. In 2007, 65 percent of
trips in the Tokyo metropolitan area were by
mass transit, making transit access an impor-
tant factor in many residents’ decision about
desirable and affordable places to live.
While residents of Tokyo enjoy access to
one of the world’s most extensive public tran-
sit systems, they struggle with high-density
problems, congestion, pollution, and sprawl.
Away from busy transit and shopping areas,
Tokyo’s neighborhoods can feel surprisingly
small-scale as low-rise buildings still domi-
nate the landscape (Figure 11.7). Lining major
roads are mid-rise office and residential build-
ings about 10–12 stories tall. Away from the
main streets, 2–5 story buildings and grids of
narrow streets and alleys cut through densely
built-up neighborhoods of small houses, low
multiunit residential buildings, stores, and
small factories. Pedestrians and bicycles are
more common than cars. This helps reduce
noise, which is important given that houses
are right next to the narrow streets. Railways
stations along commuter lines often serve as
neighborhood hubs with supermarkets and
shopping streets around them. The compact
nature of these neighborhoods gives them
social vitality and their form is one commonly
found throughout Japan.
Beijing: The New “Forbidden City”?
Beijing, the great “Northern Capital” for cen-
turies, was a horizontal, compact city of mag-
nificent architecture and artistic treasures of
China’s past grandeur when the “New China”
began in 1949, although the magnificence of
the old city had suffered greatly from general
neglect during the century of foreign intru-
sion and civil wars since the 1840s, and from
the “revolutionary reconstruction” and “mod-
ernization” in the last 60 years. Centered on
the former Forbidden City (Imperial Palace,
of course, off limits to the commoner), Bei-
jing was renowned for its sophisticated culture
and refined society, a status linked to the city’s
function as the political center of a vast nation.
Illustrating the city’s influence, the Beijing
dialect (Mandarin) became the national spo-
ken language (putonghua) after the collapse of
the last dynasty in 1911. However, despite its
political and cultural influence, there was little
industry and a relatively small population.
In 1949, the city was chosen as the national
capital of the new Communist government
Distinctive Cities 471
about 17 million. Natural population growth,
net migration to metro Beijing, and suburban-
ization in the last four decades have pushed
the metro boundary outward (Figure 11.8).
Prior to that, however, migration control to
Beijing was among the strictest in the country.
Only the well educated and those needed by
the central government could move to Beijing;
for the rest, it remained a “forbidden city.”
In the 1950s, Beijing was transformed into
a major industrial center. In the pre-1980
command-economy era, other urban func-
tions such as commerce and services were
greatly curtailed. Beijing became even more
like Moscow than Moscow was in the former
Soviet Union.
The changes to Beijing’s traditional urban
landscape were enormous in the Maoist era
(Nanjing was the national capital during the
Republican era, from the late 1920s to 1949).
Since communist takeover, the city has under-
gone several waves of demolition, construc-
tion, and expansion. Today, the administrative
area of Beijing covers a large territory, 6,500
square miles (16,800 sq km), encompassing an
urbanized core (high-density built-up area),
surrounded by numerous scattered towns and
large stretches of rural area and with a total
population of 20 million. But this shi (munici-
pality or city) is a large administrative region
and not a “metropolitan area” as it is often mis-
takenly conceived. Delineation of the approxi-
mate commuting zones (the suburbs) and
urbanized area would suggest a “metropolitan
Beijing” of about 3,700 sq km (~22 percent of
the administrative area), and a population of
Figure 11.7 one of tokyo’s busy narrow side streets, with commercial and residential land use in close proximity. Streets of this size and mix are quite common still even in the busy core of tokyo and other large Japanese cities. Source: Photo by Andre Sorensen.
472 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
(1949–1976), but continued to be signifi-
cant in the last two decades. In the pursuit
of “destroying the old and building the new”
during the Maoist revolutionary era, many
parts of the old city and the city walls were
knocked down to make way for a new social-
ist capital city. These changes shattered the
original form of Beijing and forever altered
its architectural character. While many parts
of the old city contained overcrowded court-
yard houses left from the prerevolution era
(Figure 11.9), the newly built section of the
city under Mao was one with arrow-straight,
wide boulevards and huge Stalinesque state
buildings, punctuated by seemingly endless
rows of unadorned low-rise monotonous
apartment blocks for the masses, with empha-
sis on uniformity, minimal frills, and lowest
possible construction costs. The city center
lacked a human scale and was deliberately
designed to emphasize the power of the party-
state. A huge area in front of the Tiananmen
(Gate of Heavenly Peace) was cleared to cre-
ate the largest open square of any city in the
world. Tiananmen Square became the staging
ground for vast spectacles, parades, and rallies
organized by the government. Mao and other
party leaders would orchestrate the scene
from on top of the gate like a latter-day impe-
rial court. After Mao died in 1976, his body
Figure 11.8 beijing metropolitan area has been expanding outward, fueled by in-migration and local residents moving from the city center to the suburbs. the map shows population growth rates by subdistrict unit in the urbanized part of beijing based on census data for 1982 and 2010. Source: Prepared by Kam Wing Chan, Richard L. Forstall and Guilan Weng.
Distinctive Cities 473
was embalmed and displayed inside a mauso-
leum on the south end of Tiananmen Square
along the north-south axis running through
the Palace Museum. The parallel with the dis-
play of Lenin’s body in Red Square in Moscow
was intentional, as was the attempt to link
Mao with the imperial tradition and the role
of Beijing as the center of China. Though the
square was designed and used mostly by those
in power, it also became the staging ground
for watershed mass protests organized by
students, intellectuals, and workers, from the
May Fourth Movement in 1919 to the failed
Pro-Democracy Movement in 1989. Else-
where, the charm of many traditional middle-
class courtyard houses in hutongs, or narrow
alleys, in the old city was almost lost in the
need to subdivide housing space for multiple
families, but often without necessary updates
and maintenance.
China’s large cities in the Maoist era were
manufacturing centers and administrative
nodes of an economic planning system that
focused on national, regional, and local self-
reliance (Figure 11.10). Most cities tried to
build relatively comprehensive industrial
structures, resulting in less division of labor
and exchanges than in a market economy. The
huge surrounding rural areas (often confus-
ingly called “suburban counties”) grew food,
mainly vegetables, for the cities. Some satel-
lite towns accommodated industrial spillover.
Without a land market, many self-contained
neighborhoods, based on large enterprises,
dominated the landscape of large cities, which
expanded in concentric zones. Beijing was no
exception.
New policies after Mao were meant to
address economic weaknesses and transform
Chinese cities via market reforms. Those
Figure 11.9 Pockets of traditional courtyard houses remain in hutongs, or alleys, in the inner city of beijing. Many of them have been torn down to make room for high-rise apartments and offices. Some “saved” are converted into shops in main hutongs. Source: Photo by Kam Wing Chan.
474 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
reforms have improved living standards, espe-
cially in coastal cities, and brought an urban
consumption boom. In Beijing, this resulted in
the proliferation of new stores and restaurants,
including mammoth malls. Beijing now also
has major commercial/financial districts, such
as Xidan, a busy shopping area with ultra-
modern architecture and expensive shops,
and Wangfujing, an old retail strip that is fully
pedestrianized. In the northwestern part of the
city is China’s “Silicon Valley,”—Zhongguan-
cun. Tech firms have set up main offices there
to gain proximity to top universities nearby.
Beijing has pushed outward and has a siz-
able daily commuting zone consisting of high-
rise apartments, luxury detached houses, and
often dilapidated “migrant villages” as far as 40
km from the city center (Figure 11.10). Urban
expansion parallels a noticeable increase in
income disparities and social differentiation.
Figure 11.10 Model of the City in the PRC. Source: Adapted from ya Ping Wang, Urban Poverty, Housing and Social Change in China (new york: Routledge, 2004).
Distinctive Cities 475
In the northern outskirts of Beijing, expensive,
detached, Western-style bungalow houses have
appeared, catering to expatriates and the new
rich. At the same time, with relaxed migration
controls since the mid-1980s, Beijing now has
a large migrant population of over 7 million.
These mostly rural migrants fill low-level
jobs shunned by the locals. However, these
migrants are not given legal residency status
(hukou) and are often denied access to many
urban services (Box 11.2). In addition, young
college graduates from other cities that do not
have Beijing hukou make their homes here.
Several migrant communities have sprung up
in Beijing’s suburbs, such as “Zhejiang Village”
and “Xinjiang Village.” These communities are
named after the provinces from which most
of their residents come, creating regionally
based urban enclaves. Living conditions in
these migrant villages provide a stark contrast
with those of wealthier neighborhoods
(Figure 11.11).
In the last two decades, the government has
implemented many programs to “beautify”
and modernize the city. They range from relo-
cating steel plants from the city and imple-
menting strict measures to limit the use of
automobiles to bring down air pollution lev-
els, demolishing old hutong houses, and dis-
placing hundreds of thousands of the city’s
poor for what critics call “image projects” of
building numerous very expensive ultramod-
ern architectural works. The 2008 Olympic
Games provided the greatest stimulus for
much beautification effort and for improve-
ments in urban infrastructure—newer
expressways and subway lines, a new airport
terminal—and construction of world-class
sports stadiums.
Under China’s national urbanization blue-
print promulgated in 2014, the government
plans to channel most migrants to small and
medium cities. Stringent measures are in place
to deter migration to major metropolises. The
measures include harder terms for school
enrollment for migrant children (Box 11.3).
As a result, many of them have lost their
school places in big cities. The situation was
Figure 11.11 Millions of migrants eke out their living on the urban fringes of beijing; some live in run-down village houses like this one. the photo was taken after a major rainstorm in summer 2012 in Chengzhongcun. Source: Photo by Wilfred Chan.
476 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
so grave in Beijing that hundreds of migrant
children and parents staged a three-month-
long protest against expulsion in front of the
local education commission office in summer
2014.
Shanghai: “New York” of China?
Shanghai is considered by many to be China’s
most vibrant city. This is because of its unique
colonial heritage and because it is the center
of change and new frontiers in social and eco-
nomic behavior. Shanghai is the largest and
Box 11.2 “Cities with invisible Walls:” the Hukou System in China
After the Communist Revolution in 1949, China opted for the Stalinist growth strategy of rapid industrialization-based extraction of agriculture. this industrialization strategy led China to create, in effect, a dual structure: on the one hand, the urban class, whose members worked in the priority and protected industrial sector and who had access to basic social welfare and full citizenship; and on the other hand, the peasants, who were tied to the land to produce an agricultural surplus for industrialization and who had to fend for themselves. this, in turn, required strong mechanisms to prevent peasants from leaving the countryside. in 1958, a comprehensive hukou (household registration) system was formalized to control population mobility and exclude peasants from social welfare. Each person has a hukou (registration status), classified as “rural” or “urban,” and tied to the locale he or she stayed. the decree required that all internal migration be subject to approval by the relevant local government, but approval was rarely granted. While old city walls in China had largely been demolished by the late 1950s, the power of this newly erected migration barrier functioned as invisible but effective city walls.
Since the late 1970s, development of markets and the demand for cheap labor for sweat- shop productions for the global market have led to easing of some migratory controls. Rural- hukou holders are now allowed to work in cities in low-end jobs shunned by urban residents, but they are still not eligible for basic urban social services and education programs. by the mid-1990s, rural-hukou migrant labor had become the backbone of China’s export industry and the service sector. in 2014, the size of “rural migrant labor” rose to about 170 million. this two-tier system of citizenship and the unequal treatment of the migrant population have seriously divided China and created many problems. Since 2014, the government has launched another round of hukou reform; whether it is real this time remains to be seen.
perhaps the most cosmopolitan city in China
and has one of the highest standards of liv-
ing. Shanghai city itself is part of the Shanghai
administrative region, comprising an urban-
ized core, suburbs, and outlying rural areas.
It covers a total area of 2,400 square miles
(6,300 sq km) with a population of 23 million,
including about 10 million illegal migrants.
With the rapid development of a national
and regional intercity high-speed rail system,
Shanghai is now the hub of a larger economic
region comprising several metropolises such
as Hangzhou and Nanjing (Figure 11.12).
Distinctive Cities 477
Box 11.3 “orphans” of China’s urbanization?
on the night of June 9, 2015, four children of the same family were found dead in their home in Guizhou. they were left in the poor village, without any proper care. they committed suicide together by drinking pesticide. the oldest boy was 13 years old, while his youngest sister was only 5.
in China, a new generation of children is growing up in the countryside with only one or no parents around during most of the year. hence, they are called “left-behind children.” there are more than 63 million of them in the country; half are age 6–14. they are left behind because their parents have gone to work in the city, often hundreds of miles away, as part of China’s gargantuan army of rural migrant workers, estimated at about 170 million in 2014. While they work in the city, their children often cannot go with them because of vari- ous reasons. A 2014 survey estimates that among those children, 10 million did not see their parents for one year or more, and 2.6 million never got even a phone call from their parents within a 12-month period. Many of these children develop psychological problems and some fall victim to bullying, physical or sexual abuse, or even serious accidents.
Under China’s current hukou policy, migrant workers and their accompanying children are considered only temporary residents in the city. And with very low incomes, they face many obstacles in obtaining education in the cities. though the central government since 2001 requires local governments to provide education for migrant children in grades 1–9 in places where their parents work, local governments only implement this measure half-heartedly. in many cities, claiming that they lack funding, local governments have erected direct and indirect barriers to deter migrant children from getting a public education.
Under China’s 2014 new urbanization blueprint, big cities are asked to limit their popula- tion size. As a result, admission to schools has been much harder for migrant children in big cities, forcing thousands to lose their school places. they either go back home or drop out altogether. the situation was so grave in beijing that hundreds of migrant children and parents staged a three-month-long protest in front of the local education commission office in 2014. the difficulties in getting an education for their kids in the city have forced many migrant parents to leave their kids in the countryside, despite the undesirability and unknown risks of prolonged family separation. Furthermore, public high schools (grades 10–12) are totally off limit to migrant children under China’s current policy. With a curricu- lum for the high school admission exam at home different from the one in the city, migrant school children wanting to continue high school often have to return to home villages years before grade 10 to prepare for the exam. in many instances, that means they are parted from their parents long term in their critical formative teenage years.
the deaths of the four kids in Guizhou have shocked many and drew public attention to their plight. While parents have direct responsibility for protecting their kids, arguably there is a more potent force—the hukou system that treats rural migrants differently and the related public school enrollment policy that discriminate against migrant children—that has directly and indi- rectly contributed to the plight of left-behind children. Some critics have said that these children are orphans of China’s rapid urbanization under its peculiar system and discriminatory policy.
478 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
Shanghai came the closest to a true
“producer” city in Mao’s era. In that era,
government revenues relied heavily on
remitted revenues from state-owned enter-
prises (SOEs). Shanghai, being the prime
center of SOEs, was a major cash cow for the
Figure 11.12 Shanghai’s economic influence extends to a network of cities and smaller towns beyond its boundaries. in this satellite image, pink highlights areas of concentrated commercial and residential use. Source: based on 2015 Landsat data.
Distinctive Cities 479
central government and was heavily protected
by the central government. China’s Stalinist-
type economic growth strategy prioritized
industry over agriculture, and that strategy
greatly benefited Shanghai, which maintained
its lead economic position throughout Mao’s
years. As with many cities in that time, invest-
ment poured into industry but little in “non-
productive” facilities such as housing and
infrastructure. The downtown area, particu-
larly around the Bund, or riverfront district,
where the major Western colonial settlers built
trading houses, banks, consulates, and hotels,
had the look of a 1930s Hollywood movie set.
In 1934, in the center of the city, the 22-story
Park Hotel was built. It was then the tallest
building in Asia and remained the city’s tall-
est for almost another half century until 1983,
when high-rises were again constructed. It was
the relative neglect of many cities, including
Shanghai, which contributed to the impres-
sion that the Maoist policy was “antiurban,”
although the reality was quite the opposite.
With the reopening of China in the late
1970s, under the open policy, foreign investors
returned to China, this time at the invitation
of the Chinese government. Shanghai received
a major impetus for development in 1990 in
the aftermath of the 1989 Tiananmen crack-
down, as the government struggled to regain
foreign investors’ confidence. China decided
in 1990 to open up Pudong (“East of the Pu,”
i.e., the Huangpu River, which bisects Shang-
hai), an essentially farming region on the east
side of the old city core (Figure 11.13). The
aggressively promoted World Expo 2010 was
held largely in Pudong with a record number
of 73 million visitors.
Figure 11.13 Since the early 1990s, Shanghai’s new Cbd has arisen across the river in Pudong, centered on the futuristic tV tower around surrounded by ultramodern skyscrapers. Pudong Cbd is China’s financial district. Source: Photo by Kam Wing Chan.
480 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
The Pudong development project was one
of China’s most ambitious undertakings. It
included massive investment in infrastructure
(including a new airport and a 30-km (18.6
mi) Maglev rail line) and a package of pref-
erential policies, similar to those in China’s
special economic zones (SEZs), to woo foreign
capital. These measures included lower taxes,
lease rights on land, and retention of revenues.
In Pudong, emphasis was given to high-tech
industries and financial services rather than
simply export processing. Among the foreign
investors, Taiwanese businessmen have several
thousand companies in the greater Shanghai
region (including nearby cities like Kunshan
and Suzhou), with an estimated one-quar-
ter million Taiwanese residing and working
nearby. A “Little Taipei” has emerged in the
Zhangjiang High-Tech Park in Pudong.
The Shanghai Stock Exchange, opened
in 1990, is China’s largest stock market. The
skyline of Pudong is intentionally futuristic,
with flickering neon-lit glass and steel sky-
scrapers, including a TV observation tower
that has become an icon for Pudong and the
New China (Figure 11.16). Shanghai’s stock
exchange is China’s largest by market capi-
talization and ranks the third in the world
by market capitalization. It is quite a contrast
to the neoclassical Bund on the other side of
the river. Shops and architecture in some sec-
tions have a very cosmopolitan feel and again
there is a sizable expatriate community. How-
ever, behind the glistening architecture, there
also lives a very large population of migrant
poor, often struggling to make a living in this
metropolis.
Many problems plague the city and the
region: serious interjurisdictional rival-
ries among local governments, the faraway
location of the new international airport in
Pudong, overheated real estate development,
serious traffic congestion, and severe air and
water pollution. Perhaps most important,
Shanghai still lacks a well-established legal
system that can truly protect citizens’ rights
and rein in officials from abuses of their pow-
ers. These are criticisms that could be directed
at all of China today.
Hong Kong: Business Not as Usual
At the stroke of midnight on June 30, 1997,
Hong Kong was officially handed over to
China and became the Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region (SAR). This event
marked the end of the colonial era in Asia and
the rise of China’s power. Hong Kong was one
of the last two colonial enclaves left in all of
Asia by the late twentieth century. The other
colony, Macau, was returned to China by Por-
tugal in 1999, and became the Macau SAR.
Hence, as China entered the new century, its
humiliating experience with foreign colonial-
ism ended after almost 160 years.
The 1997 handover committed China to
guarantee Hong Kong 50 years of complete
autonomy in its internal affairs and capitalist
system, under a model known as “one country,
two systems.” The latter refers to the “socialist”
system in the PRC and the “laissez faire” capi-
talist system in Hong Kong. With the excep-
tion of defense and foreign relations, the city
was to be “ruled by Hong Kong people.” In
the Basic Law (the SAR’s constitution) prom-
ulgated in 1990, China even consented that
the SAR would choose its own chief execu-
tive based on universal suffrage. Nevertheless,
worries over what would really happen after
1997 under China’s rule triggered an exodus
of about half a million Hong Kongers, mostly
the wealthy and the professionals, to Canada
(especially Vancouver and Toronto), Australia,
and the United States.
Distinctive Cities 481
Earlier, while still under the British, many
fled to Hong Kong from China after the com-
munist takeover in 1949. Hong Kong’s popu-
lation soared from half a million in 1946 to
more than 2 million by 1950. The flows, both
legal and illegal, continue. Squatter settle-
ments appeared in the 1950s and the economy
was in a shambles. The British, in collabora-
tion with Chinese entrepreneurs, including
many industrialists who had fled Shanghai
and other parts of China, turned Hong Kong’s
economy around by developing products,
“Made in Hong Kong,” for export. It was a
spectacularly successful transformation, with
investment pouring in from Japan, the United
States, Europe, and the overseas Chinese.
Cheap, hardworking labor was available. Site
limitations were overcome by massive landfill
projects, and fresh water and food were pur-
chased from adjacent Guangdong Province.
During the Cold War period of the 1950s
and 1960s, Hong Kong commanded a unique
geopolitical position. One paradox of Hong
Kong was that China continued to permit this
arch symbol of unrepentant Western capital-
ism and colonialism to exist and thrive on
Chinese territory. The Chinese did this partly
because Hong Kong made lots of money for
them, too—several billion dollars annually
in foreign exchange earned from the PRC’s
exports to Hong Kong and banking and com-
merce investments. Moreover, a struggling,
isolationist, socialist China saw a practical
advantage in keeping the door open a crack
to the outside world, and also in not being
responsible for solving Hong Kong’s stagger-
ing problems. Banker’s Row in Central District
came to symbolize the financial powerhouse
that Hong Kong had become, with the Bank
of China, the Hongkong Shanghai Bank-
ing Corporation (HSBC), and the Chartered
Bank of Great Britain lined up side by side.
The first two are regarded today as among the
most important architectural structures of
the twentieth century and symbols of Hong
Kong’s emergence as a world city.
As one of the top tourist meccas in the
world, Hong Kong is a stunning sight. The
skyline is spectacular, especially at night, with
its glittering, ultramodern high-rise buildings
packed side by side along the shoreline and
up the hillsides (Figure 11.14). Hong Kong’s
economy is heavily dependent on the property
market. Rents are among the highest in the
world, which burdens the middle and work-
ing classes. The built environment is crafted
to fit every possible urban activity. Some of
the urban designs are quite ingenious. After
the international airport moved to Chek Lap
Kok on Lantau Island in 1997, building height
limitations in Kowloon ended. The Kowloon
side is now taking on a Manhattan-like pro-
file. There seems no limit to the construction
boom and demand for new buildings and
other structures in this dynamic city.
Less eye-catching to the average visitor,
but themselves impressive social accomplish-
ments, are Hong Kong’s social housing and
new town programs. They were begun in the
1950s to cope with the large influx of Chinese
refugees. The programs gradually expanded
into some of the world’s largest. Today, about
half of Hong Kong’s population of 7 million
lives in social housing. Indeed, because of
much lower rents and prices, social housing
has been a major mechanism for decentraliz-
ing the population outside of the main urban
area. Reclamation has been a main strategy for
creating new land for the city. Many large new
towns, such as Shatin and Tuen Mun, were
built almost totally on land reclaimed from
the sea.
Hong Kong’s export industry gradually
declined with China’s opening in the late
482 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
1970s. Hong Kong took advantage of the
cheap land and labor in the Pearl River Delta
and has steadily outsourced its manufactur-
ing to the delta (while company headquarters
remain in Hong Kong). Over 100,000 Hong
Kong-invested enterprises operate in the delta
region and employ several million workers.
In economic terms, the delta and Hong Kong
are now a highly integrated region, one of
the world’s major exports centers, with Hong
Kong serving as the “shop front” and the delta
as the “factory” (Figure 11.3). Tens of thou-
sands of people cross the land border between
Hong Kong and Shenzhen daily for work,
school, or shopping.
Hong Kong has been the banking and
investment center for the China trade, as well
as regional headquarters for many interna-
tional corporations since the late 1970s. It
has played a crucial role as the intermediary
between China and the world, including serv-
ing as middleman for Taiwan’s huge economic
dealings with the PRC in the 1990s. Tourism
remains vital, with many coming from the
mainland and skyrocketing from about 4 mil-
lion in 2001 to more than 41 million in 2013!
While tourists shopping in Hong Kong gener-
ate sizable revenues for the city, they also bring
significant transportation congestion.
The post-handover period has witnessed
the city’s rapid transition to Asia’s premier
financial and service center. Simultaneously,
a series of mishaps and policy blunders (such
as the outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome, SARS, in 2003) have undermined
confidence in the new government. Rising
economic competition, including from other
Chinese cities (especially Shanghai, Shenzhen,
Figure 11.14 this view of hong Kong island, taken from Kowloon across the harbor, dramatically conveys the modernity and wealth of today’s hong Kong. the Central Plaza building towers over the wave-like profile of the Convention Center, where the ceremony of the handover to China took place in 1997. Source: Photo by Kam Wing Chan.
Distinctive Cities 483
and Guangzhou) also put pressure on the city
as it struggles to find its role as China rises.
More alarmingly, income gaps between rich
and poor have risen to a very high level—the
highest in the developed world, according to
several recent studies. Observers have linked
mass protests—some quite disruptive—in the
last few years to this widening wealth gap and
to the government’s pro-business stance with
little attention to the welfare of the people.
In addition, there is a more, and prob-
ably the most, critical issue for Hong Kong:
maintaining relations with mainland China,
and protecting its autonomy. Many people
in Hong Kong have long expressed concerns
over this issue and many have actually voted
with their feet and left, damaging the ability to
protect the city’s cherished political and press
freedoms. These rights are not enjoyed by
mainland compatriots and are often frowned
on by PRC leaders. The difficulties of keep-
ing that rather tenuous balance have surfaced
in almost perennial mass protests on July 1
(“The SAR day”), and civil disobediences, cul-
minating in the Occupy Central mass protest
in 2014. At the height of the protest, hundreds
of thousands of people took part; it lasted for
more than two months and paralyzed the cen-
tral city (Figure 11.15). The popular protest
was against PRC’s imposition of a screening
mechanism of candidates in the proposed
election system of the SAR’s chief execu-
tive based on universal suffrage in 2017. The
proposed system did not get enough votes to
pass in the SAR legislature in 2015, and Hong
Kong’s future political system remains uncer-
tain. Whatever may happen, it is clear that the
SAR’s future is irrevocably and closely tied to
that of China. Business in Hong Kong cannot
go on as usual, as some had once thought.
Figure 11.15 Also called the “Umbrella Movement,” the occupy Central protest in 2014 was the largest civil disobedience movement since 1967. the protest was against the proposed “universal suffrage” system, which critics consider as not genuine. Source: Photo by Wilfred Chan.
484 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
Taipei: In Search of an Identity?
Although regional centers are found through-
out East Asia, a particularly good example is
Taipei, which has been emerging from its pro-
vincial cocoon and acquiring some of the aura
of a world-class city, following in the footsteps
of Hong Kong. There is ambiguity about how
to classify Taipei: after 1950, it became the
“temporary” capital of the Republic of China
(ROC) government-in-exile and as such expe-
rienced phenomenal and unexpected growth.
If the communists had succeeded in captur-
ing Taiwan in 1950, as they had hoped, Tai-
pei would be a vastly different place today,
probably something akin to present-day Xia-
men across the Taiwan Strait. Instead, Taipei
skyrocketed from a modest Japanese colonial
capital city of a quarter million in 1945 to the
present metropolis of more than 6 million
that completely fills the Taipei basin and spills
northeast to the port of Keelung, northwest
to the coastal town of Tanshui (now a high-
rise suburban satellite), and southwest toward
Taoyuan and the international airport. Func-
tionally, the city changed from being a colo-
nial administrative and commercial center
to becoming the control center for one of
the most dynamic economies in the postwar
world.
When the ROC’s government retreated
from mainland China to Taiwan in 1950, the
provincial capital moved to a new town built
expressly for this purpose in central Taiwan,
not far from Taichung (Figure 11.16). Taipei
was theoretically concerned with “national”
affairs and hence had all national government
offices recreated there (transplanted with
administrators and legislators from Nanjing).
The provincial capital dealt with agriculture
and similar island (local) affairs. This artificial
dichotomy, designed to preserve the fiction
that the ROC government was the legal gov-
ernment of all of China, held until the early
1990s, when the government finally publicly
admitted that it had no jurisdiction over the
mainland. Over the decades, Taipei became a
large bureaucratic center due to construction
of national capital-level buildings in the city.
Huge tracts of land formerly occupied by the
Japanese were taken over by the government
after 1945 and the single-party authoritar-
ian political system under the Kuomintang
(KMT) allowed the government to develop
the city largely free of open public debate.
After President Chiang Kai-shek died in 1975,
a huge tract of military land in central Taipei
was transformed into a gigantic memorial to
Chiang, one of the largest public structures
in Taiwan. As Taiwan’s political system was
democratized over the last two decades, this
type of memorial and other commemorative
fixtures of the KMT rule under Chiang have
been attacked, especially 2000–2008 when the
island was governed by a pro-Taiwan inde-
pendence party, the Democratic Progressive
Party (DPP), which remains a strong opposi-
tion party.
Taipei’s metropolitan area, with an esti-
mated population of about 7 million is thrice
the size of Kaohsiung metropolitan area, the
second largest in the island and the island’s
main heavy industrial center. Taipei today
remains the center of international trade
and investment and includes a large expatri-
ate community. Culture, entertainment, and
tourism are all focused on Taipei. Because of
its colonial heritage, the city’s culture is dis-
tinctly Japanese. Manufacturing in Taipei is
now concentrated in a number of satellite
cities, to the west and south. The old port of
Keelung, once the link with Japan, serves as
the port outlet for the north. As with Seoul,
most of the city’s population increase over five
Distinctive Cities 485
Figure 11.16 Map of taiwan. Source: based on Jack Williams and Ch’ang-yi david, Change, Tawian’s Environmental Struggle: Toward a Green Silicon Island (new york: Routledge, 2008).
486 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
decades resulted from in-migration from the
densely populated countryside, a migration
that has been primarily toward the suburban
satellite cities recently. What used to be Taipei
County surrounding Taipei City (in admin-
istrative terms) was incorporated as a new
city, “New Taipei,” in 2010. New Taipei City is
Taipei’s suburbs, the population of which is
larger (more than 4 million) than Taipei City’s
(about 2.7 million).
Taipei in 2004 also became the site (tempo-
rarily) of the world’s tallest building, with the
opening of the 101-story Taipei 101. Large-
scale suburbanization has also taken place, as
young professionals have moved to the north-
ern suburbs, or southward. Taipei reflects ele-
ments of the concentric zone model and the
multi-nucleic model. In some respects, Taipei
looks like Seoul on a smaller scale, with mod-
ern buildings, broad, tree-lined boulevards,
and a high standard of living. Substantial
clean-up and improvements came with the
1990s. As the political system was democra-
tized, the environment became an important
concern and urban development became an
open topic for public input. An excellent rapid
mass-transit system eases the transportation
crush, composed of hordes of motorbikes and
private automobiles.
Like Hong Kong, a significant portion of
manufacturing in Taiwan has been outsourced
to mainland China. Closer economic integra-
tion with PRC has brought the uncomfortable
and contentious issue of cross-Strait rela-
tions. More so than in Hong Kong, views are
far more polarized among the population in
Taiwan regarding how closely it should engage
with the PRC economically and politically.
This was shown in the Sunflower protest (last-
ing for three weeks) in 2014, the same year
Hong Kong had its largest civil unrest since
1967.
Seoul: The “Phoenix” of Primate Cities
Seoul exhibits urban primacy in an especially
acute form. The metropolitan area of Seoul
houses over 25 million people, slightly half of
South Korea’s total population of 50 million,
putting it in the top ranks of the world’s meg-
acities. Seoul metropolitan region includes the
smaller neighboring city of Incheon and the
surrounding province of Gyonggi, which has a
network of high-rise residential and commer-
cial centers. In 1950, Seoul had barely more
than 1 million people, just slightly more than
second-ranked Pusan (Busan), the main port
on the southeast coast. In 2015, Pusan had
only 3.4 million people.
Seoul is the political, cultural, educational,
and economic heart of modern South Korea,
the nerve center for the powerful state that
South Korea has become. As South Korea’s cap-
ital, Seoul has a large tertiary sector devoted to
government and military forces. Manufactur-
ing is another major employer, especially elec-
tronics, machinery, and automobiles. In the
past decade, some labor-intensive manufac-
turing has shifted to other Korean cities and
to other countries. Seoul remains an impor-
tant location for headquarters of many global
corporations such as Samsung, LG Group,
and Hyundai Motors. Though not yet on par
with Tokyo or New York, Seoul is considered
a world city. Over the past two decades, it has
become increasingly cosmopolitan and glob-
ally connected via flows of capital and people,
changes that are closely related to broader
processes of democratization and globaliza-
tion in South Korea.
The rise of Seoul to become one of the
largest cities in the world is surprising from a
locational viewpoint. The city’s site, midway
along the highly populated western coastal
plain of the Korean Peninsula was a logical
Distinctive Cities 487
place for the national capital of a unified
Korea. However, since the division of the pen-
insula in the late 1940s and the bitter stalemate
between North and South Korea since 1953,
Seoul’s location just 20 miles (32 km) from
the demilitarized zone (DMZ) that divides
North and South, makes the city highly vul-
nerable. The city was nearly leveled during
the Korean War, when the North occupied the
city twice. In the 1970s, a greenbelt was estab-
lished that encircled the city approximately
9 miles (15 km) from the core and limited its
spatial expansion. This was done to contain
urban sprawl as well as to protect Seoul from
North Korean artillery attacks. Urban plan-
ning policies of the 1980s directed develop-
ments southward, across the Han River, which
was a strategy similarly informed by national
defense concerns. Despite concerns about
safety, Seoul has experienced an increasing
and seemingly unstoppable influx of peo-
ple and economic activity over the past five
decades.
Post-1960s, growth is primarily the result
of massive rural-to-urban migration, encour-
aged by Korea’s transformation into an urban-
industrial society as South Korea embarked on
an export-oriented industrialization strategy
concentrated around Seoul. The urban land-
scape includes a dizzying mix of high-rise
apartment blocks, mid-level residential and
commercial buildings, with pockets of older
1–2 story buildings; especially southward, the
urban landscape now seems “centerless,” as
dense developments and high-rise buildings
create a multi-nucleic pattern throughout the
metropolitan area.
Expansion away from the old city (north of
the Han River) was driven by a series of pol-
icy interventions intended to decentralize the
economic functions by establishing new resi-
dential and industrial development areas. The
first wave of policy-led expansion occurred in
the 1970s and produced suburbanization with
massive new subdivisions dominated by high-
rise apartment complexes, dense retail, new
corporate headquarters, and the relocation of
many public facilities belonging to national
and city governments. A second wave of devel-
opment in the 1990s responded to demands
for more affordable housing. Five large-scale
new towns were established 12–15 miles from
the city center. Their locations were dictated
by the strict greenbelt policy that created a
barrier to continued expansion of Seoul’s
existing suburban areas. Approximately 20
percent of the population, or about 2 million
people, moved out from Seoul’s central areas
between 1992 and 1999. With little industry of
their own, these new towns functioned at first
much like bedroom communities, linked by
highways, and later by transit lines, to the cen-
tral areas of Seoul. The combination of these
two waves of expansion led to a “hollowing
out” of the older parts of Seoul, north of the
Han River, laying the foundation for an urban
renewal program that began in the late 1990s.
Older parts of the city have since transformed
through a series of large-scale redevelopment
projects intended to improve housing qual-
ity with construction of new high-rise apart-
ments that allow for more open space within
the city center.
Changes in the built form and social land-
scape of Seoul have occurred in parallel with
economic changes. While its early “take-off”
occurred through heavy industrialization
based on the availability of cheap labor, Seoul
today is better described as a postindustrial
metropolis whose economic development is
centered on financial and corporate services,
real estate, and in recent years, high-tech and
creative industries. With this shift, city leaders
have sought to rebrand Seoul as a leading-edge
488 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
on new guises and, except for North Korea,
look somewhat similar across the region.
The Chinese Way
Before 1979, China pursued a Stalinist-type
industrialization program, suppressing per-
sonal consumption (the “nonproductive” side
of cities) and squeezing agriculture to help
finance rapid industrial growth. To main-
tain the huge imbalance between city and the
countryside, strict controls over migration to
the city through the hukou (household regis-
tration) system was maintained. Urban resi-
dents had some basic welfare and guaranteed
jobs, but their lives were closely monitored.
Such an approach kept Chinese people, even
in the city, at the bottom rank of the living
standards among East Asia’s countries and has
resulted in mass poverty in the countryside.
When Mao died in 1976, the system began to
change.
In the late 1970s, China’s leaders began to
make significant policy changes to key eco-
nomic policies of the Maoist era yet did not
abandon the one-party system and authori-
tarian rule. China became open to foreign-
ers for investment, trade, tourism, technical
assistance, and other economic contacts as the
policy of self-reliance was set aside. Rapid inte-
gration with the global economy profoundly
impacted cities and urban development in the
coastal region. China first established export-
processing zones, such as Shenzhen, with
concessionary tax policies to attract foreign
investment. By the mid-1990s, practically the
entire coastal region contained thousands of
“open zones” vying for foreign investments.
Another major change is de-collectiviza-
tion of agriculture and the return to private
smallholdings (under the Household Respon-
sibility System) in the early 1980s. This shift
high-tech and sustainable city. The green belt,
which was criticized in the past for failing to
curb urban growth and leading to suburban
sprawl, is now seen as an important green
space winding through a dense metropolitan
area. The satellite towns, once largely depend-
ent on Seoul, have become more independent
commercial centers, relieving commuter traf-
fic congestion. With improved mass-transit,
auto-dependent commuting from suburban
areas has decreased. Initially built to meet
the needs of the 1988 Seoul Olympics, the
impressive transit system is now more exten-
sive, combining subways, trains, and buses
throughout the metropolitan area. Mirroring
these improvements in transportation net-
works, Seoul has transformed itself into one
of most wired cities in the world. With Seoul’s
promotion of innovation and creative indus-
tries, its economic and cultural dynamism
will likely be linked closely to future digital
development.
URbAN PRObLEMS AND THEIR SOLUTIONS
The relatively clear-cut dichotomy between
the socialist path of China, North Korea, and
Mongolia, and the non-socialist path of the
rest of East Asia that characterized the region
through the 1970s is no longer valid. China
has abandoned orthodox socialism though
one-party rule remains. North Korea occa-
sionally hints that it might also do so, but
then slips back into Stalinist suspicion of the
outside world (Box 11.4). Mongolia, like Rus-
sia, abandoned not only a socialist system
but also single-party rule, and now struggles
to join the capitalist world. The colonial era
is now over in the region. As a result of these
changes, urban problems and solutions take
Urban Problems and their Solutions 489
Box 11.4 isolation: Peripheral Cities
isolation can be a huge handicap for cities, but isolation is a relative concept, in that it can be caused by both natural and man-made factors. Four cities in East Asia—Pyongyang, Ulan bator, Urumqi, Lhasa—play important roles in their respective regions, yet are really isolated, that is, they are peripheral geographically and in terms of their linkages with the rest of the world.
Pyongyang (“Flat Land”) is perhaps the biggest anomaly of the four. the government of north Korea rules this austere, reclusive nation of about 25 million from the capital city of Pyongyang. At an estimated 3.5 million in the metro region, Pyongyang is 3–4 times larger, in classic primacy fashion, than the next two largest cities, Chongjin and hamhung. this is hardly a surprise, given the centrally planned, Stalinist system that hangs on, long after the Soviet Union, Maoist China, and communist Mongolia saw the light. Leveled to the ground during the Korean War (1950–1953), Pyongyang was totally rebuilt in the true socialist city model, with broad boulevards and massive government buildings, a superficially modern showcase of socialist dogma, but a city that gets terrible reviews from the a limited number of foreigners who have managed to visit. Pyongyang is little more than a grandiose monu- ment to the whims of north Korea’s autocratic rulers. the city may be geographically sited in the heart of East Asia, but it might as well be in the middle of Siberia.
by contrast, Mongolia’s capital city of Ulan bator (Ulaanbataar, “Red hero”) with its 1.3 million people is the center of a country now doing everything possible to integrate with the outside world. the main problems are Mongolia’s tiny population (2.9 million), sprawling land area, and geographical isolation. Ulan bator is also a primate city. As Mongolia sheds its socialist past and democratizes, the country is rapidly urbanizing and trying to find alter- natives to the processing of animal products for its small economy. tourism is growing, but industry is never likely to be significant here. it will be difficult to overcome the country’s geographical limitations, and hence Ulan bator will likely remain largely a minor regional center.
Urumqi (“beautiful Pasture”) is also a regional capital, for the xinjiang Autonomous Region in China. An ancient city, Urumqi has become a booming metropolis of about 3 million, with a largely han Chinese population, as the center of China’s administration and development of xinjiang. As such, Urumqi in recent decades has increasingly taken on the character and physical appearance of a Chinese city, very similar to those found throughout the eastern, more populous part of the country. Although geographically the most isolated of our four peripheral cities, Urumqi is actually very much in touch with the outside world, largely because of China’s prodigious economic growth in recent decades. the city is the focal point of large-scale tourism, industrialization, and development of the region’s oil and other resources. Urumqi is also the center of efforts by the Chinese government to con- tain separatist tendencies among xinjiang’s largely Muslim population (especially among the Uigur). hence, the city’s geopolitical importance may well exceed its economic role.
490 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
Lhasa (“Place of the Gods,”) is the capital city of tibet and similar in many ways to Urumqi, although much smaller with under 300,000 in the urban area (Figure 11.17). if not for Chinese rule, Lhasa would be even more geographically isolated as one of the world’s high- est cities (nearly 12,000 feet elevation). Also an ancient city and center of tibet’s unique buddhist culture under the dalai Lama (in exile in india), Lhasa was thrust into the modern world with China’s takeover in the 1950s and became the focal point of China’s efforts to con- tain tibetan separatism, drawing much international attention in the process. Like Urumqi, Lhasa is rapidly become essentially a Chinese city, with the han Chinese population stead- ily increasing, and Chinese urban forms displacing much that was traditional and tibetan. tibet remains one of China’s poorest regions, and Lhasa’s economy is largely dependent on tourism and services, subsidized by the beijing government in its determination to ensure that peripheral regions (and their key cities) like xinjiang and tibet remain firmly within the PRC. one powerful demonstration of this effort was the opening in 2006 of the first railway linking tibet with the rest of China (via Qinghai province to the north). tibetan nationalists view the railway as one more tentacle of beijing’s grip. beijing, in turn, sees the railway as an essential tool to further bring tibet into the modern world and irrevocably into the PRC.
in sum, these four cities, in their historical as well as recent development, illustrate that isolation can be imposed by nature or by government, but overcoming isolation is no easy task.
Figure 11.17 the Potala Palace dominates Lhasa, the capital of tibet. this city used to be the home of tibet’s traditional ruler, the dalai Lama. Source: Photo by ond ej Žvá ek.
Urban Problems and their Solutions 491
everyone (Figure 11.18). Surplus labor in the
countryside, especially in older age groups,
remains serious. Moreover, impacting virtu-
ally everyone, rich or poor, is the critical state
of the environment. In the last decade, cities
of China have gained a reputation for serious
environmental problems, commonly cited as
the world’s most polluted cities. This has not
gone unnoticed, as governments at all levels
have invested in improving urban environ-
mental conditions.
Other Paths in East Asia
As with big cities around the world, the indus-
trial cities of East Asia are experiencing pro-
found problems of overcrowding, pollution,
traffic congestion, crime, and shortages of
affordable housing and other amenities. This
has been a region of impressive economic
growth and advancement in recent decades
and many urban residents now have stand-
ards of living among the highest in the world
(except for housing). Retail stores of all types
provide consumer goods for affluent residents.
At night, cities glitter with eye-popping dis-
plays of neon lights, nowhere more dazzling
than in Japan. Behind all this, there has been
increasing concern about widening wealth
inequality. The poor are the elderly, the immi-
grants, or rural migrants. This is especially
serious in China, where internal migrants
constitute about 230 million in 2014. Denied
access to basic social services, many of them
barely eke out a living on urban fringes.
Expensive land is a major constraint to
urban development. Thus, the major cities
are increasingly following in the footsteps
of most other large cities with high-rise syn-
drome. Growing competition among regional
cities exists to build the tallest skyscraper, as
if having the tallest building conveys status
helped raise labor productivity and brought a
better quality of life to hundreds of millions
of peasants. As many laborers were no longer
needed on the farm, the government was
forced to relax internal migration restrictions.
The migrant workers, estimated at 170 million
in 2014, provide plentiful low-cost labor to
make China the “world’s factory.” Migrants
fill many industrial and service jobs shunned
by urban workers, but under the hukou policy
these migrants do not have the same citizens’
rights and social benefits as ordinary urban
residents. This two-tier urban citizenship sys-
tem and unequal treatment of the migrant
population has become a major urban con-
cern. For example, Shenzhen had been a small
village at the China-Hong Kong border and
within three decades became a major export-
processing center with more than 10 million
inhabitants, many of who are young migrants
without the local hukou status.
The negative side of China’s new policy, a
combination of market approach and one-
party rule, has generated new imbalances
between rural and urban areas, provinces and
different regions, and socioeconomic classes.
To some urbanites, life has unquestionably
improved and appears increasingly similar to
that of the rest of East Asia. Many big cities
now offer a great variety and quality of goods
and services, including many luxury ones, a
huge contrast from the Maoist years. In fact,
some sections of large cities today look like
Hong Kong or Taipei. To many others, urban
life has also become a hectic struggle to make
ends meet, especially with escalating hous-
ing prices. Economic and social polarization
is definitely rising. An expanding class of
urban poor consists of migrants and laid-off
older SOE workers. Unemployment exists in
a rapidly aging population: China simply has
too many people to provide employment for
492 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
cities make maximum use of underground
space, with enormous, complex underground
malls interconnected by subway systems.
Suburban movement outward from the
central city is the only other alternative. New
communities have sprung up, including bed-
room towns where people can obtain better
housing with cleaner air and less noise for less
money, even though doing so often means
and superiority. Shanghai, Hong Kong, Taipei,
Seoul, and others compete. Even Japan’s cit-
ies, long characterized by relatively low sky-
lines because of earthquake hazards, have
succumbed to high-rise construction, such as
in the cluster of the 50-plus-story buildings
centered on the city government complex in
Tokyo’s Shinjuku District, or the new high-
rise profile in the port of Yokohama. These
Figure 11.18 Migrant workers shine shoes on a street in Wuhan, the largest city in central China. “Rural migrant workers,” numbered about 170 million in 2014, are everywhere in China’s major cities, doing all kinds of work. the huge army of cheap migrant labor is crucial to China’s success in being the “world’s factory.” Source: Photo by Kam Wing Chan.
Urban Problems and their Solutions 493
disperse growth into less developed areas in
the suburbs. While promotion of this multi-
nodal structure for the metropolitan region
may address issues such as traffic congestion
in the urban core, the new high-growth areas
also expand and reinforce Tokyo’s centrality.
Tokyo’s dominance also reflects strategic
choices over time. Despite successive National
Development Plans calling for more bal-
anced regional development, momentum
for this stalled as Japan struggled during the
long economic recession. Governments and
businesses return to ideas of agglomeration
economies that continue to benefit Tokyo.
The Tokyo Municipal Government has con-
sistently opposed repeated calls to relocate the
capital to another region of Japan; in the past
two decades, Tokyo city leaders pursued urban
policies to attract inward investment, increase
economic competitiveness, and enhance its
status as a global city. Tokyo’s waterfront rede-
velopment and new zoning laws that permit
intensification through high-rise construction
are two examples of how global aspirations
have influenced governments and business
leaders and reconfigured city spaces. These
factors have enhanced Tokyo’s profile as the
strongest magnet for people and investment
in Japan’s urban system.
Seoul: The Problems of Primacy
Somewhat like its larger cousin, Tokyo, Seoul
has suffered from problems of urban primacy
such as traffic congestion and housing short-
ages. Dispersed development over the past
few decades was meant to address these and
related problems by channeling expansion
into master-planned new towns outside of
central Seoul in the 1990s, though the areas
surrounding these new towns also saw haphaz-
ard and unplanned development due to land
longer commutes to work. Fortunately, most
cities have developed relatively good public
transport systems. Nonetheless, automobile
culture is spreading rapidly, with the private
automobile purchased as much for status as
for convenience. Automobile culture first took
hold in Japan in the 1960s, but other countries
have followed and China has now replaced the
United States as the world’s largest market for
automobiles since 2010.
Closing the Gap: Decentralization in Japan
In Japan, Tokyo’s dominance as the primate
city is indisputable. The concentration of
population and power has concerned planners
and politicians for decades. Efforts to decen-
tralize Japan’s urban system have approached
the problem at different levels. One approach
to reducing the dominance of Tokyo is to
direct industrial investment to other regions.
This national strategy was aggressively pur-
sued in the 1970s, stimulating industrial
and urban growth outside of the Tokyo area.
Labor-intensive work moved to the regions,
while research and high-skilled parts of pro-
duction remained near Tokyo. Unfortunately,
it is lower-skilled work that was most vulner-
able to wage pressures in the global economy.
Tokyo was relatively better positioned to
withstand, if not flourish in, these conditions,
reinforcing the capital region’s economic cen-
trality. Other efforts to discourage over-con-
centration of economic, political, and cultural
functions within Tokyo include policies to dis-
perse these functions within the metropolitan
region itself, supported by expansion of infra-
structure to connect new high-growth areas.
The Bay Aqua Line, an expressway across the
middle of Tokyo Bay, was designed to enhance
development along the eastern and southern
shore. Research and educational institutions
494 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
centralizing tendency of Seoul’s develop-
ment since the early 2000s, the city govern-
ment has also been trying to avoid decline in
the urban core. However, efforts to revitalize
older urban areas through densification (by
replacing two- to five-story buildings with
high-rise apartments) and providing more
outdoor open spaces have displaced many
lower-income residents from their old neigh-
borhoods. Some areas have seen massive dis-
placement of lower-income tenants and small
family-run businesses, unable to purchase or
rent newly constructed units. Disputes about
the gentrification process are centered on how
compensations packages are awarded. A 2009
protest against forced evictions in the Yongsan
area of Seoul turned violent, leaving six people
dead. As with other cities undergoing rapid
and dramatic redevelopment, it is not clear
whether Seoul will retain the social mix that
had traditionally defined life in its smaller,
more traditional neighborhoods as these areas
are replaced by the high-rise apartments and
broad boulevards that have become the trade-
mark of the new East Asian city.
Taipei: Toward Balanced
Regional Development
Taipei has made dramatic progress toward
solving some of its urban problems. Com-
pletion of the Mass Rapid Transit system and
stepped-up enforcement of traffic rules have
brought order to one of Asia’s worst traffic
nightmares. Air pollution has been drastically
cut through various programs. Housing is still
expensive, but the city is cleaner and decid-
edly a better place. Although many people
have moved to the suburbs, a large residential
population still lives within the central city.
The doughnut model does not fit Taipei, but
the multiple nuclei model is applicable.
speculation. Gradually, these new towns have
developed their own commercial, business,
and educational facilities, meaning that resi-
dents are making fewer trips into the central
areas. This, in combination with the ongoing
expansion of mass-transit networks outside of
the city’s core and the establishment of dedi-
cated bus lanes, has seen improvements in the
traffic conditions throughout the Seoul metro-
politan region. Interestingly, while the planned
new towns are dense enough to support mass
transit, this is not the case with the smaller,
more sporadic suburban developments that
have sprung up around the new towns. It is
these elements of Seoul’s suburban landscapes
that are a source of many of the development-
related problems that plague the city.
New-town developments have influenced
the city’s internal structure and have helped
Seoul become the central node in the national
economy. Seoul’s ongoing spatial expansion
made it a magnet for investment, leading to
uneven regional development with a concen-
tration of large corporations, state institu-
tions, and people throughout the country. To
counter this concentration, political leaders
have recently pushed forward on a controver-
sial plan to establish Sejong, a brand new city
75 miles south of Seoul that will be the home
to many national government agencies and
ministries. In moving many of central admin-
istrative functions to Sejong, over 10,000 civil
servants and their families will also relocate,
leading the way for the development of a high-
tech cluster and city of 500,000 by 2030. By
2015, Sejong had over 100,000 residents, but
questions remain about efficiencies of this
decentralization strategy, as some important
government functions will still be based in
Seoul, the political capital.
While the city and national govern-
ments have sought to counterbalance the
Urban Problems and their Solutions 495
degradation (Box 11.5). Greening of cities is
linked to broader transformations in urban
economies, dominated now by service and
high-tech industries. A similar urban devel-
opment pattern has occurred worldwide, but
for East Asia it is the speed of change that is
most remarkable. And perhaps, nowhere is
this truer than in China’s cities.
In various listings of the world’s most pol-
luted cities, China is well represented. The
public is so familiar with these rankings that
when a list of the world’s most polluted cit-
ies released by the World Health Organiza-
tion in 2015 did not list a Chinese city, this
prompted many bloggers to ask about China.
The surprise is not unfounded and all levels of
the government recognize the seriousness of
the environment degradation in China’s cit-
ies. Absence of Chinese cities in the said list is
due in part to the worsening conditions else-
where, most notably the heavily polluted cit-
ies of South Asia, but cities in China have also
seen some improvements in the last two years
after the “war against pollution” was launched
in 2014. Economic slowdown has also helped
to reduce pollution. One common strategy
has been to close or move polluting facto-
ries currently located in urban areas and, in
northern cities, to replace coal-burning boil-
ers with natural gas. Other programs, often
with international funding, involve water
improvement initiatives such as construc-
tion of new wastewater treatment plants and
clean-up of urban waterways through dredg-
ing and improved controls on industrial and
agricultural activities. Cities have increased
space for parks and local greenery as another
high-profile strategy for improving the envi-
ronmental quality of cities, while new sub-
way construction has increased public transit
capacity in many major cities. Shanghai has
been the most ambitious city, building one of
To address overcrowding in Taipei, the
national government embarked on island-
wide regional planning in the early 1970s,
resulting in a development plan that divided
the island into four planning regions, each
focused around a key city. The Northern
Region, centered on Taipei, has about 40 per-
cent of the island’s total population. Through
multiple policies about rural industrialization,
massive infrastructure investment, and pro-
grams to enhance the quality of life and the
economic base of other cities and towns, Tai-
wan has managed to slow the growth of Taipei
and diffuse urbanization. It built a high-speed
rail in 2006 connecting two “rivalry” cities:
Taipei and Kaohsiung. Historically, these two
cities have been controlled by the two main
competing political parties which have their
power bases in the North and the South,
respectively. The current central government
policy under the KMT has facilitated sig-
nificant outsourcing of Taiwan’s industry to
mainland China, which has accelerated the
economic structuring in the island. It will have
a noticeable impact on Taiwan’s urban and
economic structures and even political future.
The Greening of East Asian Cities
Cities of East Asia have faced many environ-
mental challenges as they experienced differ-
ent development paths. Growing populations,
rapid industrialization, and the recent general
shift toward high consumption lifestyles have
strained air, water, and land resources. Cit-
ies in this region respond to these challenges
variably, influenced by local conditions and
national policy priorities, while reflecting
broader global trends toward sustainability.
Driving the increased attention to quality-of-
life concerns of residents is a growing awareness
of the health and social costs of environmental
496 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
Box 11.5 a Stream returns to the City of Seoul
hae-Un Rii, dongguk University
Flowing through the center of Seoul for centuries was a stream originally known as Gaecheon (meaning “open stream”) and now known as Cheonggyecheon. in terms of Pungsu (the Korean equivalent of fengsui in Chinese), it played an important role as a natural waterway, flowing from west to east in the middle of hanseong (or hanyang), the Joseon dynasty’s name for their capital city. the Joseon emperors kept control of the stream, used it for sewage disposal as early as the fourteenth century, and planted trees along both of its banks.
Cheonggyecheon began to disappear underground as Seoul developed during the four decades of Japanese rule in Korea. Shortly after the Korean War, as the city’s population was rapidly expanding, the process of paving over Cheonggyecheon continued. by 1977, there was no longer a visible stream of water in center city. the bridges that crossed it were gone, asphalt covered the surface, elevated roadways soared overhead, people who lived near the stream were moved out, and commercial uses took over nearby land. Modernization had triumphed over what had become an eyesore, an offense to the nose, and something of an open sewer. however, a bit of nature had also disappeared from the landscape and so had a piece of Korean history.
in concert with Seoul’s drive to become one of the world’s greenest cities, reopening Cheonggyecheon for 5.84 km and turning its banks into parkland started in 2003 and finished
Figure 11.19 Cheonggyecheon Stream Restoration project in downtown Seoul during the Lantern Festival. Source: Photo by d.J. Zeigler.
Urban Problems and their Solutions 497
in 2005. but it resurfaced as a natural stream no longer. its flow now consists of purified water, and the sewage system is located under the stream. Plus, there is a big problem of flooding during the rainy season. Consequently, once the rains start, the city government prohibits people from walking along the stream. one of the threats during the rains is a pos- sibility that the door from the emergency sewage system might be open up resulting in the sewage water getting into Cheonggyecheon.
Although it was controversial at first, returning Cheonggyecheon to the citizens of Seoul and making it available to visitors from around the world is now regarded as a success. Many people now walk along Cheonggyecheon for exercise during all the four seasons; they enjoy the cool water and surrounding natural environment during the summer; and many cultural exhibitions take advantage of the open space. one of the most popular festivities is the Lan- tern Festival, which combines the traditions of Korean history and aesthetics with elements of popular culture from around the world (Figure 11.19).
Just imagine that you are walking along Cheonggyecheon: where flowers are growing along its banks, where you can sit in shady areas and watch ducks and fish, and where, from time to time, you can participate in a festival, enjoy a fashion show, or just have a rest with nature. For a megacity like Seoul, Cheonggyecheon is a kind of dream in the middle of down- town. in fact, foreign governments visit this site to learn how to manage an open-space corridor like this one, which has reemerged as an urban resource.
the world’s largest subway networks during a
15-year period of rapid expansion beginning
in the mid-1990s.
Clean-up efforts have paid off in many
cities, particularly at the street level, where
residents experience direct impacts of envi-
ronmental quality every day. However, in the
switch from “productive to “consumptive” cit-
ies, some problems are more intractable. Most
notable in this regard have been the incred-
ible rise in automobile use and the seemingly
endless proliferation of solid waste on urban
outskirts. There are also problems with agricul-
tural land being pulled out of food production
to construct new housing developments, golf
courses, and large-scale factories. Other urban
problems have origins beyond the city bound-
aries, such as the dust storms that plague Bei-
jing, cities of northern China, and the Korean
Peninsula. These notorious dust storms have
on occasion also swept through to more south-
ern cities, including Shanghai. However, while
perhaps most visible, dust from construction
and sand storms is less worrisome than small-
sized pollutants emitted by private automobiles
and factories operating within or near urban
areas. Levels of air pollution in recent years
have risen to alarming levels in winter, espe-
cially in northern China. Beijing’s pollution in
2014 was so severe that headlines around the
world referred to it as an “airpocalypse,” with
images of commuters wearing protective face-
masks. City governments scramble to respond,
introducing strict limits on new car registra-
tions and plans to move pollution-causing
industries away from urban centers.
Similar trends characterize the mixed envi-
ronmental records in other cities of East Asia.
498 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
environmental benefits, East Asia is becoming
known for even more ambitious urban envi-
ronmental initiatives based on the creation of
eco-cities, some of which are to be built from
scratch. These master-planned cities include
the New Songdo City (near Seoul), Dongtan
(near Shanghai), and Tianjin Eco-City (near
Beijing). While better known as the new
administrative capital for South Korea, Sejong
shares a similar futuristic image as a city that
showcases sustainable infrastructure and envi-
ronmental amenities. In most cases, eco-city
plans call for integrating residential, com-
mercial, and industrial developments, incor-
porating cutting-edge green technologies and
emphasizing high-tech research and develop-
ment. These eco-city projects are meant to be
large and spectacular, with residential popula-
tion targets in the hundreds of thousands. Such
large numbers are consistent with the high-rise
and high-density development pattern that is
characteristic of regional urbanization. Among
these planned eco-cities, Dongtan was the most
high-profile project, though little has been
done to move the project forward; many ques-
tion if it will ever be completed. Other projects
have begun construction, working their way
through planning and consultations, often in
collaboration with international design and
engineering consortiums. Proponents of these
projects argue that even if they are slow to be
realized, they have positive impacts on urban
vision in other cities and help drive develop-
ment of green urban technologies, such as
low-carbon and resource-efficient heating.
Some critics worry that these eco-utopian
communities will not achieve their ambitious
goals because they are more about improv-
ing the image of government officials and
the design firms than promoting the projects.
Others worry that even if built as planned, they
will be accessible only to highly educated and
Hong Kong, Tokyo, Taipei, and Seoul have
all undergone transformations that include
a move toward less polluting forms of eco-
nomic activity matched by increasing invest-
ment in and demand for cleaner air and water,
and more environmental amenities such as
public green spaces. In Seoul, the restoration
of Cheonggye Stream in 2003 was part of a
strategy to rebrand the city by adopting a sus-
tainability urban management paradigm. This
project fit well with urban revitalization efforts
that sought to bring new life to what had
become the somewhat barren streetscapes of
the city’s older core. After just over two years,
3.6 miles (5.8 km) of highway cutting through
the city center were replaced by a restored
stream, flanked by a linear park and walkway
for pedestrians and cyclists, with car traffic
limited to roads on the sides of the greenway
(Figure 11.19). To compensate for the loss of
the freeway, the city expanded bus lanes and
improved links to Seoul’s existing subway sys-
tem. The restoration of Cheonggye Stream
has earned praise for its direct environmental
effects and the indirect benefits associated with
increased flows of people back into the city core,
which had lost much of its street-level life due
to earlier waves of suburbanization. Large-scale
greening projects can also accelerate gentrifica-
tion. Urban renewal through the Cheonggye
Stream Restoration Project increased property
values and rents, driving out small industrial
enterprises that were located in this less desir-
able area. Many of these enterprises, along
with other low-cost businesses and housing,
are being replaced through “green gentrifica-
tion” by more affluent uses, including offices
and new commercial businesses such as cafes,
hotels, restaurants, and retail.
While restoration of Seoul’s urban stream
represents an ambitious multipurpose
urban redevelopment scheme with local
Suggested Readings 499
and talents to improve the quality of urban
life and promote more equitable growth will
remain major challenges. Undoubtedly, state-
of-the-art technology, such as the bullet trains
first pioneered in Japan, are now spreading in
China and other parts of the region, but many
question whether they will benefit the masses
or just the affluent.
An analysis of China’s current mammoth
high-speed train project, almost totally gov-
ernment funded, shows that the project has
benefited the rich and the middle class (i.e.,
about the top one-third of the population),
who can afford the far higher fares. The pro-
ject, rife with corruption from the beginning,
has negatively impacted the lower-income
groups because many cheaper “slow trains”
have been taken off the rails. The enormous
hardship that many low-income migrants
must endure in the annual chunyun—the
“spring movement” home and back during
the Chinese New Year break—in the “bullet-
train age” clearly demonstrates the regressive
nature of some top-down “modern” projects.
Increasingly louder voices from the grass-
roots population in many cities of East Asia,
especially in Hong Kong and Taiwan, cannot
be always ignored as in the past. The cities of
East Asia may be destined to play leading roles
in world affairs in the twenty-first century,
belonging as they do to one of the three power
centers of the global economy. The top player
of all may well be China—if things are done
right—with its great cities superseding those
of Japan, which dominated the region in the
twentieth century.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Bruno, M., S. Carena, and M. Kim. 2013. Borrowed
City: Private Use of Public Space in Seoul. Seoul,
wealthier residents, providing limited oppor-
tunity for the poor to enjoy the benefits of East
Asia’s sustainable urban futures.
PROSPECTS FOR THE FUTURE
Urban residents in many poorer cities around
the world must look with some envy at the
more prosperous cities of East Asia. To citi-
zens of the region, however, and especially to
urban planners, the overall problem of most
cities of East Asia is how far short the cities
still fall from expectations. For example, lead-
ing Japanese observers note that Japan’s fore-
most urban centers lack anything resembling
the character and depth of their European
counterparts. Instead, they seem to be forever
under construction. They also see that there is
huge potential demand for urban redevelop-
ment, yet Japanese city planning shows little
vision regarding a living environment. These
may be excessively harsh criticisms from ideal-
istic planners. Much the same could be said of
the rest of the region. Continuous demolition
and construction that leaves little history and
character are the prices of rapid growth and
economic success. But it is fair to say that cit-
ies of East Asia also respect ingenious designs
to create hospitable urban habitats in the rela-
tively unfavorable environments of high pop-
ulation pressure and scarce land.
So where do these countries and cities go
from here? East Asia will likely continue to
be a region of continuing relatively high eco-
nomic growth with most countries pursuing
a pro-business strategy. Urbanization will
continue in China, but it will require some
new thinking to integrate the migrant popu-
lation. There are vast amounts of capital for
urban development and for expanding infor-
mation technology, but marshaling capital
500 CITIES OF EAST ASIA
Sorensen, A. 2002. The Making of Urban Japan:
Cities and Planning from Edo to the Twenty-
First Century. London, New York: Routledge.
An examination of Japan’s urban development
from earliest times to the present.
Wang, Y. P. 2004. Urban Poverty, Housing and Social
Change in China. New York: Routledge. A com-
prehensive treatment of urban social issues in
China in the reform era, with focus on urban
poverty and housing.
Wu, W., and P. Gaubatz. 2013. The Chinese City.
New York: Routledge. A systematic overview
of urban development in China, including two
chapters on the traditional period.
Yusuf, S., and K. Nabeshime. 2006. Post-Industrial
East Asia Cities. Stanford: Stanford University
Press and World Bank. A book on technologies
and innovations in several major cities in East
Asia as they move away from manufacturing.
Zhang, L. 2010. In Search of Paradise: Middle-Class
Living in a Chinese Metropolis. Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press. An ethnography of
the different ways in which China’s new mid-
dle class is affected by the experience of home
ownership.
Korea: Damdi Publishers. Fascinating visual cata-
log and discussion of everyday street life in Seoul,
documenting the small ways that people appro-
priate public space and challenge urban order.
Hein, C., and P. P. Schulz. 2006. Cities, Autonomy
and Decentralization in Japan. New York: Rout-
ledge. Overview and case studies focusing on
decentralization of Japan’s urban system and
governance within cities.
Miller, T. 2012. China’s Urban Billion. London: Zed
Books. An up-to-date, well-written account of
China’s urbanization and its various complica-
tions, with many interesting snippets from the
field.
Naughton, B. 2007. The Chinese Economy: Transi-
tions and Growth. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
A comprehensive introduction to the Chinese
economy and its various mechanism and gov-
ernment policies.
Solinger, D. 1999. Contesting Citizenship in Urban
China. Berkeley: University of California Press.
An insightful study of problems faced by mil-
lions of migrant workers in Chinese cities at the
turn of the century. Many points are still rel-
evant today.
Fi gu
re 1
2. 1
M aj
or U
rb an
A gg
lo m
er at
io ns
o f
Au st
ra lia
a nd
t he
P ac
ifi c
is la
nd s.
S ou
rc e:
U ni
te d
na ti
on s,
d ep
ar tm
en t
of E
co no
m ic
a nd
So
ci al
A ff
ai rs
, Po
pu la
ti on
d iv
is io
n (2
01 4)
, W
or ld
U rb
an iz
at io
n Pr
os pe
ct s:
2 01
4 Re
vi si
on , ht
tp :/
/e sa
.u n.
or g/
un pd
/w up
/.
12
Cities of Australia and the Pacific Islands ROBYN DOWLING AND PAULINE MCGUIRK
KEy URbAN FACTS
Total Population 39 million
Percent Urban Population 71%
Total Urban Population 28 million
Most Urbanized Countries Australia (89%)
Northern Mariana Islands (89%)
New Zealand (86%)
Least Urbanized Countries Papua New Guinea (13%)
Solomon Islands (21%)
Samoa (19%)
Number of Megacities None
Number of Cities of More Than 1 Million 6 cities
Three Largest Cities Sydney (5 m), Melbourne (4 m), Brisbane (2 m)
World Cities 4 (Sydney, Melbourne, Auckland, Brisbane)
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. Cities in this region may be divided into two regional groups—those of Australia and
Aotearoa/New Zealand and those of the Pacific Islands—each with distinct characteristics.
2. Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand exhibit many of the urban characteristics of other
developed countries, such as the United States and Canada.
3. The urban character of Pacific Island cities is similar to that of less developed countries
though they are smaller and have considerably lower rates of population growth.
4. All countries in this region are dominated by primate cities, but in the case of Australia,
primate cities are the capitals of states in the federal union.
5. Many of the cities in the region were established as colonial or national capitals, and urban
patterns and character are tied to this political influence.
504 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
of the Pacific Ocean known as Melanesia,
Micronesia, and Polynesia. Socially, politi-
cally, economically, and biophysically, this is a
diverse region with diverse cities.
In this part of the world, it is easiest to
understand cities as forming two main
groups: those of Australia and Aotearoa/New
The Pacific region is a constellation of islands
of varying sizes (Figure 12.1). Australia (the
island continent) and Aotearoa/New Zealand
(now carrying both Maori and Pakeha, or
settler, names) dominate the region geo-
graphically and economically. However, many
smaller islands are found in those vast realms
6. Sydney is by far the most globally linked city and the key economic center in this vast realm,
though the global economic, cultural, and social connections of all cities have increased
dramatically.
7. In Australia, a popularly documented “sea change” phenomenon is drawing people away
from the big cities toward small but growing coastal towns.
8. Suburbanization and gentrification remain key residential forces in Australia and Aotearoa/
New Zealand, and globalization is a central driver of urban economies.
9. A multicultural population is increasingly the norm in most cities in the region, especially
in Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand.
10. Awareness of the environmental impacts of urbanization is rising, and environmental vul-
nerability, especially to the direct and indirect consequences of climate change, is a key issue
confronting the future of cities in the Pacific Islands.
Table 12.1 Australia and Aotearoa/New zealand: Changes in Distribution of National Population
Nation/Cities % National Population 1981 % National Population 2013
Australia
Sydney 21.8 20.9
Melbourne 18.6 19.1
Brisbane 7.2 9.8
Perth 6.2 8.7
Adelaide 6.3 5.7
Hobart 1.1 1.0
Darwin 0.4 0.6
Canberra 1.6 1.7
Aotearoa/New Zealand
Auckland 26.1 33.4
Christchurch 10.1 8.0
Wellington 10.8 4.5
Dunedin 3.6 2.8
Sources: New Zealand, Census of Population and Housing 2013; Australian, Bureau of Statistics
Estimated Resident Population 2013.
Key Chapter Themes 505
been, nations of urban primacy: their urban
pattern is dominated by a small number of
large cities. Approximately one-fourth of
all Aotearoa/New Zealanders live in just one
city—Auckland—and Australia’s two largest
cities—Melbourne and Sydney—are home to
more than 40 percent of the nation’s popula-
tion (Table 12.1).
The islands within Micronesia, Polynesia,
and Melanesia have starkly different urban
characteristics. They have highly nonurban
Zealand, and those of the Pacific Islands. The
former includes cities with characteristics of
more developed countries: industrialized,
with a generally high level of affluence, and
connected to global flows of people, money,
information, and services. There are two key
urban characteristics shared by both these
nations. First, they are urban. Currently, over
89 percent of Australia’s and 86 percent of
Aotearoa/New Zealand’s population live in
urban areas. Second, they are, and long have
Table 12.2 Population of Pacific Island Cities
ISLAND NATION/City Population (2015) % of Country’s Population
FIJI 909,389
Suva 77,366 8.5
Nadi 42,284 4.6
Lambasa 24,187 2.6
KIRIBATI 105,711
Tawara 40,311 38.1
Betio Village 12,509 11.8
Bikenibeu Village 6,170 5.8
MARSHALL ISLANDS 72,191
Majuro 25,400 35.2
VANUATU 236,486
Vila 35,901 15.2
Luganville 13,397 5.7
Norsup 2,998 1.3
TONGA 106,501
Nukualofa 22,100 20.7
Neiafu 4,320 4.1
Havelu 3,417 3.2
SOLOMON ISLANDS 622,469
Honiara 56,298 9.0
Gizo 6,154 1.0
Auki 4,336 0.7
SAMOA 197,773
Apia 40,407 20.4
Vaitele 5,631 2.8
Faleasiu 2,592 1.3
PAPUA NEW GUINEA 6,672,429
Port Moresby 283,733 4.3
Lae 76,255 1.1
Arawa 40,266 0.6
Source: Country Watch 2015 Country Profiles, http:// www.countrywatch.com/
506 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS OF URbANISM
Australia, Aotearoa/New Zealand, and the
Pacific Islands have indigenous peoples with
long histories of settlement, up to 40,000
years in the case of Australian Aboriginals.
Cities in this part of the world are, however,
very young. Urban settlement began with the
advent of numerous colonizers in the eight-
eenth and nineteenth centuries. Australia
became a penal colony of the British in 1788,
with the arrival of convicts to Sydney and
Port Arthur (near Hobart, Tasmania) and
later to Brisbane (Figure 12.2). The continued
arrival of convicts to these coastal towns and
the establishment of additional settlements
like Melbourne and Adelaide, for purposes
of colonial administration, commerce, and
populations. Although reliable statistics
are difficult to obtain, it is estimated that
35 percent of the population lives in urban
areas, with a projected increase to over 50
percent by 2025. There are 35 towns and cities
with a population greater than five thousand.
Two-thirds of the southwest Pacific realm’s
urban dwellers are to be found in Papua New
Guinea (PNG) and Fiji, the most populous
nations in the region (Table 12.2). The region’s
largest cities—Port Moresby (PNG), Nouméa
(New Caledonia, still a French possession),
and Suva (Fiji)—are tiny by world standards.
Negligible population growth is occurring
in these cities, where economic opportuni-
ties remain limited. In Pacific Island nations,
prestige and status are still very much tied to
the land and the rural, rather than to cities
and the urban.
Figure 12.2 one of the travelers on Melbourne’s Sandridge bridge represents the convict era in Australian history. the former railroad bridge is now a pedestrian crossing and sculpture garden. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Historical Foundations of Urbanism 507
capitals, facilitating more efficient connec-
tions between the cities and their hinterlands.
Industrialization similarly occurred within
(rather than beyond) these coastal centers of
colonial administration, though there were
to be later exceptions like Wollongong and
Newcastle in New South Wales, and Whyalla
in South Australia. By 1900, Australia had a
total population of a little less than 4 million;
Sydney and Melbourne each had populations
of approximately half a million; Adelaide,
Brisbane, and Perth more than 100,000 each;
and Hobart remained small at 35,000 people.
Colonialism had hence been responsible for
this uniquely Australian urban primacy and
settlement pattern in at least two ways. First, the
sites of European settlements (either convict
or free), with their coastal locations and trad-
ing functions, formed the foundations of the
colony and its growth (Figure 12.3). Second,
the functions of colonial administration, and
trade cemented metropolitan primacy. The
political independence of each of the Brit-
ish colonies (later to become Australia’s six
states) also meant that the capital cities oper-
ated independently of each other throughout
the nineteenth century, providing services to
their rural hinterlands, acting as ports for the
import and export of commodities to and
from Europe, and functioning as centers of
colonial administration. Indeed, competition
between the capitals further worked to bolster
primacy. With each capital focused on ensur-
ing continued economic growth, backed by
political force within their respective territo-
ries, the establishment of alternative, prosper-
ous, and comparable urban centers was made
more difficult.
Two major events of the mid- to late-
nineteenth century further enhanced the size,
functions, and importance of Australia’s six
colonial capitals. Railroads focused on the
Figure 12.3 Adelaide is the state capital and primate city of South Australia. it was founded as a planned capital city for a new british colony in the 1830s. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
508 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
cities took on characteristics of the sector
model related to transport links and features
of the natural landscape.
The turn of the twentieth century did see
one challenge to the existing state capitals:
the planning of the new city of Canberra. The
federation of Australia’s colonial territories in
1901 was designed to both create and unite
a nation. The six colonial capitals became
capitals of states in the newly formed Com-
monwealth of Australia, and a new national
capital—Canberra—was established between
the two cities that dominated the national
urban hierarchy—Melbourne and Sydney. The
decision to locate the national government in
the newly formed Australian Capital Territory
(ACT) between the country’s two largest cities
was a compromise. The Australian Parliament
competition among the capitals fueled the
growth of existing rather than new urban
centers.
The first half of the twentieth century saw
urban Australia grow in the spatial pattern
established by British colonialism. A manu-
facturing boom that began in the 1920s rein-
forced the primacy of each state capital. This
era also saw the beginning of the systemic sub-
urbanization of Australian cities. The estab-
lishment of middle-class suburbs in attractive
surroundings away from the central city was
facilitated by the development of public-
transport lines radiating out from the city
center, as well as the activities of land devel-
opers and house builders. With the absence
of inner-city slums on the scale of those in
Britain, the social differentiation of Australian
Figure 12.4 Canberra’s distinctive but controversial Parliament house is difficult to appreciate from the outside because much of the structure is underground. the inside is breathtaking, filled with beautiful art and materials native to Australia. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Historical Foundations of Urbanism 509
with the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi
between the British and the native Maoris.
Unlike the convict bases of Australia’s settle-
ments, free setters in Aotearoa/New Zealand
were encouraged to migrate and invest, with
the resultant economy largely dependent on
pastoral activities like grazing sheep and cat-
tle. Unlike Australia, urban primacy was not
a nineteenth-century phenomenon here,
due to the originally more dispersed settle-
ment pattern and more diverse reasons for
urban settlement. For example, early towns
like Wellington and Christchurch were estab-
lished by trading and/or religious interests;
Auckland’s natural harbor made it an ideal
port (Figure 12.5); and gold rushes under-
pinned the growth of Dunedin. Thus, by
1911, Auckland had a population of 100,000,
Christchurch 80,000, Wellington 70,000, and
Dunedin 65,000. Over half of the non-Maori
population lived in urban areas. In contrast,
did not formally relocate from Melbourne to
Canberra until 1927, and even today, the ACT
remains comparatively small, with fewer than
400,000 inhabitants (Figure 12.4). Its dominat-
ing characteristic is the prominent role played
by formal urban planning. A master plan devel-
oped by an American, Walter Burley Griffin,
guided its development as a “garden city” built
around a large lake, with a central focus on a
“parliamentary triangle,” and satellite suburbs
with town centers of their own. Canberra’s
expansion was slow—only 16,000 people lived
there in 1947—and its early economy was reli-
ant on public service and diplomatic func-
tions. Today, its economy is supplemented by
a large student population that attends the
relatively large number of public and private
institutions of higher learning, including the
Australian National University.
In Aotearoa/New Zealand, European settle-
ment and modern urbanization began in 1840
Figure 12.5 built on an isthmus and connected to a rich hinterland, Auckland now hosts many activities found in major world cities, including the famous Sky tower that dominates the skyline. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
510 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
are based upon the patterns established in pre-
vious decades. Economic, social, and political
influences across the region have consolidated
urban primacy. Urbanization processes, the
overall urban pattern of the region, and the
characteristics of cities within it, are far from
uniform. For cities of the Pacific Islands,
tourism, political independence, instabilities,
migration, and environmental hazards play
significant roles. In Australia and Aotearoa/
New Zealand, in contrast, industrialization
followed by deindustrialization, globalization,
international immigration, urban governance,
and rural/urban population dynamics are the
primary influences.
The Pacific Islands
The historical pattern of urban primacy in a
largely nonurban region remains a hallmark
of the Pacific’s urban geography (Table 12.2).
By 1960, only Suva (Fiji) and Noumea (French
Caledonia) had populations greater than
25,000, and even today the size of the cities
remains small. Political independence from
colonial powers began in the 1970s. Only a
few territories, such as New Caledonia, remain
in colonial hands. Independence had a num-
ber of significant impacts on the region’s
urban system. Colonial administration was
no longer the primary purpose of the largest
cities in the region, but processes associated
with independence cemented the primacy
of these towns. In some, like Port Moresby,
PNG, independence fostered urban growth
because of new investment in urban housing
and services (Figure 12.6). Across the region,
accelerated urban growth followed independ-
ence because of, for example, the removal of
negative perceptions of urban living, or the
establishment of some countries as tax havens
(e.g., Port Vila, Vanuatu). Independence also
throughout the nineteenth century and the
first half of the twentieth century, Maori set-
tlement was predominantly rural.
Like Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand,
Oceania has had a long-established indige-
nous population. Similarly, it was the colonial
context that underpinned the urban system of
the region. Oceania was one of the last regions
of the world to be colonized, with British,
French, American, and Dutch powers estab-
lishing presences in countries like Fiji, Samoa,
Tonga, and Vanuatu at various times across the
nineteenth century. Towns first developed as
trading ports, usually close to existing villages,
good harbors, and viable anchorages. These
towns grew slowly, and some, like Levuka in
Fiji, declined over time because of relative
inaccessibility. They were never large: in 1911,
Suva had a population of only 6,000 people,
about 5 percent of Fiji’s population.
The first half of the twentieth century saw
a diversification of urban functions and spo-
radic urban growth. Although widespread
industrialization did not occur, the process-
ing of agricultural commodities like sugar,
and the extraction of resources through min-
ing, diversified the economic base and saw the
growth of cities in Fiji and New Guinea, where
the mining towns were nearly as large as the
colonial capital of Port Moresby. In Micro-
nesia, intense Japanese colonialism saw cities
like Koror, on the island of Palau, grow sub-
stantially; other administrative capitals grew
slowly. By the middle of the twentieth century,
urbanization remained limited.
CONTEMPORARy URbAN PATTERNS AND PROCESSES
The contemporary urban systems of Australia,
Aotearoa/New Zealand, and the Pacific Islands
Contemporary Urban Patterns and Processes 511
A number of possible solutions to the limi-
tations that customary land tenure places on
capitalist urban growth have been proposed.
These include proposals to lease customary
allotments, or the ability to use land to gen-
erate income through means other than com-
pensation. Such proposals have been severely
hindered by the limited capacity of urban gov-
ernance across the islands.
Connected to issues of land tenure are the
general housing characteristics of the urban
Pacific. Palatial houses exist, but they are often
built by expatriates and in gated communities.
Formal housing of the type commonly found
in Australian and Aotearoa/New Zealand cities
exists as well. Far more common, however, are
informal settlements. The great demand for
required bureaucracies in national capitals,
and encouraged education and urban living
in general.
Land and land tenure systems are a defin-
ing characteristic of Pacific cities. In Mela-
nesia, Polynesia, and Micronesia, customary
land tenures pose significant challenges for
urban growth, housing, and infrastructure
provision as well as the quality of urban life.
In Port Moresby, for example, traditional
owners hold one-third of the city’s total area,
and land is seen as a communal resource.
However, customary land tenure places limits
on the land available to house urban residents
and is associated with higher housing costs.
It also provides a disincentive to invest in
land development and urban infrastructure.
Figure 12.6 the Papua new Guinea high Commission, with its distinctive Pacific aesthetic, is located in Australia’s national capital, Canberra. Members of the Commonwealth of nations exchange high Commissioners instead of Ambassadors. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
512 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
Funafuti, is less than 14 feet (4.3 m) above sea
level.
The global economic context is crucial to
urban economies in the Pacific. Many nations,
like Fiji, have turned to tourism for economic
survival, with urban consequences. Global
commodities and mining, as well as the pres-
ence of wealthy expatriates, underpin the
urban hierarchy of PNG. And finally, inter-
national migration, in particular emigration,
can relieve some of the social, economic, and
environmental pressures in cities. In Tonga
especially, migration to Aotearoa/New Zea-
land, Australia, and the United States operates
as an urban “safety valve,” allowing Tongans
to realize economic opportunities overseas
rather than in overcrowded and economically
limited urban areas. This safety valve has also
become part of new, informal, urban eco-
nomic activities.
In sum, cities of the island Pacific are places
of vulnerability and opportunity. In a largely
nonurban context, in which effective urban
planning and coordination are nonexistent at
worst and problematic at best, urban living is
still sought as a chance for a better quality of
life. Though officially derided, life in informal
settlements remains attractive.
Australia
The dominance of state capital cities remains
the defining characteristic of Australia’s
urban system. The primary drivers of urban
development in the twentieth century—
industrialization, migration and, latterly,
globalization—have only reinforced the
importance of state capitals and fueled their
population growth. Between 1947 and 1971,
the population of Australia’s five largest cities
doubled, and growth has continued since then.
Historically, Sydney (capital of New South
housing, in the context of substantial urban
poverty and limited employment opportuni-
ties, means that informal housing is common.
Public housing is available, though waiting
lists are extremely lengthy.
Finally, the present and future of the cit-
ies of the island Pacific cannot be understood
without reference to environmental contexts
and threats. Urban settlement has involved
degradation of islands’ fragile coastal environ-
ments. The waste and water requirements of
growing urban populations threaten to over-
whelm already stressed ecosystems. Urban
water is typically sourced from freshwater
lenses, and if these are over pumped, salt-
water contamination can occur and render
the water unsuitable for human use. Because
of the geology of the islands, waste disposal
also affects the environment. Other forms of
water supply contamination can occur (e.g.,
by chemicals, sewerage), which in turn affects
human health. The most important environ-
mental issue for these cities in the twenty-first
century is climate change, especially global
warming. The low-lying islands, and their
cities, are at risk of inundation because of
sea-level rise. Climate change is also believed
to involve increased storm activity, acceler-
ated coastal erosion, saltwater intrusion into
reserves of fresh water, and increased landward
reach of storm waves. Each of these events has
the potential to dismantle city infrastructure
and threaten urban livelihoods. Environmen-
tal hazards are further exacerbated by social
vulnerabilities, especially limited institutional
capacities for urban planning. In 2010 at
the UN Framework Convention on Climate
Change meeting in Cancun, the Deputy Prime
Minister of Tuvalu classed climate change as a
“life or death survival issue,” threatening the
very existence of this Pacific Island nation.
The highest point on Tuvalu’s capital island,
Contemporary Urban Patterns and Processes 513
people have long dwelled on the fringes of cit-
ies, often in substandard housing. Places of
residence within the city are related to the
provision of public housing and also localities
with strong identification for indigenous Aus-
tralians. One of these places is “The Block,” in
Sydney’s inner-city Redfern, where housing
and other cultural services are concentrated.
The past 25 years have seen some shifts in
the distribution of economic and population
growth across Australia’s large cities. Two fac-
tors underpinned these slight alterations in
the urban system. The first was the influx of
people into Australian cities through interna-
tional migration. For the past 20 years, more
than 100,000 people annually have migrated
to Australia from around the world, most of
these to the capital cities, particularly Syd-
ney, Brisbane, and Perth. Cities that have not
received substantial numbers of migrants, like
Adelaide and Hobart, have declined in relative
Wales) and Melbourne (capital of Victoria)
have been the island continent’s largest and
most economically dominant cities. Australia’s
manufacturing growth after World War II was
centered in Melbourne, which, until recently,
housed the majority of Australian corpo-
rate headquarters (Figure 12.7). Other state
capitals served their rural and resource-based
hinterlands, with smaller and less diversified
economic bases. In the immediate postwar
period, Adelaide was somewhat of an excep-
tion, as the center of Australia’s car industry.
Aboriginal Australians are much less likely
to be urbanized than the broader Australian
population. They are also more likely to live in
small towns rather than large cities. Indeed, a
little over 1 percent of Sydney’s total popula-
tion, and 1.7 percent of Perth’s population are
indigenous. Indigenous movement to capital
cities is often temporary, and linked to kinship
and friendship ties with rural areas. Aboriginal
Figure 12.7 Melbourne’s traditional image is being shattered today by skyscrapers like Eureka tower (world’s tallest residential building when built) and deborah halpern’s Angel, a sculpture with roots in the aboriginal aesthetic of Australia. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
514 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
commercial developments on old industrial
land are increasing, and in some years the
construction of new apartments outstrips
that of detached houses. Equally important
is a cultural and economic reevaluation of
living in Australia’s inner cities. Australian
inner cities are vibrant, cosmopolitan spaces,
with a wealth of retail, social, and recreational
opportunities; and they are highly accessible
by public transport (Figure 12.10).
The internal structure of Australian cities
has changed over the past three decades. Based
on an analysis of social and economic charac-
teristics, metropolitan localities may be divided
into seven types of places (Figure 12.11): three
advantaged and four disadvantaged. In new
economy localities are found people employed
in new global industries and many educated
professionals. Gentrifying localities are found
across Australia’s inner cities, and are home to
those with ties to the global economy but with
a sizable proportion of low-income residents
as well. Middle-class suburbia houses many
educated professionals, though with a low
density of connections to the global economy.
Working-class battler communities have trades
people, often homeowners, while battling
family communities have above average levels
of single-parent and nonfamily households.
In old-economy localities, primarily suburban
and especially in Adelaide, the decline of man-
ufacturing has seen concentrations of unem-
ployment. Finally, peri-urban localities on
the fringe of the capitals attract low-income
people seeking cheaper housing or homes for
retirement.
While state capitals have, on average, been
growing, small towns in rural and regional
Australia have exhibited divergent patterns.
Many rural towns, traditionally operating as
service centers for surrounding farms, have
experienced population declines. Decreasing
terms. The second factor was globalization, or
more specifically changing urban functions
as the Australian economy became increas-
ingly tied to, and driven by, global flows of
commodities and money, and increasingly
reliant on globally networked business ser-
vices. Globalization has seen Sydney rise in
prosperity and prominence to become Aus-
tralia’s only world city. The headquarters of
Australian-based businesses, and the regional
offices of multinationals, are now more likely
to be in Sydney than in Melbourne. The rela-
tive growth of Brisbane and its surrounding
region during the same period can be attrib-
uted to internal migration (principally from
Sydney), the rise of a tourist-based economy,
growing economic ties between Brisbane and
the Asia-Pacific region, and Queensland gov-
ernment incentives for business to relocate to
Australia’s sunbelt. Connections to Antarctic
tourism and scientific activities are empha-
sized in the southern-most capital of Hobart
(Box 12.1).
Australia’s state capitals are highly sub-
urbanized and geographically expansive by
international standards (Box 12.2). Histori-
cally, the predominant housing preference is
for a detached house, producing sprawling
suburban conurbations (Figure 12.8) like
that between Brisbane and the Gold Coast, 37
miles (60 km) away. The continued prolifera-
tion of suburban housing is currently under
some threat. The high energy demands of
suburban life—use of the private car, heating,
cooling, and the water-use demands of large
houses—are increasingly questioned. Limited
availability of land and the high costs of ser-
vicing the social and physical infrastructure
needs of new suburbs have led to policies of
urban consolidation across the nation, with
an emphasis on sustainable building prac-
tices (Box 12.3). Mixed-use residential and
Contemporary Urban Patterns and Processes 515
Box 12.1 Hobart as a Gateway to antarctica
hobart is Australia’s southernmost capital city, located at approximately 43 degrees south of the equator on the island of tasmania. While the majority of Australian and new Zealand capital cities have strong connections to the Pacific and its islands, hobart’s location and history provide foundations for strong links to the Antarctic frontier, and the designation “gateway to Antarctica.” historical ties, research connections, and tourism underpin this designation.
building upon a long history as a sealing and whaling port in the first half of the nine- teenth century, hobart became a key staging point for Antarctic explorations. French and british expeditions of the 1830s were pioneering, though there was a lull until a flourishing of scientific and exploratory visits in the 1890s. hobart was involved in most of the storied Antarctic explorations of the early twentieth century, including those of Roald Amundsen (1910–1912) and the first Australian expedition by Sir douglas Mawson (1911–1914). hobart was used to gather supplies before ships departed, and also as a site from which to announce the success (or otherwise) of voyages upon their return.
hobart remains a hub for Antarctic scientific exploration today. A number of key research bodies concerned with Antarctica and its surrounding oceans are either based in or net- worked through hobart, such as the international Antarctic institute and the Australian Antarctic division. the latter is responsible for overseeing Australia’s engagement with the Antarctic territories, both scientific and more broadly.
tourism is an increasingly critical element of hobart’s economic fortunes. While the majority of visitors to Antarctica leave from South America, a small number depart via ship or plane from hobart, typically destined for East Antarctica. these journeys take between 7 and 14 days by ship and 4.5 hours by plane. For those unable to afford the time or expense of such journeys, hobart also offers visitors recreations of the Antarctic expeditions of the twentieth century. hobart’s Constitution dock houses the Mawson’s huts Replica museum, a series of buildings that recreate the physical sensations of the huts lived in by douglas Mawson and his team during their expedition of 1911–1914. built from the same materials, and with the use of digital audio to recreate a windy Antarctic landscape, the huts enable visitors to experience what life was like for Mawson and his team of 18 men. this theme of replicating Antarctic experiences is found at a number of other sites in hobart, such as a sub-Antarctic plant house at the botanical gardens, and a walking tour of the significant sites and moments in Antarctic exploration.
farm incomes, the closure of many public
and commercial services such as banks, and
limited employment and education oppor-
tunities for young people have encouraged
migration out of these towns and into larger
regional centers or, more commonly, capital
cities. A counter trend of growth in Australia’s
coastal towns is also evident. The twenty-first
516 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
Aotearoa/New Zealand
After World War II, the growth trajectories
of the cities in Aotearoa/New Zealand largely
paralleled those of Australia. The four largest
cities of Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch,
and Dunedin continued to grow, as did the
primacy of Auckland (Table 12.1). A number
of processes underpinned this pattern. Mar-
ket reforms since the 1980s have strengthened
global economic, cultural, and social ties,
which in turn have transformed large cities.
Second, immigrants, initially from the Pacific
Islands but also more recently from China and
India, have flowed into the large cities, espe-
cially Auckland and Christchurch. The third
factor is the internal shift in economic activ-
ity. While a general process of deindustrializa-
tion in Aotearoa/New Zealand occurred in the
late twentieth century, employment losses in
manufacturing were more severe in Welling-
ton, Christchurch, and Dunedin; and some
manufacturing relocated to Auckland. Finally,
entrepreneurial urban governance processes
were deployed to make cities more attractive
century boom in resource prices has meant
that towns in coastal Australia have grown
rapidly, instigating severe housing shortages
and consequent escalations in-house prices.
The “sea change” phenomenon, in which city
dwellers swap a hectic city lifestyle, trans-
port congestion, and high housing costs for
a slower pace of life and cheaper housing in
coastal towns is also important. Initially con-
fined to older people, principally retirees and
those nearing retirement, sea changes are
now undertaken by young professionals able
to run businesses outside the major cities, as
well as less affluent families seeking cheaper
home ownership. Towns like Byron Bay, Coffs
Harbour, and Port Macquarie in New South
Wales, Barwon Heads in Victoria, and Den-
mark in West Australia are commonly iden-
tified sea-change locations. “Tree change” is
a more recent but similar phenomenon in
which urban dwellers move to greener loca-
tions like rural Tasmania, inland New South
Wales (e.g., Orange, Mudgee) or Victoria
(e.g., Daylesford).
Figure 12.8 Sydney is known as a city of suburbs and single- family homes such as this one. Source: Photo by Robyn dowling.
Contemporary Urban Patterns and Processes 517
Box 12.2 the Geography of everyday life in Suburban Sydney
Figure 12.9 new roles for women, and new problems, have emerged in Australian cities over the past three decades. Source: Courtesy of Robyn dowling.
Australia is a suburban nation. despite increasing urban consolidation and gentrification, more than 72 percent of Sydney’s population live in detached housing, and 33 percent in areas more than 9 miles (15 km) from the city center. Suburban Sydney, unlike its north American counterparts, is heterogeneous. Sydney’s greatest concentration of migrants is found in its suburbs, and hence we see pockets of affluence and poverty neighboring each other. What is everyday life like in this differentiated world city?
Suburban Sydney residents live in houses of varying age and design. new houses are more likely to be large—27 percent of houses have four or more bedrooms, a double garage, formal and informal living areas, separate rooms for each child, perhaps a games/media room and a backyard that may just be able to accommodate a cricket pitch. Family members—both adults and children—typically know their immediate neighborhood and participate in local
518 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
sporting and recreational activities. the family shops locally, sometimes at a small corner shop or on a main street, but more likely at a supermarket in a large shopping mall. here, not only can they pick up their weekly provisions, but they can also eat a meal and see a movie.
daily travel patterns are increasingly complex spatially and socially. one adult (more likely male) will commute to the Cbd for his job in the finance or business sector or to another suburb for manufacturing employment. the woman is likely to work in this or a nearby suburb, most likely in retailing or a similar service-sector job in banking, hospitality, or education. the limited availability of public transport in certain parts of suburban Sydney, and the generally poor servicing of cross-suburban travel, mean that these journeys to work are most likely to be undertaken by car. For mothers of young children, the importance of the car is even more pronounced, as she drops children at school/childcare on her way to work, and takes them to social and sporting activities on the way home (Figure 12.9). For these suburbanites, the time and cost of car travel is becoming an increasing burden, though with no relief in sight.
Box 12.3 Green Buildings
the challenges of reducing consumption of finite resources—especially water and fossil fuels—in cities of Australia and Aotearoa/new Zealand are great. national scale policies that encourage the reduction of demands for energy and water and/or promote the use of renewable sources of energy are sparse. At the building scale, the picture is more positive. Encouraged by local government policies and building regulation, new housing developments in the inner cities are innovatively embracing low-energy infrastructures. the Central Park development in inner Sydney is a salient example. occupying the 5.8-hectare site of a former brewery, Central Park consists of 8 residential, commercial, and heritage precincts with an eventual expected occupation of 4,000 residents. building a neighborhood that was sustain- able across multiple dimensions was a goal of the development. the use of nonrenewable sources of energy is achieved with an onsite tri-generation facility that provides cooling, heat, and power to site. Water supply is harvested from rainwater collected in tanks at vari- ous parts of the site, while wastewater from commercial, residential, and garden uses is col- lected and recycled for use in cooling systems, toilets, and landscape irrigation. Finally, the buildings have both green walls and green roofs, planted with native vegetation and watered with recycled water, with the aim of providing not only more visually appealing facades but also natural means of cooling. importantly, this neighborhood was reliant on financial and regulatory support from various state agencies. this includes subsidies and grants from the new South Wales Government, as well as the sustainability measures implemented by the City of Sydney.
Source: Central Park Sydney. 2015. Central Park Sydney. [onLinE] Available at: http://www.centralpark- sydney.com
Contemporary Urban Patterns and Processes 519
Figure 12.10 the advantage of high population density and compact urban form is that you can walk or bike to old Victoria Market in Melbourne for the freshest of fruits, and vegetables. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Figure 12.11 Changes over the past three decades have produced new types of urban localities in Australia. Source: Compiled by authors from statistics in Scott baum, Kevin o’Connor and Robert Stimson, Faultlines Exposed (Melbourne: Monash University ePress, 2005).
520 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
of home ownership and education. Increas-
ing ethnic diversity is also an important urban
characteristic.
DISTINCTIVE CITIES
Sydney: Australia’s World City
With a population currently of about 4.5 mil-
lion, and projected to reach 5.7 million by
2031, Sydney is the most populous and most
prosperous city in Australia. The city is
home to some of Australia’s most widely
recognized iconic landmarks: the Harbour
Bridge (Figure 12.12), the Opera House
(Figure 12.13), and Bondi Beach. It is an inter-
national finance market; it attracts a growing
concentration of corporate headquarters; and
and to stem population decline. In Welling-
ton, New Zealand’s capital, the waterfront was
redeveloped using both public and private
sector investment. The aim was for the city
to become an international conference venue,
and the government also located the new Te
Papa National Museum there.
Aotearoa/New Zealand cities are low den-
sity, though suburban living is no longer the
only residential option as high- and medium-
rise apartments are becoming more common.
The proportion of Maoris living in urban
Aotearoa/New Zealand is now almost on
par with that of the non-Maori population,
because of the loss of Maori land and conse-
quent rural-to-urban migration. Maoris face
significant disadvantages in the cities, with
high rates of unemployment and lower levels
Figure 12.12 Completed in 1932, the Sydney harbour bridge opened up the city’s north Shore. tourists, tethered by lifelines, have been climbing the arch since 1998. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Distinctive Cities 521
by 65 percent to reach 2.8 million; it grew to
almost 5 million by 2015. The vast majority of
growth has been accommodated in expansive
suburban developments, including large-scale
public-housing estates built mainly across
the city’s western suburbs. Despite planned
expansions of public-transport networks,
the rate of urban expansion and rising levels
of car ownership meant that the city quickly
assumed the car-oriented form of autosubur-
bia, connected by networks of freeways rather
than public-transport corridors. Speculative
developers’ and housing consumers’ prefer-
ences for low-density, detached dwellings
meant that the city assumed a sprawled met-
ropolitan form, poorly served by the existing
rail network radiating from the Central Busi-
ness District (CBD). Twenty years of urban
it is Oceania’s highest value-generating econ-
omy and dominant world city. Equally, it dem-
onstrates some of the defining characteristics
of contemporary Australian urban life: subur-
bia, urban-based prosperity arising from an
advanced service economy, multiculturalism,
and environmental threat (Box 12.4).
Sydney entered the twentieth century as
the primate city and highest order service
center in the state of New South Wales. By
1911, just 123 years after first European set-
tlement, it had a population of 652,000 and
was already a city of suburbs. Sydney’s post–
World War II “long boom” brought unprece-
dented economic and population growth and
set in motion the formative settlement pat-
terns that have shaped the contemporary city.
Between 1947 and 1971, population expanded
Figure 12.13 now a UnESCo World heritage site, the Sydney opera house has become a symbol of the island continent. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
522 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
Box 12.4 Multiculturalism and local Government in australia
Cities in Australia have long been immigrant cities. After World War ii, labor migration to Australia was dominated by people from the United Kingdom, ireland, and southern Europe. the 1980s and 1990s saw a shift to the countries of southeast Asia, and more recently toward refugees from Africa and the Middle East. hence, cities like Sydney are characterized by considerable cultural diversity. it is largely within urban neighborhoods that “everyday multiculturalism,” the ordinary living of cultural diversity, occurs. Sometimes, this engenders conflict, as seen in the following excerpt from an article by a religious affairs reporter for the Sydney Morning Herald.
A Muslim centre built in the heart of Sydney’s Bible Belt is facing fresh opposition—over its plans to host midnight prayers. But plans to extend the Annangrove prayer centre’s hours and permit it to open late at night on three holy days have attracted four objections—well short of the thousands of complaints that almost blocked its construction four years ago. . . . The trustees [of the Imam Hasan Centre] want permission to open the doors until midnight three times a year, an increase in capacity from 120 to 150 people and a 45-minute extension in operating hours to permit cleaning and the occasional committee hearing. “Can you tell me any church that has any time restriction or limit on numbers?” said Abbas Aly, one of the centre’s trustees. . . . If you ring up our neighbours they’ll tell you they hardly notice us here. It’s hardly used midweek and most of our programs are on a Saturday.”
The [Baulkham Hills] council originally refused to approve the centre when more than 900 local residents claimed its existence threatened the ambience and character of the semi-rural suburb, in Sydney’s north-west. Mr Aly appealed to the Land and Environment Court, which reversed the decision on the grounds that the local objections were not based on facts.
Once construction started, the site was vandalised, sprayed with racist graffiti and smeared with animal offal. Pigs’ heads were impaled on wooden stakes. Mr Aly said tensions between local people and the centre had long since dissipated, except for the occasional persistent critic, especially as it had become clear that the centre looked more like a community centre than a mosque. “We’ve had quite a positive response to our latest development application from neighbours, compared to the 8500 complaints to our construction. We get quite a number of people who have come in to apologise. I asked them did they see the plans, they said, ‘No, we just believed what we were told’, and I take my hat off to them for coming in and making their peace.” The Mayor of Baulkham Hills, Tony Hay, said four complaints had been lodged against the variation in consent orders, mainly expressing concern that creeping changes were undermining the intent of the original Land and Environment Court proceedings. No decision had been taken yet. . . .
Source: Linda Morris, “Midnight prayers raise objections,” Sydney Morning Herald, September 10, 2007.
Distinctive Cities 523
international property investment—in com-
mercial office and hotel developments—have
transformed the CBD’s built environment, as
has the transformation of Sydney’s economic
base to one dominated by increasingly glob-
ally connected financial and other advanced
services. Sydney has become one of the most
significant financial centers in the Asia-Pacific
realm, making up 40 percent of Australia’s tel-
ecommunications market. Employment in the
global city sectors of finance, insurance, prop-
erty, and business services is concentrated in
and around the city center where many of the
estimated 600 multinational companies who
run their Asia-Pacific operations from Sydney
are clustered, along with the headquarters of
approximately 200 of Australasia’s top compa-
nies. The economy of the city center now gen-
erates 30 percent of the value of metropolitan
consolidation policy has contained the extent
of sprawl, but strong population growth
(50,000 per year since the late 1990s) has
meant that fringe expansion has continued.
Sydney’s employment, retailing, and services
have been decentralizing since at least the
1970s. The development of regional centers
of commercial activity, such as Ryde, North
Sydney, Parramatta, Penrith, and Liverpool
has given the city an increasingly polycentric
form. Indeed, the current metropolitan plan-
ning strategy labels Sydney as a “city of cities.”
Despite Sydney’s predominantly low-rise
suburban form, the city center is characterized
by high-rise office towers, global tourist land-
scapes and, lately, residential towers tightly
grouped on the edges of one of the world’s most
spectacular natural harbors (Figure 12.14).
Since the late 1960s significant waves of
Figure 12.14 Sydney’s skyline, typical of a world city, dominates the capacious harbor. Can you identify Sydney tower? Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
524 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
Sydney were either born overseas or are the
children of immigrants. The United King-
dom, China, and Aotearoa/New Zealand are
the dominant source countries, though there
are also substantial numbers of residents born
in Vietnam, Lebanon, India, Philippines, Italy,
Korea, and Greece. Historically, particular
migrant groups—especially those of non-
English-speaking backgrounds—have tended
to settle initially in particular Sydney suburbs:
Greeks in Marrickville and Italians in Leich-
ardt in the 1950s and 1960s, Vietnamese in
Cabramatta in the 1970s and 1980s, and Leba-
nese in Auburn in the 1990s. However, recent
research has shown that Sydney’s settlement is
characterized more by multiethnic suburbs,
such as Auburn, rather than ethnic minority
concentrations, and by intermixing of differ-
ent ethnic minority groups both with each
other and with the host society rather than
by ethnic segregation. Over time, spatial and
social assimilation of migrants into a predom-
inantly multicultural city has been the domi-
nant pathway.
Whether growing evidence of social
polarization in Sydney will produce more
entrenched socio-spatial segregation along
lines of class and ethnicity is a concern both
to Sydney’s planners and citizens. In a trend
common to many global cities, Sydney’s
median dwelling price doubled between 2004
and 2014, with the consequence that housing
stress (i.e., paying more than 30 percent of
household income on housing costs) affects
approximately 200,000 households across
the city. As the median house price has crept
up, lower-income groups, including recent
migrants, have been increasingly confined
either to rental housing or to less accessible
suburbs removed from employment oppor-
tunities and services. It remains to be seen
whether Sydney’s social divides, traditionally
Sydney’s economic output and contains 28
percent of all metropolitan employment, with
high concentrations in the highly paid profes-
sional and managerial occupations.
Concentrated in Sydney’s city center are
high-paid, advanced-services workers, as
increasingly globalized connections have
driven long-standing processes of gentrifica-
tion, the recent resurgence of high-rise luxury
residential dwellings, and the multiplication
of globalized consumer spaces. Inner sub-
urbs of nineteenth-century housing have
been revitalized. New upmarket residential
locales have been built in high-density, pre-
viously used land on the edges of the CBD,
and in a host of high-rise high-density tow-
ers throughout the CBD. These developments
have meant that the resident population of
Sydney’s inner city has increased by 40 per-
cent since 1996. The development of a range
of globalized consumer spaces, catering both
to global tourists and to inner-city residents,
has also transformed the city center. In the
1980s the New South Wales government rede-
veloped Darling Harbour container terminal
as an international conference center, festival
shopping, and entertainment precinct. In the
1990s, special legislation was passed to enable
redevelopment of heritage wharves at Walsh
Bay as an exclusive residential, commercial
office, and restaurant precinct. Currently, the
redevelopment of the Green Square precinct,
located halfway between the airport and the
CBD, is transforming the residential and
commercial space of this former industrial
precinct.
Sydney’s world-city status is also reflected
in the fact that about 40 percent of all
migrants to Australia settle there, thus deep-
ening and diversifying the long-established
multicultural nature of the urban area’s pop-
ulation. Eight out of every ten residents of
Distinctive Cities 525
resources located in Western Australia—gold
and bauxite, for example. It is mining and
other global connections that have shaped the
city over the past 50 years. The mining boom
of the 1960s and 1970s, coupled with immi-
gration (primarily from the United Kingdom
but also from parts of southeast Asia), insti-
gated an acceleration of the city’s economic
and population growth. The location of
offices of mining companies and associated
services saw tall buildings emerge on the city
skyline (Figure 12.15). In Australia, the 1980s
were a decade characterized by an entrepre-
neurial spirit embraced by both government
and business. A consumption and leisure-
based economy emerged, aided by the city’s
hosting of the 1987 America’s Cup Challenge.
For the past three decades, the Perth economy
has continued to thrive on its economic base
of mining and tourism, boosted by substantial
immigration.
Now capital of the state of Western Aus-
tralia, Perth today is far removed from its
colonial beginnings. It has a modern sky-
scraper-dominated skyline; and the entre-
preneurial governance of the late twentieth
century involved substantial redevelopment
of older parts of the city as tourist and leisure
spaces. The redevelopment of the Old Swan
Brewery site in inner Perth is one example of
these processes. The Government of Western
Australia’s development corporation chose to
redevelop the site that was once home to the
factory making Perth’s famous beer. The Old
Swan Brewery complex now hosts a myriad
of leisure activities including theaters, dining,
and office space, as well as car parking. Across
Australian cities such redevelopment plans are
invariably contested. Conflict over the Swan
Brewery redevelopment project is representa-
tive of indigenous struggles to claim space
within urban Australia. In this particular case,
nowhere near as pronounced as in U.S. cities,
are set to become increasingly stark.
Nonetheless, Sydney remains renowned for
its quality of life. It habitually enjoys a top-
ranking position in international benchmark-
ing exercises assessing physical and cultural
lifestyle assets. However, the city’s beauti-
ful natural environment, open spaces, and
national parks belie the environmental chal-
lenges generated by Sydney’s car-dependent
nature and population pressure, especially
regarding air quality and water supply. Car
ownership is ubiquitous and 71 percent of
work trips are taken by private motor vehicle.
Consequently, air quality suffers due to pho-
tochemical smog-producing ozone at levels
that, while improving, still regularly exceed
the 4-hour standard for ozone concentration
on 21 days a year. In addition, despite falling
rates of water use per capita, Sydney’s popu-
lation growth is challenging the adequacy of
the city’s water supply. As of the early twenty-
first century, Sydney’s water consumption was
at 106 percent of the amount that can be sus-
tainably drawn from the drainage basin. Con-
tinuing urban development poses a significant
threat to Sydney’s water quality.
Perth: Isolated Millionaire
With a population of 1.7 million, Perth may
be the world’s most isolated large city. Located
on Australia’s west coast, Perth was established
in 1829 along the banks of the Swan River
and laid out according to a grid pattern com-
monly associated with colonial planning. As
the colonial capital of Western Australia until
1901 (when the states were united as a Com-
monwealth), Perth grew slowly for its first
one hundred years. Throughout its history,
Perth served both a rural and mining hin-
terland, with much of Australia’s key mineral
526 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
more recently southward toward the munici-
pality of Mandurah. Population growth also
instigated increased demand for water in an
environment of minimal rainfall. In 2006, a
desalination plant for the city was opened to
bolster the city’s water supply. For much of the
twentieth century, it was presumed that the
private car would adequately cater to the trans-
portation needs of this growing population.
More recently, however, the need for better
public transportation has been recognized. A
new, profitable and well-patronized suburban
railway line to East Perth was opened. Perth is
also home to a wide variety of other sustain-
able transport initiatives. Foremost here are
“TravelSmart” programs, run by employers,
Aboriginal protesters drew attention to the
symbolic significance that the site held for
them; and they wanted the brewery buildings
demolished and the land returned to park-
land. Their point was made in a variety of
ways, including an 11-month period in which
they camped on the site. The protests were
unsuccessful, with the government author-
ity going ahead with the redevelopment and
incorporating elements of Aboriginal culture
into the design. At another level, the protest
was successful for the ways in which it brought
an Aboriginal presence into the urban world.
Perth, like other Australian cities, is a
sprawling city. Population growth has spawned
metropolitan growth, initially to the east and
Figure 12.15 Kings Park in Perth offers a view of the skyline that serves the commercial interests of Western Australia and the indian ocean rim. Source: Photo by Stanley brunn.
Distinctive Cities 527
By the 1980s, the area—especially Surf-
ers Paradise at the heart of the Gold Coast—
had gained a dubious reputation as a place of
relaxed social norms, brashly opulent neon-lit
landscapes, and get-rich-quick real estate deals.
Nonetheless, the region matured as a tourist des-
tination. Large-scale foreign direct investment
in real estate, especially from Japanese interests
in the 1980s and more recently from the Middle
Eastern, brought significant diversification to
the array of tourist products and consumption
landscapes in Surfers Paradise and its hinter-
land. The area developed a series of integrated
tourist resorts such as the Marina Mirage and
the golf-themed Sanctuary Cove; large-scale
retail malls such as Pacific Fair, Conrad Jupiters
casino; multiple golf courses; and multiple
theme parks, including Movieworld, Sea World,
Dream World, and Wet‘n’Wild Waterworld.
The Gold Coast (incorporated as a city
since 1959) has had a rapidly expanding resi-
dent population, which now stands at about
half a million. Its more than 13,000 accom-
modation rooms in hotels and serviced apart-
ments accommodate an additional 3.5 million
domestic visitors and 800,000 international
visitors annually, primarily from Asian coun-
tries and Aotearoa/New Zealand. But more
than a consumption-driven tourist economy
today underlies the Gold Coast. It is also
one of the most rapidly developing cities in
Australia, characterized by sustained rapid
population growth rates of around 2 percent
annually. Its growth is largely migrant driven
as lifestyle attractions have drawn in-migrants
from across Australia, many of whom have
found housing in low-density canal-estates
built behind the high-rise coastal strip. More
recently, as the Gold Coast has expanded, more
conventional forms of suburbia have devel-
oped including a major new-town develop-
ment in Robina to the southwest. As this has
schools, universities, or workplaces. These
programs encourage individuals to consider
non-car travel, and sometimes provide incen-
tives to do so. Like Auckland’s “walking school
buses,” they have been successful in reducing
private automobile travel in Perth, and in rais-
ing awareness of the city’s precarious environ-
mental future.
Gold Coast: Tourism Urbanization
Australian sociologist Patrick Mullin has used
the term “tourism urbanization” to describe a
scenario of tourism-sustained urban growth,
where (1) urban development is based pri-
marily on tourist consumption of goods and
services for pleasure, and (2) urban form is
shaped by the city’s function as a leisure space.
The Gold Coast on Australia’s Queensland
coast can be understood in these terms.
In Australia’s Gold Coast—25 miles
(40 km) south of Queensland’s capital city,
Brisbane—white settlement began in the
1840s with timber getting and agricultural
development. By the 1870s, wealthy Brisbane
residents were already discovering the area as a
leisure destination, known simply as the South
Coast. The development of a rail connection
from Brisbane in the 1930s saw the area’s
appeal broaden and some minor beach resorts
emerge. But it was not until the boom of the
1950s that the area took on the name “Gold
Coast” and began its development as Aus-
tralia’s highest intensity, high-rise tourist des-
tination. Through many cycles of boom and
bust, intense real estate investment in tourist
accommodation, retail, restaurants, and enter-
tainment ventures along this 35-mile (56 km)
strip of spectacular surfing beaches, trans-
formed the Gold Coast into the most intensely
developed coastal tourist strip in Australia and
a key international tourist destination.
528 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
Auckland: Economic Hub of
Aotearoa/New Zealand
While not the nation’s capital, Auckland
has dominated Aotearoa/New Zealand’s
urban system since overtaking Dunedin and
Christchurch as the country’s largest city in the
late-nineteenth century. Like Sydney, it devel-
oped on an aesthetically and economically
advantageous harbor, and is similarly renowned
for its natural beauty. Historically, it too served
a rich agricultural and forested hinterland. The
deregulation of the national economy in the
1980s paved the way for the transformation of
Auckland. It is Aotearoa/New Zealand’s larg-
est, most prosperous and economically active
city. By the late twentieth century, it hosted
more than a third of the nation’s employment
in manufacturing, transport, communication,
and business services. It increasingly occupies
a strategic position in the national economy,
through its operation as a place in which and
through which the global economy operates. It
is the location of multinationals, international
financial transactions, global property invest-
ments, and a hub for international tourists.
Global rather than local connections are also
important in explaining a number of other fac-
ets of urban life in Aotearoa/New Zealand.
The 1980s saw the transformation of the
Auckland residential and commercial land-
scapes. High-rise residential towers (like the
famous Sky Tower, tallest building in the
Southern Hemisphere) were built around the
city’s CBD, often financed in foreign curren-
cies, designed by architects outside Aotearoa/
New Zealand, and managed by global prop-
erty conglomerates. High-rise residential
living has become increasingly popular.
The building of medium-density housing
has added to the city’s density. Sometimes
modeled on “new urbanist” ideas imported
occurred, the initial dominance of retirees
among in-migrants—prompting one author
to label the city “God’s waiting room”—has
subsided such that the largest in-migrant
group now ranges between 20 and 29 years
old. The city’s population is expected to reach
nearly 789,000 by 2031; but the Gold Coast is
also blending into the extended urban region
of southeast Queensland (SEQ), a conurbation
that stretches 150 miles (240 km) from Noosa
southward through Brisbane and the Gold
Coast to Tweed in northern New South Wales.
SEQ’s population is approaching 3 million,
representing more than two-thirds of Queens-
land’s population. The population of SEQ is
projected to reach 4.4 million by 2031.
As the Gold Coast blends into this urban
region, its economy is diversifying. Tourism-
related industries have tended to support
lower-skilled occupations and low-paid and/
or casual employment, prone to seasonal
fluctuation. Now, the state-supported Pacific
Innovation Corridor initiative aims to pro-
mote the region’s hi-tech, biotech, computing,
and multimedia industries that will integrate
the region into a globalized knowledge econ-
omy and improve rail and road connections to
Brisbane’s larger economy. Nonetheless, Gold
Coast is still one of the lowest income cities
in Australia and has higher levels of socio-
economic disadvantage than other Australian
cities, in part a product of its occupational
structure. The tourism-dominated economy
is reflected in lower-skilled occupations, low
rates of higher education, high rates of low-
paid casual employment, and high rates of
unemployment. As the conurbation expands,
challenges emerge: managing disadvantage,
enabling economic diversification, building
roads and transit systems, developing sustain-
able communities, and balancing environ-
mental protection against development.
Distinctive Cities 529
Box 12.5 Gentrification and Ponsonby road, auckland
Figure 12.16 Ponsonby Road is now a focal point of chic eateries and boutique shopping in Auckland. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Whether the claim that gentrification is now a global phenomenon is valid or not, this urban- ization process has certainly reshaped the inner suburbs of many of Australia’s and new Zea- land/Aotearoa’s cities. the process has witnessed middle-class renovation and resettlement of formerly working-class housing in inner-city neighborhoods in all the major metropolitan centers, as well as in regional cities such as newcastle and Wollongong in new South Wales. Gentrification is not merely a residential phenomenon but one involving refashioning local shopping streets, leisure and recreation facilities, and neighborhood services as residents’ aesthetics, ethos, and consumption patterns combine to mold local streetscapes. these impacts are evident on King Street in Sydney’s newtown, brunswick Street in Melbourne’s Fitzroy’s, boundary Road in brisbane’s West End, darby Street in newcastle’s Cooks hill, and Ponsonby Road in Auckland’s Ponsonby.
the suburb of Ponsonby is located less than a mile west of Auckland’s Cbd (Figure 12.16). After World War ii, many of Ponsonby’s more prosperous residents relocated to the expanding outer suburbs and were replaced by lower-income Pacific island and Maori migrants. however, waves of gentrification commenced in the 1970s, as diverse groups of young, well-educated, Pakeha (white new Zealanders of European descent) were attracted to the area by its cheap property, low rents, and social and ethnic diversity. ironically, that diversity can be threat- ened by the very process of gentrification. in Ponsonby’s case, gentrification overlapped with an Auckland-wide housing boom and property price inflation in the 1990s; the result has been significant displacement of lower-income, less-educated inhabitants, driven out by rising rents and spiraling house prices. Ponsonby’s population has, proportionately, become
530 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
do aspire to and do fulfill these suburban
ideals, like residence in a detached house.
Migration has also transformed suburban
landscapes. Suburbs like Sandringham, with
new places of worship and retail landscapes,
have been the destination of many migrants
from Asia.
The sustainability of a large, dynamic city
like Auckland is attracting ever more schol-
arly and policy attention. Contradictions
between reliance on the private motor vehi-
cle and a strong environmental consciousness
have seen the widespread adoption of “walk-
ing school buses.” Rather than children being
driven individually to school, they congregate
at locations along a designated route and walk
to school with other children, all under paren-
tal supervision. The average walk takes about
30 minutes. About 200 active walking school
buses now operate throughout Auckland and
directly from the United States, these new
suburbs modify the conventional suburban
way of life with smaller houses, a gridded
street pattern, and sometimes a communal
open space. Though not gated communities
in the strictest sense, the role of these new
suburbs in fostering social exclusion is an
ongoing issue. In fact, the same issue often
arises as inner-city neighborhoods undergo
gentrification (Box 12.5).
Lifestyle television programs and home-
focused magazines are hugely popular and
foster expenditure on household items and
renovation projects in Auckland and its sub-
urbs. Suburban backyards may be getting
smaller, but they still serve the important
purposes of providing a place for children
to play, domestic vegetable cultivation, and
the fulfillment of aesthetic and economic
aspirations. Some new groups of migrants
distinctly “whiter” and higher income. nonetheless, despite price inflation, the area has maintained a relatively young population and a significant proportion of rental housing.
Certainly, diversity is characteristic of the dramatic transformation of the consumption spaces and public culture of Ponsonby Road. Gentrification has combined with changes to licensing laws to see the birth of a thriving agglomeration of over 90 cafes, restaurants, and bars, interspersed with specialty stores, greengrocers, butchers, and newsagents. Mark Latham’s (2003) research has shown how the plethora of cafes and bars—often flamboyantly and expensively styled and open to the street—depart from the more traditional, enclosed spaces of pubs and the culture of hard-drinking masculinity that they accommodate more readily than other forms of sociality. As a result, gentrification has seen Ponsonby Road develop a range of more ambiguous spaces for consumption and sociability that are wel- coming to women, gay-friendly, and less confined to traditional norms of gendered iden- tity. in this particular site of gentrification, working-class displacement and middle-class colonization have been accompanied by the development of a diverse public culture that, while definitely accessible (most easily to those with disposable income), is open to diverse expressions of identity and diverse ways of inhabiting the city.
Source: A. Latham, Urbanity, lifestyle and making sense of the new urban cultural economy, Urban Studies 40 (2003): 1699–1724.
Distinctive Cities 531
poorly serviced housing, in which urban pov-
erty is concentrated; Suva has just a little less.
Basic urban infrastructure—water, sewerage,
electricity, and garbage collection—is either
completely lacking or minimally provided in
such settlements. Problems are exacerbated by
a lack of formal employment opportunities.
Urban poverty is rising, exemplified by the
increasing number of street children. Infor-
mal employment, particularly prostitution,
has arisen to counter the lack of formal-sector
employment opportunities.
Policy responses to urban poverty and
marginalization in Suva and Port Moresby
have been small and problematic. The under
funding of basic infrastructure has contrib-
uted to the problem. There is widespread
opposition to the urban poor and street pros-
titution. The government’s response to pros-
titution, the prevalence of street children, and
informal settlement has been largely nega-
tive. In PNG, problem settlements have been
bulldozed rather than adequately resourced.
More generally, these cities have been sites
of social and political unrest, which has had
its suburbs, but they are more likely to serve
middle-class neighborhoods. They have been
credited with removing cars from the road,
reducing air pollution, reducing obesity, and
enhancing community. Official urban poli-
cies of sustainability have already influenced
the building of medium-density housing and
housing with a small ecological footprint. A
more widespread implementation of urban
sustainability in Auckland has also recently
been discussed.
Port Moresby and Suva: Island Capitals
Port Moresby and Suva are the largest cit-
ies, and political capitals, of their respective
nations of Papua New Guinea and Fiji. They
have parallel histories, urban patterns, and
contemporary influences. While their cur-
rent political instabilities may be unique, their
other characteristics are broadly representa-
tive of cities in the island Pacific.
Neither PNG nor Fiji has a prosperous
economy. They have weak manufacturing sec-
tors, are reliant on an agricultural enterprises
beset with inefficiencies and at the mercy of
low globalization, and are plagued by politi-
cal instability. Hence, both Suva and Port
Moresby have fragile economic bases. While
population has been steadily growing in both
cities, employment opportunities have not.
Consequently, unemployment is high, with
one estimate putting unemployment in Port
Moresby at around 60 percent. These fragile
economic circumstances underpin the most
salient characteristics of Pacific Island cities: a
large informal sector, including informal set-
tlements, plus political problems and unrest
(Figure 12.17).
Informal, squatter-like settlements are
common in these cities. Port Moresby has
at least 84 agglomerations of substandard,
Figure 12.17 Located on Auckland’s north Shore, devonport’s landscape has been almost completely transformed by suburbanization. nevertheless, a few visual reminders of the original inhabitants remain, including this Maori warrior. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
532 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
Desalination may be one solution to water
supply, but its voluminous energy demands
impose other impacts on the environment. In
addition, the geographic expansion of urban-
ized areas involves the loss of productive land,
loss of biodiversity, and increased energy use.
The imperatives in all cities have thus become
reduced energy consumption and emissions
reduction alongside increased use of renew-
able energy.
Urban governance provides many chal-
lenges across the region. The challenge is
the establishment of effective urban govern-
ments able to meet environmental and secu-
rity challenges and fashion positive outcomes
(Figure 12.19). Governance processes that
contribute to social cohesion are also key. In
Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand, urban
governance is now characterized by a variant
of neoliberalism in which market processes
and solutions underpin policy. Waterfront
redevelopments in many cities are classic
implications for the internal structures of
these cities. In Port Moresby, for example,
security concerns have seen European and
other expatriates withdraw further into bar-
ricaded residential estates on the hillsides of
the city.
TRENDS AND CHALLENGES
Many of the cities in Australia and the Pacific
are cradled by fragile ecosystems and are
extremely vulnerable to the multifaceted
impacts of climate change (Figure 12.18).
Australia’s largest cities are further challenged
by the fact that they are all located in areas
where climate change is inducing significant
declines in rainfall levels. All of the capital cit-
ies (except Hobart) have desalination plants
in operation or nearing completion, to con-
vert seawater to drinking water, though most
are currently finding it difficult to cover costs.
Figure 12.18 in newcastle, nSW, this ClimateCam billboard broadcasts figures on the city’s electricity consumption. these are updated hourly as a way of raising awareness about the city’s contribution to resource use, GhG emissions and climate change. Source: Photo by Kathy Mee.
Suggested Readings 533
SUGGESTED READINGS
Connell, J., and J. P. Lea. 2002. Urbanisation in the
Island Pacific. 3rd ed. London: Routledge. An
overview of urbanization in 11 independent
island states.
Connell, J., and P. McManus. 2011. Rural Revival?
Place Marketing, Tree Change and Regional
Migration in Australia. Surrey: Ashgate. Exam-
ines urban-rural migration using numerous
case studies across Australia, to understand how
urban-to-rural migration can be achieved and
offer approaches for wider applications.
Forster, C. 2004. Australian Cities: Continuity and
Change. South Melbourne: Oxford University
Press. Explores the urban experience across
the Pacific Islands, including the role of cit-
ies in national development and as centers of
globalization.
Jacobs, J. M. 1996. Edge of Empire: Postcolonialism
and the City. London and New York: Routledge.
An analysis of how the connections built by
outcomes of neoliberal policies. The extent to
which such governance is equitable remains
questionable, and ways to produce more
“just” cities within such a framework are still
being sought. Equitable outcomes for indig-
enous peoples of these cities are especially
important.
Finally, the provision of adequate, appro-
priate, and affordable housing is a pressing
issue for all cities in the region. In Sydney
and Melbourne particularly, where house-
price escalation has been intense, affordabil-
ity has now reached historic lows. Mortgage
stress—where households are paying more
than 30 percent of gross household income on
housing—has risen, most particularly in the
suburbs. The impacts of the affordability crisis
include displacing younger people and lower-
paid workers from high-cost urban areas,
labor shortages, and growing debt burdens on
households with mortgages.
Figure 12.19 one of the challenges of urban governance in Australia is maintaining safe streets. Signs like this one in Sydney have been increasing rapidly as people everywhere become more security conscious. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
534 CITIES OF AUSTRALIA AND THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
McManus, P. 2005. Vortex Cities to Sustainable Cit-
ies: Australia’s Urban Challenge. Sydney: Uni-
versity of New South Wales Press. Examines
the histories and planning decisions that have
contributed to the unsustainability of Austral-
ian cities.
Newton, P., ed. 2008. Transitions: Pathways toward
Sustainable Urban Development in Australia.
Canberra: CSIRO Publishing. Examines demo-
graphic and development trends and their
implications for resource demands and sustain-
able urban development.
Weller, R., and J. Bolleter. 2012. Made in Australia:
The Future of Australian Cities. Perth: Univer-
sity of Western Australia Publishing. Uses the
concept of visionary cities within urban mega-
regions to project the social and sustainable
future of Australia’s urban population.
globalization and the postcolonial world shape
and reshape the composition of cities.
Le Heron, R., and E. Pawson. 1996. Changing
Places: New Zealand in the Nineties. Auck-
land: Longman Paul. Provides an overview of
the transforming geography of New Zealand
including its cities and regions in the context of
globalization.
Major Cities Unit. 2013. State of Australian Cit-
ies 2013. Infrastructure Australia. Canberra:
Australian Government. Provides a detailed
empirical snapshot of demographic, economic,
social, environmental, and governance dynam-
ics of Australia’s major cities.
McGillick, P. 2005. Sydney, Australia: The Making
of a Global City. Singapore: Periplus. A photo-
graphically illustrated history of Sydney’s built
environment.
Figure 13.1 Urban Populations: 1950, 2000, and 2050. Source: data from United nations, World Urbanization Prospects, 2001 Revision (new york: United nations Population division, 2002), www.unpopulation.org. Projections for 2050 by authors.
13
Cities of the Future BRIAN EDWARD JOHNSON AND BENJAMIN SHULTZ
KEy URbAN FACTS
Largest in Population (in millions: Tokyo (37.1), Delhi (28.6),
2010–2025 projections) Mumbai (25.8), São Paulo (21.6), Dhaka (20.9),
Mexico City (20.7)
Urban Areas Adding Most Residents Delhi (6.4), Dhaka (6.3),
(in millions: 2010–2025 projections) Kinshasa (6.3), Mumbai (5.8), Karachi (5.6),
Lagos (5.2)
Fastest Annual Growth Rates (%) Ouagadougou (8.5), Lilongwe (7.1),
(2010–2025 projections) Blantyre-Limbe (7.1), Yamoussoukro (6.9),
Niamey (6.7), Kampala (6.6)
Slowest Annual Growth Rates (%) Dnipropetrovsk (−0.25),
(2010–2025 projections) Saratov (−0.20), Donetsk (−0.17),
Zaporizhzhya (−0.15), Havana (−0.11),
Volgograd (−0.09)
Sharpest Declines Dnipropetrovsk (37), Havana (35),
(in thousands: 2010–2025 projections) Saratov (24), Donetsk (24), St. Petersburg (18),
Zaporizhzhya (17)
KEy CHAPTER THEMES
1. General growth in overall world urban populations will continue, with rapid growth in the
less developed countries and slow growth in more developed countries.
2. Urban growth in developing countries will present many challenges, including provision of
basic infrastructure and human services.
3. Young people and seniors will fuel the growth of city centers in developed countries, while
larger numbers of minorities and immigrants will move to the suburbs.
4. The world’s fastest growing cities are in countries with weak environmental standards, put-
ting the health of the world’s poorest urban residents at risk and putting greater strain on
the global environment.
538 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
Populous and diverse cities now exist
throughout the world. In fact, since 2007,
for the first time in history, the majority
of the human population is living in cities
(Figure 13.1). This chapter describes cities
of the future with predicted trends in world-
wide urban growth, distributions, com-
positions, economies, and landscapes. In
addition, challenges posed by urban growth
and change are explained, including provid-
ing for the residents of booming cities in
the developing world, or global south, and
managing urban revitalization and subur-
ban diversification in the developed world,
or global north. How cities will attempt to
be more sustainable and adapt to climate
change is also discussed, along with dein-
dustrialization, urban spaces as both com-
munications and transportation crossroads,
and resource-based cities of the near future.
Then, the chapter addresses changing urban
governance, which includes interurban
collaboration and geographic technologies.
The chapter concludes with a look at cities
that are predicted to have the highest quality
of life (Box 13.1).
URbAN GROWTH IN THE GLObAL SOUTH
Going forward, the percentage of humans
living in cities worldwide is predicted to
continue increasing. By “cities” or “urban
areas,” researchers commonly mean cities
as well as their suburban and exurban areas.
Since becoming 50 percent urban in 2007,
the human population has increased to 54
percent urban in 2015. This proportion puts
the worldwide urban population at almost 4
billion people. By 2050, the United Nations
predicts that the global urban population will
have risen to 66.4 percent or over 6.3 billion
people (Figure 13.2).
5. Cities in coastal areas are likely to face rising sea levels and more frequent and strong storms
due to climate change, forcing many cities to upgrade infrastructure and update land-use
plans.
6. As new industrial cities continue to develop, they will likely go through a period of dein-
dustrialization as they transition to a cleaner service economy, just as the revitalized former
industrial centers of the developed world have done.
7. Contrary to predictions that the world will become “flatter,” cities that are communica-
tion and transportation hubs will thrive, as will cities with concentrations of highly skilled
workers.
8. Some cities located near newly discovered natural resources will thrive, as will cities in Sub-
Saharan Africa and other regions, as they are able to attract manufacturing jobs due to East
Asia’s transition to a service economy.
9. Innovative approaches to urban governance, including extensive use of geographical infor-
mation systems (GIS), will continue to be important as urban governments plan for future
change.
10. Security provision and location-based mass surveillance will increase in urban areas, espe-
cially in the wake of terrorist attacks in major cities.
Urban Growth in the Global South 539
Box 13.1 engineering earth Futures
Stanley d. brunn, University of Kentucky
the planet is replete with mega-engineering projects of varying sizes, financial costs, and environmental impacts. While we generally would associate these projects with extensive transportation schemes, dams, airports, river diversion, and irrigation projects, they also can include theme parks and leisure spaces (golf courses and sports arenas), new capital cities, and towering skyscrapers. but engineering the earth can and does include projects of a social nature as well. Are not genetically modified foods, Google Earth, GiS, the internet, and Face- book also ways in which we choose to engineer the earth? And what about social engineer- ing projects such as gated communities, international “cookie cutter” suburbs, resettlement projects for “alien” newcomers and socially divisive projects designed by governments that separate groups based on skin color, religion, and ethnicity? Examples of these projects exist on all continents and in their social, environmental, and political impacts will only increase in importance in the coming decades.
three issues are paramount in looking at the future of megaprojects. First, is “bigger” necessarily “better”? Contemporary society, whether in the developed or developing world, seems almost addicted to projects that are huge. China’s three Gorges dam, dubai’s burj Khalifa, the trans Amazon highway, plus gigantic nuclear power plants, offshore oil rigs, postmodern skyscraper skylines, and outlandishly designed new capital cities, all come to mind. there is no shortage of mega-dreams and mega-schemes to try and resolve an immedi- ate energy or transportation problem or to appease the superego of government leaders. We seem to think the size “fix” will solve the problem or appease potential users.
Second, what are the impacts of mega-projects? For each project, there are social as well as environmental externalities. What are the short- and long-term consequences of relying on nuclear power or altering the course of a river or planning residential areas in environ- mentally sensitive wetland zones or on erosion-prone slopes? or, what about a society whose youth and wealthy are addicted to the disembodied worlds of Facebook, iPods, cell phones, and the internet? or, a world where everything and everyone is a coded into GiS databases? do we really want a world where everything can be mapped and where everyone is mapped 24/7? With our fixation on “technology coming to the rescue,” we often forget the envi- ronmental and human impacts of financial and engineering solutions to problems. Social, environmental, and civil engineering often seem to operate in parallel universes. hazards to future generations may originate in the social and physical engineering projects of today.
third, what about our future? Futures, like pasts and presents, will be engineered. the questions are who will be masterminding the planning and what do we expect from it? Post- modernists like to remind us that we have the freedom and flexibility to design the futures we want. Perhaps that is true; but, perhaps this view is also elitist, self-serving, material- istic, and unresourceful. Present and future worlds will be comprised of many living in sur- vival conditions in rich and poor worlds whose daily lives are and will be full of uncertainty,
540 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
Not all urban areas are predicted to grow
at the same pace, however. Urban areas in the
less developed world, also known as the global
south, are predicted to grow more rapidly
than those in more highly developed coun-
tries, or global north (Tables 13.1 and 13.2).
For example, Tokyo is currently the world’s
most populous urban area, with 38.0 million
people. It is predicted that Tokyo will still top
the list in 2030, having shrunk slightly to 37.2
million people. In contrast, Delhi, the second
most populous urban area at present, is pre-
dicted to grow by 40.3 percent, from 25.7 mil-
lion in 2015 to 36.1 million in 2030.
Populous cities in the more highly devel-
oped countries are predicted to grow slowly or
plateau in terms of the number of inhabitants,
while cities in less developed countries are
predicted to grow substantially. Cities in very
highly developed countries, such as Osaka,
New York, Los Angeles, Paris, and London, will
thus drop down the ranking list of the world’s
frustration, desperation, and without a moral compass. Where these conditions exist, how can one “engineer hope”? Perhaps the human condition will be improved by placing greater focus on economic and social micro-engineered projects that are local, sustainable, and com- munity based rather than highly visible and heavily financed projects by the international banking community. What is certain is that global warming, biological species decline, finan- cial meltdowns, social underachieving, geopolitical impotence, surface conformities, and social restlessness are futures with us now. it remains for the youth and elders, leaders and followers to decide what kind of engagement, empowerment, or engineering of the planet’s resources and population we wish to pass on the coming generations.
More than one hundred mega-projects are discussed in the multivolume Engineering Earth: The Impacts of Megaengineering Projects, which was edited by S. d. brunn and published in 2011 by Springer (dordrecht, netherlands).
Figure 13.2 Global Urban Population: 2010–2050. Source: Population division of the department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United nations Secretariat, 2010.
Urban Growth in the Global South 541
Table 13.1 World’s Most Populous Cities in 2015
World’s Most Populous Cities in 2015
Rank City Population Development Level (2012)
1 Tokyo 38.0 million Very high human development
2 Delhi 25.7 million Medium human development
3 Shanghai 23.7 million Medium human development
4 São Paulo 21.1 million High human development
5 Mumbai 21.0 million Medium human development
6 Mexico City 21.0 million High human development
7 Beijing 20.4 million Medium human development
8 Osaka 20.2 million Very high human development
9 Cairo 18.8 million Medium human development
10 New York 18.6 million Very high human development
Source: Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of
the United Nations Secretariat, 2015; United Nations Development Program, 2014.
Table 13.2 World’s Most Populous Cities in 2030
World’s Most Populous Cities in 2030
Rank City Population Development Level (2012) % change from 2015
1 Tokyo 37.2 million Very high human development -2.1 2 Delhi 36.1 million Medium human development 40.3
3 Shanghai 30.8 million Medium development 29.5
4 Mumbai 27.8 million Medium human development 32.1
5 Beijing 27.7 million Medium human development 35.9
6 Dhaka 27.4 million Low human development 55.5
7 Karachi 24.8 million Low human development 49.5
8 Cairo 24.5 million Medium human development 30.5
9 Lagos 24.2 million Low human development 84.7
10 Mexico City 23.9 million High human development 13.6
Source: Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations Secre-
tariat, 2015; United Nations Development Program, 2014.
most populous, as will other cities in Europe
and North America; while cities in East Asia,
South Asia, and Sub-Saharan Africa are pre-
dicted to climb the ranks. The very populous
cities of the world are predicted to be increas-
ingly located in East Asia and South Asia.
Causes of Urban Growth in the Global South
Why are urban areas burgeoning in the global
south? In these countries, rural-to-urban
migration is currently occurring and is pre-
dicted to persist into the next several decades.
People are moving from the countryside to
542 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
cities, swelling the populations of urban areas.
These moves are caused, in large part, by
broader trends in population and economic
geography.
The demographic transition model and
the related migration-transition model help
to explain how population trends are linked
to urbanization. They suggest that families in
less developed rural areas desire large families,
in part, because children provide additional
help working the land, potentially increasing
a family’s earnings. As farmers in developing
countries become able to purchase labor-sav-
ing tractors and other farm machinery, some
of their children become redundant with
respect to labor needs, and commonly move
to cities to seek work. As industrialization cre-
ates a demand for labor in the cities, unem-
ployed or underemployed in-migrants from
rural areas fill that demand.
Agricultural mechanization and urban
industrialization are driving the growth of
cities in many developing countries. The
changing geographies of labor markets are
causing a surge in city populations today,
and they are predicted to persist into the
near future (Figure 13.3). In developed
countries, this agricultural mechanization/
urban industrialization trend played out in
previous eras when cities in today’s devel-
oped countries grew rapidly from rural-to-
urban migration. Today, however, the cities
of developed countries do not receive many
rural newcomers because farmers in these
countries have utilized labor-saving machin-
ery for decades and have adjusted their fer-
tility downward. For example, the United
States became a majority-urban population
in 1920 at a time when the trend of agricul-
tural mechanization was sweeping across
the country’s farms and ranches, and when
industrialization was transforming urban
economies by creating jobs in the secondary
sector of the economy.
Figure 13.3 At close of business on Fridays in Portland, oregon, placards are out to remind commuters to enjoy their weekend. it’s good for their health. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Urban Growth in the Global South 543
In addition, public health and medicine
has improved in many developing countries
in recent decades. Families who, for genera-
tions, had many children to offset predicted
high infant and child mortality rates are now
finding that through improvements in sanita-
tion, maternal health care, vaccinations, and
overall medical care, more children are sur-
viving to adulthood. Higher survival rates
commonly result in more grown children
living in a rural area than can be supported
there, so those people commonly move to cit-
ies. Again, this trend occurred in developed
countries long ago, and their fertility rates in
both rural and urban areas have been low for
generations.
Changing cultural attitudes also contribute
to urbanization in the developing world. As
culture globalizes and many traditional cul-
tures begin to adopt Western values, achiev-
ing social status becomes more a matter of
individual accomplishment rather than being
linked to having a large family. Differences in
income, education, and professional titles, for
example, establish social hierarchy. Access to
higher education and better paying positions
in the tertiary sector are overwhelmingly con-
centrated in cities, attracting thousands of
aspiring young professionals each year.
Challenges Posed by Urban
Growth in the Global South
The high growth rates of cities in developing
countries present challenges. With millions
moving to rapidly growing urban areas of
the developing world each year, city services,
infrastructure, and housing provision have
not kept up with the population increase,
resulting in large informal settlements charac-
terized by poor housing conditions in many
areas of the developing world. Many factors
contribute to urban poverty, including tenu-
ous employment in the informal sector, lack
of effective urban networking to find jobs,
low wages of multiple-member households,
low rates of literacy, and lack of job skills. The
urban poor are also those who have to carry
water to their residences (equivalent to eight
suitcases a day); they experience irregular and
unexpected losses of water and electricity (if
such services are available at all), lack readily
available and safe fuel sources to heat food or
homes, and use various outdoor facilities for
toilets. They live in constant fear of eviction,
loss of income and employment, injuries from
work, and random violence brought on by
criminal gangs or police.
For example, a rapidly growing city like
Dhaka in Bangladesh must find a way to pro-
vide infrastructure and services for the half
million new residents arriving, on an average,
each year. This includes adding more water
mains, sewers, schools, hospitals, train lines,
buses, roads, energy supplies, dwellings, and
jobs. Newcomers having a difficulty finding
housing sometimes end up living in infor-
mal settlements, which go by different names
in different parts of the world: shanty towns,
bustees, barrios, bidonvilles, favelas, and villas
miserias. If residents have no legal right to the
land, which is almost always the case, they are
called squatter settlements, and if the built
environment is deteriorated and unhealthy,
they may also be referred to by the now-pejo-
rative word, slums. In such settlements, utility
service is typically not provided, land tenure
is uncertain, and housing is self-help. Gov-
ernments have financial and administrative
difficulties in formalizing such settlements
and providing city services. Accommodating
over 500,000 new residents every year would
be a tremendous challenge even for cities in
wealthy countries, let alone many of the cities
544 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
in less wealthy regions that will need to address
these issues in the coming decades.
URbAN CHANGE IN THE GLObAL NORTH
Metropolitan areas in the developed countries
are predicted to grow slowly: there are fewer
people to draw from rural areas and popula-
tions are at or below replacement level fertility.
What growth does occur will be due largely to
international immigration. Within metropoli-
tan areas, however, population rearrangement
is occurring, with the growth in city-center
populations and diversification of the suburbs
being evident in present and future trends.
Central cities have been attracting popu-
lation recently, which is a notable change
because such cities lost population, largely
to their suburbs, for several generations.
Depopulation of core cities and moves to the
suburbs and exurbs was especially evident
in North America, but occurred in West-
ern Europe as well. It is notable that Greater
London’s population has been rebounding
since the 1990s and is now, at 8.5 million,
larger than at any previous point in its his-
tory including its former high point, which
was hit right before World War II. London
has clearly bucked the decentralization trend.
So have other large European cities, but much
less vigorously.
Inner-city revitalization in the United States
and Canada has occurred in part because the
largest age cohorts in many developed coun-
tries are Baby Boomers (born 1946–1964) and
Millennials (born 1982–2002). These genera-
tions have larger proportions of those seeking
residences in or near city centers compared to
other more suburban-inclined generations.
Boomers are seeking smaller residences to
better fit empty-nest households and mini-
mize home upkeep obligations and expenses
as they age. In the United States, Boomers no
longer have children at home, so there is lit-
tle impetus to remain in or move to what they
perceive to be higher-quality suburban school
districts. Many Boomers have come to desire
the shorter commutes provided by living close
to workplaces in the core cities and shorter
travel time to city-center cultural attractions
and dining (Figure 13.4).
Near the other end of the age spectrum,
North American Millennials are showing a
preference for core cities or urban neighbor-
hoods, rather than the overwhelmingly pre-
ferred suburban areas of earlier generations.
Having come of age during the Great Reces-
sion (beginning in 2008), Millennials want to
live close to large downtown labor markets
in order to increase job search success and to
facilitate the frequent job switching that they
predict will mark their careers. Childlessness
has increased, particularly among younger
generations, and those who do have chil-
dren have fewer and at later ages. Millennials
are living in diverse households made up of
roommates, cohabitating couples, or singles.
Thanks to Millennials, divorcees, widows,
and widowers, the fastest growing house-
hold type in many developing countries is
single people living alone. At the same time,
young generations such as Millennials strug-
gle to save to purchase houses amid economic
and job market difficulties. They are buying
homes later and in fewer numbers compared
to previous generations. Population and eco-
nomic trends are funneling this generation to
core cities with their large supply of smaller
dwellings and rental residences. Also, it has
become more common, especially in Western
Europe, for Millennials to reside with their
parents well into adulthood, further slowing
Urban Change in the Global North 545
the demand for new housing in suburban and
exurban areas.
Suburbs in Europe, North America, and
Australia continue to grow, just more slowly
than in the second half of the twentieth cen-
tury. Many suburbs in North America and
Europe were overbuilt leading up to the
Great Recession, and the glut of homes has
caused suburban housing prices to stagnate
or decline. In Florida, Nevada, and Arizona,
approximately 15 percent of all residences
were vacant during the Great Recession, casu-
alties of overbuilding and the housing crash.
In Ireland, 300,000 new homes, mostly located
in suburban and exurban locations, stand
unoccupied and often unfinished, contribut-
ing to a 50 percent decline in overall property
prices since the peak in 2007. These houses,
like those in North America, were built when
mortgages were easily had, buyers (incor-
rectly) predicted that prices would continue
to rise, and growth in wages did not keep up
with increases in housing prices.
In the developed countries of North
America, Europe, and Oceania, international
immigrants increasingly are moving to sub-
urbs. European suburbs have long been home
to immigrant neighborhoods, including
North Africans in the suburbs of Paris and
Turks in the suburbs of Berlin. Increasingly,
newcomers to the United States and Canada
are moving to enclaves in the suburbs rather
than to ethnic neighborhoods in core cities.
The U.S. Census Bureau has also reported on
the sustained movement of African Americans
to the suburbs. The large cities of New York,
Los Angeles, Chicago, and Detroit, among
others, have all seen a decline in the black pop-
ulation. Both push and pull factors seem to be
at work in their moves: Some are respond-
ing to gentrification of inner-city neighbor-
hoods, and others are responding to their own
Figure 13.4 Repurposing old buildings to serve as apartments and condominiums in the heart of downtown is bringing life back to central cities. Every Cbd has signs like this, but this one happens to be in Cincinnati, ohio. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
546 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
suburban dreams (Figure 13.5). Suburbs are
clearly becoming more diverse, ethnically and
economically.
URbAN SUSTAINAbILITy AT CENTER STAGE
The rapid growth of cities has many costs
and benefits in terms of sustainability
(Figure 13.6). On the one hand, urbanization
is often taken as a sign of economic develop-
ment, as the world’s economic engine is pow-
ered by cities. Concentrating a larger number
of people into a smaller area also makes the
delivery of important services (e.g., health
care) more efficient. On the other hand, the
United Nations estimates that cities account
for more than three-fourths of global
energy consumption and greenhouse gas
emissions. The fact that 67 percent of the
world’s population is expected to live in cit-
ies by 2050 means that understanding how
to make urbanization sustainable will be one
of the greatest challenges in the twenty-first
century.
The concentration of industrial activity in
and around cities is one of the primary reasons
why cities account for such a high percentage
of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. In
the developed world, there has been a con-
certed push toward “green” technologies and
cleaner forms of energy to decrease pollution
and reduce emissions. While these are neces-
sary and important measures intended to cre-
ate a more sustainable future, new industry is
increasingly attracted to metropolitan areas
that offer lax environmental standards, espe-
cially in China and India.
Pollution Problems and Urban Futures
Powered by its vast deposits of coal and other
minerals supplying factories in its metropoli-
tan areas, China experienced an average eco-
nomic growth rate of over 10 percent each
year from the 1980s into the first decade of the
2000s, lifting hundreds of millions of people
out of poverty. The environmental cost of this
growth, however, has been severe. The World
Bank estimates that only one percent of the
country’s over 600 million urban residents
breathe air that is considered safe by Euro-
pean Union standards. Research by the World
Health Organization indicates that dirty air
and water already account for hundreds of
thousands of premature and preventable
deaths each year.
Figure 13.5 2015 commemorated the 50th anniversary of the “March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom” led by Martin Luther King, Jr. here at his memorial on the national Mall, a new generation looks up to dr. King. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Urban Sustainability at Center Stage 547
India, with over a billion people of its own,
has also experienced severe environmental
degradation as it continues to urbanize and
industrialize at a startling pace. Delhi has the
highest level of urban air pollution of any of
the world’s megacities. Nine other Indian cit-
ies are among the top 20 in the world with the
highest levels of airborne particulate matter.
Like China, dirty energy sources and heavy
industry fuel India’s rapid ascent. Unlike
China, however, India’s relatively high fertility
rate means that the population will continue
to grow, thereby placing even more pressure
on the already overcrowded cities in the future.
The United Nations warns that the per-
sistence of current urbanization trends
depends upon a city’s ability to provide ade-
quate services as well as viable employment
opportunities. In South and East Asia, where
urbanization has been accompanied by eco-
nomic growth, cities will be increasingly able
to meet those basic needs in the near future,
becoming wealthier and more environmen-
tally sustainable. Urbanization in Sub-Saha-
ran Africa, by contrast, has been mostly in
the form of slums growing around cities that
already lack sufficient resources. Currently,
Sub-Saharan Africa is the least urbanized
region in the world. With many cities growing
between 5 and 10 percent per year, the region
is expected to be more than 50 percent urban
by 2030.
According to research by the World Bank,
more than half of Africa’s urban residents do
not have access to proper sanitation, and that
figure exceeds 80 percent in a few countries
like Sierra Leone and Niger. The same study
found that 20 percent of urban Africans do
not have access to clean drinking water, and
more than three out of four residents in west-
ern African cities live in substandard hous-
ing. All of these factors combine to severely
Figure 13.6 in Seoul, Korea, open space is green space. Although it’s one of the world’s megacities, Seoul has made living with nature a priority of life and governance. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
548 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
challenge the sustainability of Sub-Saharan
Africa’s urbanization. Inadequate disposal of
urban waste and trash in LDC cities around
the world affects the spread of diseases as well
as the overall quality of urban life. Hardly a
year goes by without the reported outbreak
of disease or the contamination of an urban
water supply. While European, North Ameri-
can, Australian, and Japanese cities implement
programs designed to protect the quality of the
living, working, and leisure environments, for
cities in less developed countries, health issues
are often considered of secondary importance
vis-à-vis economic development goals. Pol-
luted air from automobiles or from industries
is a fact of daily life just as much as polluted
drinking water and piles of garbage. Ecologi-
cal problems abound including the outbreak
of diseases, insufficient health vaccinations,
and sporadic public safety warnings.
The UN’s Sustainable Cities Programme
operates in scores of cities, mostly capitals. It
aims at developing local capacities for envi-
ronmental planning and management as
poorly managed urbanization creates serious
environmental and social problems. At the
municipal level, development issues gener-
ally include water resources and water supply
management, environmental health risks, and
solid and liquid waste management/on-site
sanitation, air pollution and urban trans-
port, drainage and flooding, industrial risks,
informal-sector activities, and land-use man-
agement in the context of open-space/urban
agriculture, tourism and coastal area resource
management, and mining.
Climate Change and Urban Futures
While rapid urbanization brings challenges of
its own, cities of the future will be faced with
yet another unprecedented event: the effects
of climate change. Many of the world’s largest
and fastest growing cities are in coastal areas.
This fact makes them particularly vulner-
able to climate change for two reasons. First,
weather events like strong hurricanes and
typhoons (once considered extraordinary)
are expected to become more frequent and
more intense in the near future. Major storms
like Hurricane Katrina on the Gulf Coast and
post-tropical cyclone Sandy in the North-
eastern United States are likely to become the
norm rather than the exception. Second, sea
levels are expected to rise anywhere from one
to six feet by the end of the century (Box 13.2).
When one considers that a rise in sea level of
just eight inches has the potential to displace
millions of people currently living in low-
lying coastal areas, it becomes apparent that
cities must take a proactive stance to protect
residents and infrastructure. A report by the
Worldwatch Institute noted that the grow-
ing numbers of environmental disasters are
resulting in more loss of life each decade. In
the past 25 years, 98 percent of the people
injured by natural disasters lived in the 112
countries classified as low or middle income
by the World Bank. These countries accounted
for 90 percent of lives lost to natural disasters.
The same is true for the melting of sea ice,
which results from global warming. Com-
pounding the problem, less than 3 percent of
LDC residents have insurance compared to
about 30 percent in the rich world.
The problems that climate change presents
to cities are compounded when they expand
geographically to meet the demand for new
housing, services, transportation, and indus-
tries. New construction gets pushed into
low-lying areas and other places that are not
suitable for building because they are more
vulnerable to sea-level rise and flooding caused
by storms. This is especially problematic in the
Urban Sustainability at Center Stage 549
Box 13.2 living With Water
Michael Allen, old dominion University
As a historic, coastal community, norfolk, Virginia, has a long-standing relationship with water. Situated at the mouth of the Chesapeake bay near the Atlantic ocean, the city is bisected by the Elizabeth River and penetrated by various “creeks.” European merchants set- tled in the region 400 years ago. Since then, norfolk’s 144 miles (232 km) of coastline have encouraged trade and commerce. tourism and seafood industries thrive. the city is the home to the world’s largest naval base. the Port of Virginia provides thousands of jobs, millions in revenue, and services to 45 countries worldwide. And, the nearly 250,000 norfolkians have learned to live with water.
Figure 13.7 Even short rainstorms bring flooding to norfolk’s streets and underpasses. the problem promises to worsen as sea levels rise and much of norfolk subsides. Source: Photo by Michael Allen.
however, living in an urban, coastal community also includes challenges. nor’easters and tropical cyclones, most notably hurricane isabel in 2003, often impact the region. And, whether the result of storm surge, sea-level rise, or simple downpours, flooding plagues nor- folk’s residents (Figure 13.7). According to the national Climate Assessment, global sea level has increased about 8 inches (200 mm) since the late 1800s. however, in norfolk, sea level has increased a total of 1.51 feet (0.47 m) just since 1927. And, for norfolk, it’s a one-two punch. While the sea is rising due to greenhouse gases and melting ice, the land is also sink- ing due to prior land-use policy. throughout its history, many creeks, wetlands, and marsh- lands have been filled with debris, and with time, this land naturally sinks. Consequently,
550 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
developing world, where many people mov-
ing to megacities are poor and set up housing
that is both substandard and in hazard-prone
landscapes.
Infrastructure to Mitigate Climate Change
Cities in the near future will be forced to step
up their investments in technology and infra-
structure that protect the built environment
from flooding and storms. The Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD) estimates that in 50 years, the value
of the infrastructure assets that are at risk from
storm damage (buildings, transportation,
and utilities) in New York City, Miami, and
Guangzhou will be worth around ten trillion
dollars combined. Tokyo and Nagoya in Japan
and Amsterdam and Rotterdam in the Nether-
lands are already taking proactive measures to
protect their infrastructure assets. Comparing
a map of the world’s most populous and fast-
est growing cities with one showing shallow
continental shelves reveals that many pros-
perous U.S. cities from Boston to Miami to
Houston will be affected by a two-meter rise
in sea level. Cities in northern and northwest
Europe are also vulnerable, as are cities at the
the federal government recognizes norfolk as the second most vulnerable city in America to sea-level rise, behind only new orleans.
despite overwhelming scientific evidence, the discourse surrounding climate change is often politicized in the United States, and even denied. yet, in norfolk, residents share stories of climate-change reality and narrate complexities that involve morals and values, economics, and the role of government. Who is responsible for environmental change? What should the government do? through the national Flood insurance Program, FEMA subsidizes rates for high-risk, flood-prone regions. Following natural disasters, money is filtered to these regions for redevelopment. Some argue these subsidies encourage coastal development in high-risk zones. norfolk has invested millions of dollars to protect property from rising seas. in 2012 alone, $7 million was used to raise roadways and homes, yet the ability to control nature has proven to be almost impossible: flooding still occurs. Forums, such as the 2015 dutch dialogues, suggest that the city (and region) is beginning to think more creatively in terms of mitigation and adaptation.
With an estimated $300 million price tag, shared investment in climate mitigation and adaptation requires all levels of government, the military, and various nongovernment enti- ties to partner and collaborate. it’s a shared responsibility. norfolk’s mayor, in fact, recently suggested that there may come a time in the near future when norfolk will have to create retreat zones—areas that will be fully inundated by water and unsuitable for development. Significant political willpower to address climate change is needed. named as a top-100 resil- ient city by the Rockefeller Foundation, norfolk is situated to serve as a model for designing cities of the future, for teaching us how to live with the water while supporting economic prosperity, and for addressing social injustice while building more resilient communities.
Urban Sustainability at Center Stage 551
mouth of the Ganges, on the Malay Peninsula,
in insular and mainland Southeast Asia, east-
ern China, and Japan.
Ho Chi Minh City, for example, is expected
to grow from its current population of 8–20
million by 2050. To accommodate this growth,
the city will look to expand into surrounding
agricultural and forested areas, thereby remov-
ing vegetation that acts to mitigate natural
flooding. Rising temperatures in the adjacent
South China Sea are expected to bring more
frequent, heavier rains, bigger storm surges,
and more tropical storms. Other cities in the
region have already begun feeling the pres-
sure. New industrial developments around
Bangkok have expanded into low-lying wet-
lands and former rice paddies, where flood-
ing is a regular feature of the landscape. In
2009, heavy rains from a tropical storm inun-
dated 80 percent of Manila, and even stronger
storms are expected in the near future.
At the other end of the climate-change
spectrum, droughts are also expected to
become more frequent and more severe. As
urban areas in the American southwest like
Los Angeles, Las Vegas, and Phoenix add land
area and residents, they will put intense pres-
sure on the already strained water supply. Cal-
ifornia is currently in the midst of a prolonged
mega-drought that will likely go unabated for
the foreseeable future, amid high population
growth and agricultural output. Growing cit-
ies, therefore, will have to find new and inno-
vative solutions to meet the water demands of
the population.
Large-scale desalination of seawater is one
proposed solution that is already being devel-
oped. For coastal cities, this is an expensive
option that could meet some of the demand.
Cities will also have to increase their invest-
ments in water treatment plants that recycle
wastewater. The main adaptation, however,
will be to rethink land-use planning and
urban and suburban lifestyles in regions that
are starved for water. Rather than having
sprawling cities with wide roads that create an
urban heat island, cities will need to have more
compact pedestrian zones. Instead of planting
trees in drought-prone areas to provide shade,
buildings will need to be constructed closer
together in a manner that provides human-
made protection from the sun. Narrower alleys
between buildings also create breezes that can
lower surface temperatures. Urban residents
will have to replace their grassy lawns with
vegetation that is more suited to a dry, desert
climate. They will also have to shift from sin-
gle-family housing to multistory buildings to
make water use more efficient.
Deindustrialization and Urban Futures
Cities in the developed world underwent the
same sort of growing pains during their devel-
opment phase in the nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries as cities in the developing
world are facing today. Improper sanitation
and water pollution led to cholera outbreaks
in cities like London, Paris, and New York.
Smog rose to lethal levels in London and else-
where in the United Kingdom in the nine-
teenth century. London’s nickname, in fact,
was “The Smoke.” In the developed world,
many countries passed legislation to rein in
pollution and improve the environment only
as recently as the 1970s.
Just as the developed world implemented
tougher environmental regulations, the devel-
oping world was opened up to economic
globalization, resulting in drastic change in
urban economic functions. This change has
been marked by deindustrialization in for-
mer industrial powerhouses like Pittsburgh,
Milwaukee, and Cleveland in the United States;
552 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
and Glasgow, Liverpool, and Manchester in
the United Kingdom. Over the past three dec-
ades, these and other former industrial cent-
ers have undergone a marked shift away from
industry and toward services. This transition
resulted in the loss of hundreds of thousands
of manufacturing jobs, depriving people of
a living wage. At the same time, deindustri-
alization made way for a much cleaner, more
environmentally sustainable urban economy
based on knowledge and information. It also
allowed for urban revitalization by repurpos-
ing millions of square feet of former ware-
house and factory space.
Pittsburgh, for example, was once the heart
of the U.S. steel industry. Skies darkened by
industrial smoke and buildings blackened by
soot were characteristic images of the city.
When the last steel mill closed in the mid-
1980s, Pittsburgh transformed itself into a
center of engineering and medical research
and integrated itself into the modern knowl-
edge economy. Abandoned buildings from its
industrial heyday became valuable real estate
in the form of loft apartments, boutiques, and
coffee shops. More young professionals are
moving to the urban core rather than to low-
density, auto-dependent suburbs as their pre-
decessors did, thus reducing the necessity for
long commutes. As a result of these changes,
the air is now remarkably clean and clear,
especially when one considers that just a few
decades ago smog levels in Pittsburgh were
no different than those observed in today’s
Chinese cities. Similar trends are occurring in
cities throughout the developed world, which
is a positive sign as far as the sustainability of
urban living is concerned (Figure 13.8).
New industrial cities in China and India
are likely to undergo the same type of tran-
sition in the near future. In these and other
developing countries, the urban middle class
Figure 13.8 is this carbon-neutral office building in Melbourne, Australia, the future of sustainable urban architecture? the colorful panels on the outside are components of the sun-shade system. What you can’t see are the night cooling windows, the green roof, the vacuum toilets, and the anaerobic digester. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
The Geography of Connectivity and Talent 553
is growing as wages and education levels rise.
These trends open the way for a transition
to a cleaner, more sustainable future. At the
same time, a rise in the middle-class popula-
tion in developing countries means that more
people are living in larger residences, buying
automobiles, demanding reliable city utili-
ties, and requesting that governments build
roads and highways to support increased
automobile travel. It will be a challenge for
such cities to dedicate funds and space to the
preferences of their growing metropolitan
middle classes.
Urban Gardening and Urban Futures
In addition to repurposing old industrial
buildings, urban gardening is another attempt
to make cities of the future more sustainable.
Many older neighborhoods in more estab-
lished North American cities feature numer-
ous vacant lots where a building or parking
lot once stood. Programs in these cities allow
local residents to use the vacant plots for com-
munity gardens, which can bring numerous
benefits. First, urban gardening helps reduce
the heat island effect that is common in cit-
ies constructed almost entirely of asphalt and
steel. Second, gardens are a low-cost way to
beautify the urban landscape, especially in
deindustrializing cities where the surround-
ing buildings and infrastructure have fallen
in disrepair. Third, by giving local residents a
chance to grow some of their own food, urban
gardens cut down on the number of food-
miles produce needs to travel before it reaches
urban consumers. Fourth, people come into
closer contact with their neighbors and their
neighborhoods through the act of tending to
a community garden. Finally, urban gardens
offer a serene place to relax in the city. They
can even attract tourists and create jobs.
While the benefits of urban gardening may
apply to all types of cities, they are especially
relevant to the older and deindustrializing cit-
ies of North America and Western Europe.
Urban population shrinkage has already trans-
formed many Rust Belt cities. Managing this
shrinkage with creative and environmentally
sustainable solutions has been and continues
to be a primary concern as deindustrializa-
tion continues for the foreseeable future. It
is even possible that horizontal surface plots
that currently characterize urban gardening
may transition into multistory, vertical urban
farms capable of producing far more volume
and variety of crops than currently possible.
In addition to supplying food, these vertical
gardens could act as a natural temperature
control and add color to the urban skyline.
THE GEOGRAPHy OF CONNECTIVITy AND TALENT
In the developed world, one of the most
important developments of the twenty-first
century has been the rise of the knowledge
economy. While the twentieth-century econ-
omy traded on tangible inputs and manu-
facturing, the knowledge economy trades on
information. Since advanced information and
communications technology (ICT) decouples
access to information from place, this eco-
nomic shift has important implications for
the future of cities the world over (Box 13.3).
When ICT was first becoming mainstream
and transforming communication, many
technology writers predicted the demise of
cities because decentralized communication
seemed to remove the need for clustering by
industries and people. Telecommuting was
expected to transform the modern work-
place and give workers the opportunity to
554 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
Box 13.3 Human Geographies of the twenty-first Century
Stanley d. brunn, University of Kentucky
Economic, social, and political futures in any region are affected by local cultures and events as well as regional and global actions and institutions.
1. Continued urbanization at the global scale. Urban agglomerations will grow bigger and urban institutions will increasingly dominate even rural areas. interactions and associ- ations are likely to be increasingly between cities near and distant rather than between cities and rural trade areas.
2. Urban connectedness, anomie, and placelessness. Faster transportation and communi- cation technologies may lead people to devalue their sense of place, thus increasing anomie, alienation and social instability.
3. Meshings of the local and global in daily life. Scale meshings will be evident in transac- tions and interactions—where one works, with whom one works, and the destinations of goods and services. While some urban residents will interact predominantly at local levels, others are will operate at transnational scales.
4. Asianization and Africanization of Europeanized worlds. An ongoing contemporary cul- tural global process is the impress of Asian and African diasporas on traditionally Euro- peanized worlds. these new cultures will add new layers of food, music, entertainment, and intellectual diversity to city life.
5. Increased regional and global awareness. the diffusion of iCts and instant global report- ing of crises will increasingly transcend political boundaries and raise the awareness of planetary concerns. one example is the growing emphasis on the basic human rights of women, children, elderly, disabled, and cultural minorities.
6. Competitive K-economies. “K” is for knowledge. it symbolizes the transition from handware to brainware and the importance of images and symbols in product consumption. these brain economies will be of increased significance in globally competitive and creative cities.
7. Contested legal structures. increased volumes and densities of transborder urban net- works and circulations will raise questions about the effectiveness of traditional gov- ernments in daily life: individual versus group rights, temporary verses permanent residents, those with and without property, and possibly with and without statehood.
8. Redefining norms and abnorms. Urban cultural and political clashes (subtle and vio- lent) are likely to continue to emerge among groups: those calling for tolerance and diversity in work, living, lifestyle, and social spaces versus those seeking to retain traditional norms based on religious and rural values or outdated modes of authority.
9. Limits on technological breakthroughs. Prepare for more constraints on the adoption and dissemination of new technologies because of adverse social impacts on a culture, high fixed costs, and government security. Will technology “gaps” between haves and have-nots begin to narrow or will technological solutions be too expensive?
The Geography of Connectivity and Talent 555
finally leave the city in favor of the cheaper,
pastoral countryside. Although ICT certainly
adds geographic flexibility to the traditional
workplace, its impact on the future of cities
is still unclear. On the one hand, major cities
are places with superior capacity to receive,
process, and transmit the information that
fuels the knowledge economy (Figure 13.9).
In addition, being near competitors in the
same field makes it possible to keep up with
the state of the art. As Richard Florida has
pointed out, industry insiders stay abreast
of the latest rumors, gossip, advancements,
and innovations in their respective fields by
being in constant contact with their com-
petitors, whereas those far from the pri-
mary cluster of activity may find it difficult
to access the same type of information in a
timely manner.
On the other hand, because of its ability to
decentralize information, the internet makes
it possible for a wider range of places to par-
ticipate in the knowledge economy. Business
interactions can now take place remotely and
instantaneously because commodities and
information are no longer bound to physical
space. Therefore, it is possible that smaller cit-
ies in the global periphery can take advantage
of the decentralized nature of the internet and
insert themselves into the modern knowledge
economy. The intersection of the cultural
industries with advanced ICT is particularly
illustrative of this point.
Historically, innovations in music, fashion,
art, and in other cultural industries have come
from major centers of global cultural produc-
tion like New York, Los Angeles, Paris, Milan,
and London. These world cities provide both
a large and sophisticated local marketplace
and a critical mass of creative individuals
with whom to share new ideas and collabo-
rate on innovative projects. In the digital age,
the internet decentralizes the marketplace for
cultural products in addition to providing
a platform for mass sharing and collabora-
tion. As a result, new producers have entered
the cultural industries en masse, regardless
of their location. If a new music group lives
in a remote location with few performance
venues, they can easily distribute their music
to a global audience online. Likewise, fashion
designers can create new items, advertise them
online, sell them, and ship them to consumers
around the world.
Elite cultural industries in large production
centers, such as fashion in Milan and film in
Los Angeles, will likely continue to dominate
the cultural economy into the future. How-
ever, the internet creates new opportunities for
a wider range of production centers in smaller
cities to compete in niche markets, even if one
or a few large centers remain dominant. The
ability to remotely access and participate in the
cultural economy bodes well for newly urban-
izing places, especially those in the developing
world. At the same time, it is important to note
10. Veneers of homogeneity amidst diversity. the “Mcdonaldization of the World,” or the creation of a Western globalized consumer world dominated by Western food, music, fashion, and entertainment, will reflect a certain visible sameness. but beneath these landscapes and icons of Westernization will be the rich historical and cultural mosaics of enduring regional cultures.
556 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
that the internet is far from being a spaceless,
placeless phenomenon. Advances in ICT have
shrunk the global time-space continuum, but
the economic landscape is still highly uneven.
The best access to high-speed internet and
other components of the digital infrastructure
are overwhelmingly concentrated in urban
areas, leaving many small towns and rural areas
on the other side of the digital divide. In addi-
tion, service provision favors wealthy places as
companies compete for consumers who are
able to afford the highest possible prices.
Cities as Virtual Crossroads
How can we expect ICT to impact the size,
shape, and function of cities in the com-
ing decades? How much will decentralized
information chip away at the economic domi-
nance and informational privileges that cur-
rently characterize cities? The answer to those
questions is not so straightforward. The mod-
ern world of business and communication
is no longer a “space of places” but rather, in
Manuel Castell’s words, a “space of flows.”
In other words, even though the economy is
already highly globalized, it will become even
more interconnected in the near future. Cit-
ies that are best able to accommodate flows
of information and commodities will thrive,
while those lacking this ability will struggle.
The most successful cities will establish more
intensive connections with each other, and
some peripheral places that were previously
less touched by globalization will also come
into the network.
Figure 13.9 the Shard, completed in 2012, is the latest addition to London’s collection of skyscrapers and the tallest building in the European Union. Globalization has bid a whole new generation of skyscrapers into construction. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
The Geography of Connectivity and Talent 557
Urban form has always been shaped, in
part, by communication and transportation
systems and structures. Canals, tramlines,
subways, and expressways have all significantly
altered the time it takes to travel between any
two connected places. The time that it takes to
move people, goods, and information within
or between cities affords places distinct advan-
tages and disadvantages.
In the past, cities thrived or atrophied based
on their relative positionality within global
flows of trade. Many large urban agglomera-
tions still owe their prosperity to transpor-
tation facilities, including important roads,
canals, and airports. While positionality will
be no less important for cities of the future,
prosperity will increasingly rely on an alterna-
tive structure. Telecommunications networks,
as well as the social, economic, and political
opportunities for people in cities to access
such networks, are currently very unevenly
distributed across the globe. Broadband and
fiber optic cables are heavily concentrated
in (and link) East Asia, Europe, and North
America. Heavily wired cities include Seoul,
London, and Boston; and they are much more
likely to experience change brought about by
time-space compression than cities lacking
high network connectivity, such as Pyongyang
or Kinshasa.
Many cities have been, and continue to
be, restructured as wired and wireless cities
in order to compete for a vast array of high-
technology digital transfers that link busi-
nesses and households. San Francisco, Seattle,
San Diego, San Jose, Los Angeles, New York,
Washington, DC, Chicago, Boston, and Miami
are among the top U.S. cities in internet pen-
etration. The internet is being utilized not
only for luring capital and businesses, but also
for security purposes. For example, web cam-
eras monitor London’s streets and its financial
district. Internet penetration in some LDCs is
also significant and is a deliberate strategy to
attract economic investment from the MDCs.
Delhi, Mumbai, and Bangalore are all wired
cities in India’s globalized economy.
Examples of countries making heavy
investments in national and urban digital
economies are Singapore, Estonia, Slovenia,
countries of the Persian Gulf (as part of their
post-petroleum economic planning), Hong
Kong, Ireland, Jamaica, and Trinidad. Digital
cities invest in computer hardware and soft-
ware design and support large and small com-
panies performing various digital tasks, as well
as the many nongovernmental organizations
and governmental institutions. These include
libraries, courts, hospitals, and employment
and environmental centers.
Certain cities are more tightly connected to
global networks than others. However, physi-
cal connections do not ensure that a major-
ity of a city’s inhabitants will benefit from
globalized networks. Large groups in a highly
connected city, as measured by bandwidth,
can remain disconnected. Unfamiliarity with
world languages that dominate the internet,
especially English, but also Chinese and Span-
ish, can render network connections without
meaning and value. Similarly, various cultural
and political restrictions can exclude people,
based on gender, ethnicity, or religion, from
regular internet use. For instance, in certain
cities it is highly inappropriate for women to
spend time in male-dominated internet cafes.
Finally, economic barriers may be the most
powerful exclusionary force. Both the means
(a computer and a mobile device) and the cost
of access (hourly or monthly fees) can be pro-
hibitively expensive for many residents even in
the most connected cities. Questions of inclu-
sion and exclusion are becoming ever more
important for cities, because unequal access
558 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
to distant information and communica-
tions will likely cause other increasing urban
inequalities.
Ultimately, highly connected cities will
continue to be command-and-control points
for the global economy, housing headquarters
of far-reaching corporations, particularly in
the financial, insurance, and real estate fields;
as well as government and nongovernmental
organization offices. Cities will thrive because
they are well-connected hubs in the global
flows of information and travel. Those cities
that have the satellite dishes, fiber optic cables,
and internet routing switches will prosper,
as will cities that provide wireless internet
and mobile device networks that enable large
proportions of the population to be con-
nected and become economically productive
(Figure 13.10). Cities that have successfully
transitioned to idea-based economies,
specializing in research and innovation, will
thrive because these cities are where ideas are
born and content is created.
Currently, London and New York are the
most outstanding examples of such highly
connected world cities, but with high popu-
lation and economic growth, cities such as
Shanghai and Dubai may increase in global
economic status. These and other command-
and-control cities will be increasingly con-
nected to each other, rather than to their
local hinterlands. Cosmopolitan migrants,
business people, and government leaders
will commonly move between them, over
great distances, rather than moving between
world cities and their outlying regions. Larger
airports, longer-range commercial jets, and
high-quality communications networks ena-
ble such distant movement of people as well
as ideas to occur quickly.
Figure 13.10 Wireless networks, cell phones, and matrix barcodes bring urban landscapes to life, tell the stories of times past, and signal advances in technology that mark world cities. London is so wired, you can even talk to the long-gone goats. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
The Geography of Connectivity and Talent 559
Cities as Nodes of Globalization
Globalization is, and will likely continue to be,
one of the most frequently repeated themes
of the twenty-first century. The idea that cit-
ies are becoming economically, culturally,
and politically more globally connected is
grounds for hope, desire, fear, and despair.
Globalization can lead to shared advances in
science and technology, economic growth,
and the exchange of philosophic, political,
and artistic ideas between people and places
that were once isolated from each other. How-
ever, increased connections can also result in
economic and political exploitation and the
destruction of cultural bonds.
Globalization is not something that spreads
across the surface of the globe like fog rolling
over a chain of hills. Rather it is evident only
in specific times and places. In other words,
if we take the example of any city experienc-
ing transformations because of global con-
nections, that city is not necessarily spatially
proximate to the sources of those transforma-
tions or to other cities experiencing similar
transformations.
A widely repeated idea is that the absence
of globalization is responsible for global ineq-
uities. In other words, cities that remain dis-
connected from global processes and flows of
trade are unlikely to have high living stand-
ards. Such ideas are usually based on eco-
nomic theories that rely on “the logic of the
marketplace.” By allowing the global market
to regulate society instead of being regulated
by society, it is argued that market forces will
enrich people in poor cities by effectively gov-
erning and creating wealth for all participants.
The counterpoint of this argument is the idea
that ever-increasing globalization and inte-
gration of cities will only exacerbate global
inequalities. Within the globalized economy,
capital and jobs can now be moved rapidly
from place to place, but the actual popula-
tions remain rooted in their home cities. The
effects of globalizing processes have led some
scholars to refer to “a race to the bottom,”
in which people have to accept increasingly
lower wages and benefits in order to perform
the same jobs. These concerns have fueled
a massive global movement of protest and
highlight the inequalities caused and intensi-
fied by globalization, including antiglobaliza-
tion demonstrations at biannual World Trade
Organization conferences wherever they
occur.
One of the most important ways that
globalization can be measured is through
the movement of people and cargo by air.
However, the most globalized airports are
not always located in cities that most people
would associate with a high degree of global
connectivity. Of the world’s three largest
cargo airports in 2010, one comes as a sur-
prise. Memphis, Tennessee, is outranked only
by Hong Kong as the world’s second-largest
cargo-handling airport, due to FedEx’s pri-
mary hub being located there. Following
Memphis are Shanghai and Seoul, and, then,
surprisingly, Anchorage, Alaska, which serves
as the crossroads between North America and
Asia. In Europe, the leading cargo-handling
airports are Frankfurt and Paris; Dubai leads
in the Middle East.
When passenger flows between cities are
considered, we get a more familiar picture
of cities networked into the global economy.
Europe and particularly North America domi-
nate the rankings. While some highly ranked
cities have high connectivity because they
serve as major airline hubs, others including
London and New York are highly connected
due to their central position in global eco-
nomic and tourist flows. Among the world
560 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
leaders for city airport systems by passenger
traffic are London, New York, Tokyo, and
Atlanta.
Cities Beyond the Networked Core
Large cities are home to the longest life expec-
tancies in developed countries because of
the presence of public health infrastructure,
research hospitals, safe occupations, and the
near absence of heavily polluting industry.
These characteristics attract people from
across the lifespan, but they may be especially
appealing to seniors, who comprise an ever-
larger share of total city populations. In fact,
the graying generation, by virtue of its dis-
posable income and consumer-buying hab-
its, may be drawn to such cities and serve as
a key to growth and economic development.
The idea that cities are the healthiest places to
live is rather remarkable when compared to
previous centuries during which cities were
unhealthy places due to manufacturing-gen-
erated pollution and diseases caused by inad-
equate sanitation, ventilation, and hygiene.
In addition to cities that specialize in health
care, we can also expect some smaller cities
with low global profiles to boom because they
are situated near newly exploitable natural
resources. Examples include towns that have
grown into cities near the burgeoning tar
sands of central Canada, like Fort McMurray,
Alberta, and around natural gas fracking in the
United States, such as Williston, North Dakota.
Increasing affluence around the world means
more people are consuming energy, which is
driving energy prices higher, causing resource
exploitation in remote regions that have pre-
viously been cost-prohibitive. The long-term
viability of cities that are dependent upon nat-
ural resources is unclear, however. “Boom and
bust,” rather than long-term prosperity, are
typical of natural-resource-based economies.
Cities in the petro-states of the Persian Gulf,
especially Dubai in the United Arab Emirates
and Doha, Qatar, are now testing the proposi-
tion that economies built on petro-dollars can
transition to economies based on high-end
services. At the present time, the price of crude
oil is dropping and all cities with an economic
base in the petroleum sector may be in for a
coming bust.
Other cities outside the world’s core net-
work will thrive because they are located near
inexpensive labor, taking over labor-intensive
manufacturing tasks for the global market in
a process called offshoring. As African cities,
for instance, procure reliable information-
technology infrastructure such as fiber optic
cables, and as electricity provision and ship-
ping connections improve, labor-intensive
manufacturers will likely relocate labor-inten-
sive operations in this inexpensive region. It is
probable that cities in Africa will industrialize
and grow in the coming years, similar to the
recent experience of Asian cities.
Will this movement of manufacturing jobs
to Africa come at the expense of Asian cities
that are currently growing? When economic
growth tapers in today’s developing coun-
tries, will cities in those countries experience
real estate busts, especially in China? Or will
developing countries transition from export-
driven economies to domestic-demand econ-
omies? People in developing countries are
starting to earn enough money to travel, and
transportation services are growing, as are
casinos, theme parks, golf courses, and other
tourist activities.
In the near future, some cities will decline,
losing population and influence because they
have not successfully navigated a changing
globalized economy. Cities based on labor-
intensive manufacturing located in developed
Governance, GIS Use, and Security Provision 561
countries will decline because rich countries
do not have low-cost labor. Instead, cities in
developed countries that transition to capital-
intensive economic activities that use high-
skilled labor will thrive. Examples of cities
that have not negotiated the deindustriali-
zation transition well include Detroit in the
United States and Newcastle-upon-Tyne in
the United Kingdom. Both saw their popula-
tion peak in 1950 and decline for decades after
that. Now, the rate of decline has leveled off
for the former, and population has begun to
increase for the latter.
GOVERNANCE, GIS USE, AND SECURITy PROVISION
Governmental Cooperation
New and modified forms of urban governance
will likely emerge in coming decades to deal
with interurban economic connectivity as well
as larger and changing city populations. City
and metropolitan-region governments have
increased in importance and are predicted
to do so into the future. Port authorities that
operate airports and seaports, development
authorities that promote economic growth,
and transit and toll road authorities that build
and operate transportation systems are com-
monly metropolitan-area based, rather than
being housed at the provincial or federal level.
In metropolitan areas that cross an inter-
national border, such as El Paso/Juarez and
San Diego/Tijuana, city governments are
cooperating on some of the issues noted here.
World cities are increasingly cooperating with
other large city governments across the globe
because of shared challenges and potential
solutions. For example, New York City looks
to London for traffic management ideas such
as congestion tolling instead of calling on New
York City’s state government or the U.S. fed-
eral government. Increasingly, cities are find-
ing that they have more in common with other
cities and are aligning government coopera-
tion accordingly. Cities are collaborating with
other cities across international borders rather
than with their provincial hinterlands, mir-
roring economic realignments that have been
occurring for the past several decades.
As countries throughout the world become
more urban, politics is also likely to change.
Generally, regions that have a higher propor-
tion of their populations living in urban areas
are more politically liberal, progressive, and
open-minded compared to regions with more
nonurban residents. Urban residents, who
live in compact, diverse, and highly socially
connected places tend to be more tolerant of
diversity and change. Urban populations have
driven movements to legalize same-sex mar-
riage, marijuana use, casino gambling, and
assisted suicide. These urban voters are very
different politically than their rural coun-
terparts or the countries in which they are
located; instead, they share more in common
with other cities.
Geographic Information Systems
Digital technologies, especially geographical
information systems are used to plan, build,
and manage the urban environment. Since
the early 1970s, GIS has become routine in
urban planning tasks in North America, West-
ern Europe, Japan, and Australia. These sys-
tems are also becoming adopted in the cities
of some less developed countries, particularly
India, China, South Africa, Senegal, Ghana,
Brazil, and Mexico. GIS is the science and tech-
nology that integrates vast databases with geo-
referenced data (exact latitudinal/longitudinal
coordinates) to prepare maps, satellite images,
562 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
and aerial photographs. These databases allow
researchers and planners to perform a range of
statistical and spatial analyses including mod-
eling, visualization, and simulation; to design,
plan, and manage urban environments; and
to propose and evaluate future scenarios. GIS
can easily be linked to the Global Position-
ing System (GPS) to ensure highly accurate
spatial analysis. Also, mobile and hand-held
GPS units integrated into GIS programs can
be taken to remote areas to conduct real-time
research.
Usage of GIS has become popular with cit-
izen-based grassroots organizations because
GIS enables them to be informed—and pow-
erful—participants in community planning
efforts. Key GIS applications executed with
technocrats working in tandem with grassroots
groups include natural resource management
and conservation efforts, community-based
planning and neighborhood revitalization
in urban areas (Figure 13.11), and activism
organized at local, national, global, and mul-
tiscalar levels. In such efforts, local, qualita-
tive knowledge is integrated with quantifiable
public data sets, and mental maps and sketch
maps are integrated with official digital maps,
aerial photographs, and satellite images. These
practices have been used in a number of pro-
jects among indigenous societies in the non-
Western world.
In the context of neighborhood revi-
talization in the Western world, community
organizers use public data sets through GIS
to inform and legitimate local knowledge to
obtain action and formulate strategies, moni-
tor and predict neighborhood, prepare for
organizational tasks, fund recruitment efforts,
enhance service delivery tasks, and explore
how spatial relations shape urban policy. GIS
Figure 13.11 What would you build here? Let your voice be heard. here, people along 14th Street in Washington, dC, are being challenged to create the neighborhood they want by voting on ideas that they themselves come up with. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
Governance, GIS Use, and Security Provision 563
analysis has enabled communities to accom-
plish such tasks as:
• fighting blighted housing conditions
by tracking down absentee landlords
through property records;
• providing police assistance by identi-
fying crime hot spots across time and
space;
• analyzing land-use data to track vacant
and boarded up houses;
• keeping track of school-age populations
to optimize assignments to schools and
plan new school bus routes;
• combining mortgage-lending data with
demographic data to address discrimi-
natory investments; and
• generating sophisticated, multiscalar
maps to measure a community’s chang-
ing well-being.
Community GIS activities have been aided
by the emergence of internet mapping sites
such as Google Earth, in which high-resolu-
tion satellite images of places across the world
can be accessed in minutes for free by anyone.
The power of Google mapping is evident in
the case of southern Brazil’s Surui people,
whose chief approached Google for high-
resolution satellite imagery to monitor illegal
loggers and miners on the tribe’s 600,000 acre
reserve. While high-tech mapping has already
been used to track illegal activity and record
knowledge, this is the first time an Amazon
tribe will share their own vision of their ter-
ritory with the rest of the world via Google
Earth. In essence, they have a technology that
allows them to stand up against globalizing
forces that are biased in favor of urban econo-
mies. In the western world, various govern-
ment agencies provide easy access to public
databases through Internet GIS sites. One site,
COMPASS, enables citizens of Milwaukee to
access, view, query, and map detailed property
data, health data, crime data, community asset
data, and demographic data at no cost. Such
Internet GIS sites are particularly useful for
resource-poor organizations that have diffi-
culties in creating and maintaining in-house
GIS.
Surveillance of Public Space
At the neighborhood scale, street-level govern-
ance in cities will continue to evolve. In terms
of law enforcement, community policing has
been credited with driving street crime down
to historically low levels, particularly in North
American central cities. Some of this decline
is likely due to gentrification, as residents with
higher incomes and levels of education com-
prise a greater proportion of downtown and
inner-city neighborhoods compared to past
decades. These populations are also demand-
ing better city services and have flexed their
political muscle to secure enhanced police,
public transit, and sanitation services. New
York has utilized a controversial stop-and-
frisk policing policy, but this method has been
challenged in court for allegations of racial
profiling.
City governments have recently responded,
and continue to respond to, the threat of ter-
rorism. The attacks on September 11, 2001
in New York; March 11, 2004 in Madrid;
July 7, 2005 in London; November 26,
2008 in Mumbai; April 15, 2013 in Boston;
and November 13, 2015 in Paris, are some
instances in which international and domestic
terrorists have targeted civilian urban spaces
such as office buildings, hotels, shops, streets,
and transit systems. City police departments
have responded by adding antiterrorism divi-
sions to supplement more traditional patrol,
564 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
for those studying urban worlds as security
concerns affect the daily lives of individuals
and influence where they reside, work, and
play. Human security concerns include deal-
ing with terrorism in its many dimensions.
Transnational terrorism and biological and
environmental terrorism are considered high-
priority threats for urban governments. Public
officials must insure that dangerous individu-
als, goods, and substances do not cross their
borders or enter their country’s airports and
ports. They are ever vigilant for contaminated
products, whether foods, live plants and ani-
mals, or other materials, that might endanger
their food supplies, livestock, public water sys-
tems, and the unique natural and built envi-
ronments that attract tourists. The security
industry will remain one of the urban growth
industries for much of this century, as evi-
denced already in airports, train stations, har-
bors, and border crossings.
CONCLUSIONS
The cities of the future will be more popu-
lous and more numerous than those that
exist today. In fact, one prediction has the
world’s metropolises, merging into megalo-
polises, and then into one giant ecumenopo-
lis (Figure 13.12). Until that time comes, the
most populous cities will increasingly be
located in today’s developing countries. This
urban growth in the developing world is being
driven by dropping mortality amid high fer-
tility, industrialization, and the accompany-
ing urban in-migration as redundant labor
leaves rural areas to fill newly created jobs in
cities. The same urban population transition
has already played out in the developed world,
where city populations have plateaued. In the
developed world, low birth rates mean that
detective, transportation, and organized crime
units.
Almost all cities, with London and New
York being among the first, have increased
surveillance via networks of police cameras
mounted throughout the central city. In addi-
tion to providing a record of street activity,
these cameras can also track license plate num-
bers and employ facial recognition software.
At a macroscale, unmanned drones have the
ability to capture high-resolution photos and
videos from a distance, unbeknownst to pas-
sersby on the street. Terabytes of surveillance
can be sent, received, and analyzed in a matter
of seconds by technicians in remote locations.
At the microscale, police offers are beginning
to wear body cameras, and that trend is likely
to extend to other professions as well. Cities of
the future will have an even greater number of
cameras, in a greater variety of locations, and
operating at a greater range of scales. Urban
residents will either adapt to this new reality
or stand up against becoming a surveillance
society.
Cities in the developed world justify mass
surveillance by maintaining that it gives law
enforcement officials far greater ability to
make cities safer. Critics counter that mass
surveillance programs create new realities
that are also undesirable. For example, as
biometric recognition software increases in
sophistication, it becomes possible to track an
individual’s every movement. Civil liberties
activists have concerns about the possibility
to abuse such an extensive and powerful tool.
Urban governments, especially in democratic
countries, must find an appropriate balance
between managing security concerns and pro-
tecting an individual’s right to privacy.
Human security issues are emerging as
important topics for those in the social and
policy sciences. They are also important
Conclusions 565
Fi gu
re 1
3. 12
Ec
um en
op ol
is :
th e
Gl ob
al C
it y.
S ou
rc e:
A da
pt ed
f ro
m C
. A.
d ox
ia di
s, “
M an
’s M
ov em
en ts
a nd
h is
S et
tl em
en ts
,” E
ki st
ic s
29 ,
no .
17 4
(1 97
0) : 31
8.
566 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
transportation networks. Other cities will
thrive by offering cheap labor, proximity to a
natural resource, or a particular specialty like
advanced medical treatment. Cities with such
nondiversified economies will need to prepare
for a possible future when their singular com-
petitive advantage wanes, such as when wages
rise or drilling wells become played out.
Cities are increasingly cooperating with
each other, even across international borders,
in activities from preventing terrorism and
crime to operating ports. They are becoming
more linked to each other in a governmental
sense and less connected to their provincial
or national governments. GIS is commonly
used to foster more responsive and efficient
governance. Such technologies are employed
not only by city officials, but also by commu-
nity groups and organizations, and the private
sector.
Urban Living at Its Best
What cities will successfully navigate the geo-
graphic, demographic, economic, environ-
mental, and political challenges of the coming
decades? Cities that provide high-paying,
service-sector jobs at the same time that they
tend to the welfare of the underprivileged;
cities that guarantee a healthy environment
backed up by a flourishing health-care indus-
try; cities that invest in infrastructure to facili-
tate transportation and communication; cities
that assure housing markets respond to both
private and public sector demands; cities that
look after public safety at the same time that
they affirm personal freedoms; and cities that
realize the role of education, recreation, cul-
ture, and the arts in competing with other cit-
ies in a globalized economy.
Many organizations are interested in qual-
ity-of-life measures, which can be used to rank
growth will come primarily from immigra-
tion, with most immigrants now showing a
preference for suburban areas. Urban revitali-
zation is occurring in the developed world as
smaller, older, and wealthier households relo-
cate closer to city centers, along with young
adult households. Amid these changes, cities
in less developed countries will grapple with
providing adequate infrastructure, services,
and housing to their residents. And, urban
areas in more developed countries will accom-
modate urban revitalization, diversification of
their suburbs, and the postindustrial transi-
tion to services.
Sustainability and climate change will be
near the forefront of challenges facing cit-
ies the world over in the near future. Urban
living is more energy efficient, but it concen-
trates pollution. The urban poor, especially
in less developed countries, commonly reside
in low-cost and environmentally degraded
neighborhoods often characterized by infor-
mal housing. These residents often lack access
to education and high-quality jobs and often
experience health challenges associated with
poor environmental quality. Cities will have to
develop ways to become more sustainable as
well as provide opportunity for their residents.
This will happen against the backdrop of cli-
mate change, which will force cities to adapt
to withstand more fierce and frequent storms,
rising sea levels, and increased drought.
Demographically and economically grow-
ing cities will follow one of several paths. In
the more developed world, the most success-
ful cities will continue to navigate the transi-
tion from deindustrialization to a high-tech,
creative, service economy based on the com-
mand and control of the increasingly glo-
balized economy. These cities will continue to
augment their positions as important nodes
in the global information technology and
Conclusions 567
In 2010, Mercer also developed an Eco-City
Ranking based on water availability, water
potability, waste removal, sewage, air pollu-
tion, and traffic congestion (Table 13.3). The
top five “eco-cities” were Calgary, Honolulu,
Ottawa, Helsinki, and Wellington. Nordic cit-
ies ranked especially high; those in Eastern
Europe ranked somewhat below their coun-
terparts in Western Europe. United States
and Canadian cities ranked high. In the Asia-
Pacific region, Adelaide, Kobe, Perth, and
Auckland ranked the highest, and Dhaka the
lowest. In the Middle East and North Africa,
Cape Town, Muscat, and Johannesburg
ranked high; Antananarivo and Baghdad were
at the bottom.
Will some cities in today’s developing world
ascend these rankings? Will others fall? As the
world becomes more urban and more inter-
connected, how will cities, their landscapes,
cities and to promote an individual city’s ability
to attract investment, conferences, and sport-
ing events, as well as specific groups such as
artists, scientists, wealthy retirees, and tour-
ists (Figure 13.13). The Mercer Quality of Life
Index provides one widely respected ranking of
cities that offers the highest quality of living in
the world (Table 13.3). The Mercer methodol-
ogy includes measures of personal health and
safety, the economy and physical environment,
transportation and communications, public
services, and the overall political climate. Not
surprisingly, the top cities were in high-income
European countries, plus similar cities in Can-
ada, Australia, and New Zealand. Vienna topped
the list. The highest U.S. cities were Honolulu,
which ranked 31st, and San Francisco, which
ranked 32nd. The cities with the lowest rank-
ings were Baghdad followed by the African cit-
ies of Brazzaville, Bangui, and Khartoum.
Figure 13.13 the creative class responds to culture and the arts. Without them, cities decline. that’s why the Chrysler Museum in norfolk, Virginia, just invested $24 million in an upgrade and brought to town Florentijn hofman’s Rubber duck, at least for a short visit. Source: Photo by d. J. Zeigler.
568 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
Table 13.3 Quality of Living and Eco-City Rankings
The World’s Top Twenty Cities, by Rank
Mercer Quality of Living Survey 2015 Mercer Eco-City Ranking 2010
1 Vienna, Austria 1 Calgary, Canada
2 Zurich, Switzerland 2 Honolulu, USA
3 Auckland, New Zealand 3 Ottawa, Canada
4 Munich, Germany 3 Helsinki, Finland
5 Vancouver, Canada 5 Wellington, New Zealand
6 Düsseldorf, Germany 6 Minneapolis, USA
7 Frankfurt, Germany 7 Adelaide, Australia
8 Geneva, Switzerland 8 Copenhagen, Denmark
9 Copenhagen, Denmark 9 Kobe, Japan
10 Sydney, Australia 9 Oslo, Norway
11 Amsterdam, Netherlands 9 Stockholm, Sweden
12 Wellington, New Zealand 12 Perth, Australia
13 Bern, Switzerland 13 Montreal, Canada
14 Berlin, Germany 13 Vancouver, Canada
15 Toronto, Canada 13 Nuremberg, Germany
16 Ottawa, Canada 13 Auckland, New Zealand
16 Melbourne, Australia 13 Bern, Switzerland
16 Hamburg, Germany 13 Pittsburgh, USA
19 Luxembourg, Luxembourg 19 Zurich, Switzerland
19 Stockholm, Sweden 19 Aberdeen, U.K.
Source: Mercer Quality of Living Ranking 2015; Mercer Eco-City Ranking 2010.
Box 13.4 Seeing Cities on the Soles of your Feet
donald J. Zeigler, old dominion University
the cities of the world await your visit. Start learning urban geography the way it should be learned: on the soles of your feet. be attentive to details, but also use the wide-angle lens that your education in geography has provided. Look for patterns and processes on the landscape and document them for the future. When geographers are traveling, they are doing research. here’s how:
take pictures. Photograph people and landscapes—ordinary and extraordinary. you can’t cover everything, but you can find a few topics of personal interest and follow them from city to city: skylines, waterfronts, signs, buskers, open space, monuments, maps on the landscape, etc. Meander off the “high streets” and slow down. What story is the city trying to tell you? help tell that story in pictures. to do that, you will have to become a master of field notes as well.
Suggested Readings 569
Davis, M. 2006. Planet of Slums. London: Verso.
Explains how informal urban settlements
develop and describes the poor living condi-
tions experienced by their residents.
Ehrenhalt, A. 2013. The Great Inversion and the
Future of the American City. New York: Vintage
Books. Discusses the movement of people to
urban centers in the developed world and how
suburbs are trying to stay appealing by becom-
ing denser.
Florida, R. 2014. The Rise of the Creative Class,
Revisited. New York: Basic Books. Describes the
shift to a flexible, creative, innovation-based
and collaborative economy.
Nicholls, R. J., et al. 2008. “Ranking Port Cities with
High Exposure and Vulnerability to Climate
and their populations change? The best way
to find out is to go see for yourself (Box 13.4).
SUGGESTED READINGS
Brunn, S. D. 2011. “World Cities: Present and
Future.” In Geography for the 21st Century, ed.
J. P. Stoltman, pp. 301–14. Thousand Oaks, CA:
Sage Publications, Surveys major population
trends and problems facing the world’s cities.
Castells, M. 2009. The Rise of the Network Society:
The Information Age: Economy, Society and Cul-
ture, Vol. I, 2nd ed. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
Examines the “network society” and changes
that gave rise to the “new economy.”
Keep a journal. document your observations in words. When you stop for coffee or lunch, take out your journal, activate notes on your iPhone, or open your tablet computer. before you forget them, record a few observations and impressions. then, at the end of the day, synopsize what you have learned. it will take discipline but your essays will bring back the experience like nothing else you can do. And remember the first axiom of learned travel: writing it down helps you think it out.
open your ears. Attune your ears to new languages, new words, new music, and new cacophony. Each city has an auditory signature of its own. Listen to how the local place names are pronounced. Pick up some slang. Find out what music is saturating the air waves. talk to people you meet, give ear to their accents, and pay attention to how they tell their stories, not just what they have to say. Record what you can.
educate your taste buds. Eating is a learning activity, and the cities you visit will be anxious to educate you. Learn about the dishes that define a nation, the regional cuisines, and favorite desserts. Patronize the microbreweries; search out the farmers’ markets; take as much time as the locals do to finish their meals; and become a locavore. And always ask questions about what you are eating. Use words and pictures as gustatory aides memoires, field documents that will activate your taste buds’ memory.
acquire some mementos. but be selective. Look for post cards, buy a local newspaper, find a local language dictionary or children’s book, save a few coins or bills, and buy a few stamps at the post office (the visit alone will be worth the experience). Go to the super- market for a box of cereal: eat the cereal and save the box. Go to the newsstands and buy a copy of National Geographic in a foreign language. Go to the tourist kiosks for a souvenir, and make sure it was actually made in the country you are visiting.
570 CITIES OF THE FUTURE
Institute. Examines the challenges that cities face
in dealing with terrorism in the post-9/11 world.
World Bank. 2013. Global Monitoring Report 2013:
Rural-Urban Dynamics and the Millennium
Development Goals. Washington, DC: World
Bank. An annual report that examines how
urbanization helps countries achieve the UN’s
Millennium Development Goals.
Worldwatch Institute. 2007. State of the World 2007:
Our Urban Future. Washington, DC: World-
watch Institute. Reports on challenges facing
urban humankind, accompanied by valuable
tables, footnotes, and references.
Extremes: Exposure Estimates,” OECD Environ-
ment Working Papers, No. 1. OECD Publishing.
Examines the extent to which 136 port cities
around the world will be affected by climate
change.
United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP). 2014. Human Development Report
2013: The Rise of the South. The UN Human
Development Index quantifies the status of
health, education, economies, and gender
equity across the globe.
Urban Land Institute. 2002. ULI on the Future:
Cities Post 9/11. Washington, DC: Urban Land
572 APPENDIX
Cover Photo Credits
Clockwise from top left:
New construction in cities around Russia (Vladivostok is pictured) relegates Soviet urban land-
scapes to the background as new commercial and residential buildings vie for valuable real
estate locations. Photo by Sergei Domashenko.
As cities fill up with people, streets become more congested with not only cars, but bicycles and
camels as well. Photo by George Pomeroy.
Three young girls find time for fun as they assist their mothers who labor as ambulantes (street-
vendors) in the informal economy of Huancayo, a city in the Peruvian central Andes. Photo by
Maureen Hays-Mitchell.
Since the early 1990s, Shanghai’s new CBD has arisen across the river in Pudong, centered on
the futuristic TV tower surrounded by ultramodern skyscrapers. Pudong CBD is China’s finan-
cial district. Photo by Kam Wing Chan.
The Dome of the Rock (venerated by Muslims) and the Western Wall (venerated by Jews) are
symbols of a religiously divided Jerusalem. Photo by D. J. Zeigler.
African cities located in low-elevation coastal zones, such as Monrovia, Liberia, are vulnerable
to severe flooding from sea-level rise. Photo by Robert Zeigler.
The traditional markets of Marrakech, Morocco, are some of the most well-known in the world.
In Arabic-speaking countries they are known as souks or suqs. Photo by D. J. Zeigler.
Angkor Wat, built between 1113 and 1150 by Suryavarman II, is one of but hundreds of wats
spread throughout Cambodia. Because it symbolizes Cambodia’s golden age, its image can also
be found on the nation’s flag. Photo by James Tyner.
The citadel, or cale, of Gaziantep, Turkey, occupies a strategically located hilltop that dominates
the fertile agricultural region near the Turkish-Syrian border. Photo by D. J. Zeigler.
574 COVER PHOTO CREDITS
Slater’s Mill is today an historical landmark in Pawtucket, Rhode Island; it marked the begin-
ning of the factory system in the United States. Photo by D. J. Zeigler.
The Pelourinho historic district, named for the “pillory” formerly used to punish slaves, indi-
cates the strong Afro-Brazilian influence in Salvador da Bahia. Photo by Brian Godfrey.
This view of the 9/11 Memorial shows one of the two reflecting pools which sit within the foot-
prints where the Twin Towers once stood. Photo by John Rennie Short.
The Church of Our Savior on the Spilled Blood, in St. Petersburg, was built on the spot where
Emperor Alexander II was assassinated in March 1881. Built from 1883-1907, the Romanov
family provided funds for this glamorous cathedral. Photo by Jared Boone.
Paris evolved around an island in the Seine River: Île de la Cité. Today, it is most famous for the
cathedral of Notre Dame, whose spire is barely visible here. Photo by D. J. Zeigler.
Now a UNESCO World Heritage site, the Sydney Opera House has become a symbol of the
island continent. Photo by D. J. Zeigler.
The Sikhs, neither Hindu nor Muslim, are a major part of India’s cultural diversity, seen here in
their main gurdwara, the place where they worship. Photo by D. J. Zeigler.
Abidjan, 338 Abuja, 339, 347 Accra, 329, 332, 337, 342, 343,
344, 345, 359, 366 Aceh, 420, 422 Addis Ababa, 327, 359 Aden, 284, 285, 300 Agra, 380, 381 Akron, 56, 574 Aleppo, 280, 285, 293 Almaty, 248, 252 Amsterdam, 5, 46, 64, 77, 187,
194, 196, 201, 202, 203, 211, 233, 300, 550, 568
Angkor Wat, 380, 417, 571 Astana, 252, 253 Athens, 189, 193, 225, 231, 232 Atlanta, 49, 52, 57, 73, 75, 76, 77,
80, 83, 92, 560 Auckland, 503, 504, 505, 509,
516, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 567, 568
Baghdad, 13, 281, 285, 288, 309, 320, 567
Baguio City, 427 Baltimore, 50, 54, 78, 86 Bandung, 426 Bangalore, 369, 370, 393, 409,
557 Bangkok, 77, 413, 414, 416,
417, 419, 424, 425, 427, 429, 430, 431, 433, 435, 439, 442, 443, 444, 445, 449, 450, 452, 453, 551
Barcelona, 77, 161, 215, 223, 224, 225
Barnaul, 248 Batavia, 422, 423, 425 Beijing, 13, 77, 273, 396, 457,
458, 459, 464, 466, 470, 471,
472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 490, 497, 498, 541
Beirut, 277, 280, 281, 286, 294 Belize City, 100, 101 Belo Horizonte, 143, 163, 164 Benghazi, 285 Berlin, 77, 197, 202, 208, 211,
216, 226, 227, 228, 231, 232, 233, 366, 545, 568, 574
Beverly Hills, 66, 317 Blantyre-Limbe, 537 Bogotá, 135, 137, 138, 141, 143,
144, 148, 150, 155, 177, 179, 180, 184, 185
Borobudur, 421 Boston, 19, 33, 40, 49, 50, 51,
52, 66, 75, 77, 94, 462, 550, 557, 563
Brasilia, 41 Brazzaville, 327, 567 Bridgetown, 112 Brisbane, 503, 504, 506, 507,
513, 514, 527, 528, 529 Brussels, 77, 187, 189, 201, 203,
221, 231, 233 Budapest, 193, 198, 204, 205,
233 Buenos Aires, 13, 77, 118, 135,
137, 138, 141, 142, 143, 144, 148, 150, 151, 155, 157, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 185
Buffalo, 52, 54, 56, 76 Bukhara, 14
Cabinda, 324 Calgary, 50, 52, 54, 56, 75, 80, 93,
567, 568 Canberra, 18, 504, 508, 509, 511,
534 Cancún, 18, 99, 100, 101, 124 Cape Town, 323, 324, 326, 328,
332, 354, 355, 365, 366 Caracas, 135, 137, 138, 144, 150,
185 Cardiff, 193 Cartagena, 121, 148 Casablanca, 285, 288 Celebration, 61 Chandigarh, 370, 375 Changan, 15 Charlotte, 52, 57, 73, 80, 112 Chennai, 369, 374, 375, 382, 383,
386, 389, 390 Chicago, 6, 17, 22, 46, 49, 52, 53,
54, 58, 66, 67, 73, 75, 76, 77, 80, 83, 87, 545, 557
Chongjin, 489 Christchurch, 504, 509, 516, 528 Ciudad Guyana, 41 Cleveland, 29, 56, 68, 69, 76,
551 Colombo, 370, 374, 383, 386,
390, 400, 402, 403, 407 Copenhagen, 77, 205, 568 Cuzco, 147, 148, 149
Dallas, 39, 52, 56, 75, 77, 80 Damascus, 280, 281, 299,
309, 320 Dar es Salaam, 324, 327, 333,
340, 358, 365 Delhi, 3, 8, 9, 13, 39, 40, 369,
370, 374, 375, 376, 381, 382, 390, 393, 394, 395, 396, 403, 404, 406, 408, 537, 540, 541, 547, 557
Detroit, 17, 52, 56, 68, 69, 75, 76, 545, 561
Dhahran, 287, 288 Dhaka, 3, 40, 369, 370, 374, 377,
389, 396, 399, 400, 401, 408, 409, 537, 541, 543, 567
Geographical Index
576 GEOGRAPHICAL INDEX
Doha, 294, 308, 560 Donetsk, 537 Dongtan, 498 Dortmund, 194, 196, 200, 233 Dubai, 77, 253, 277, 281, 293,
294, 306, 307, 308, 309, 319, 448, 539, 558, 559, 560
Dublin, 77, 193, 209 Dunedin, 504, 509, 516, 528 Durban, 323, 332, 354
Edinburgh, 212 Edo, 459, 464, 465, 500 Ekaterinburg, 255, 256 eThekwini, 355
Fertile Crescent, 277, 281, 282, 303, 312
Fès, 285 Flint, 56 Fort-de-France, 112 Funafuti, 512
Geneva, 19, 77, 202, 568 Glasgow, 17, 193, 212, 552 Guadalajara, 97, 102, 103, 128,
133 Guayaquil, 138, 144
Hamburg, 192, 203, 568 Hanoi, 414, 419, 445, 446, 447,
449, 453, 454 Harappa, 377 Harare, 333, 359 Hausa cities, 330 Havana, 98, 99, 112, 120, 121,
122, 123, 124, 135, 537 Helsinki, 233, 260, 567, 568 Ho Chi Minh City, 413, 414,
416, 417, 419, 423, 425, 430, 432, 433, 445, 446, 447, 448, 450, 453, 551
Hobart, 504, 506, 507, 513, 514, 515, 532
Hollywood, 66, 67, 301, 479 Hong Kong, 46, 72, 77, 80, 125,
199, 334, 436, 457, 458, 460, 461, 463, 464, 466, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 486, 491, 492, 499, 557, 559, 577
Honolulu, 454, 567, 568 Houston, 52, 56, 75, 77, 80, 92,
94, 324, 550 Hyderabad, 3, 370, 371, 374, 393
Indus Valley, 11, 377 Islamabad, 370, 375 Istanbul, 13, 21, 191, 277, 278,
280, 283, 285, 288, 310, 311, 312, 313, 316
Izmir, 312
Jakarta, 40, 77, 413, 414, 417, 422, 427, 430, 431, 432, 433, 435, 440, 441, 442, 444, 445, 449, 450
Jamshedpur, 375, 389, 390 Jebel Ali, 306 Jeddah, 284 Jericho, 282 Jerusalem, 46, 285, 288, 303, 304,
305, 306, 319, 571 Johannesburg, 323, 336, 338,
354, 355, 356, 366, 567
Kabul, 374, 400 Kaliningrad, 251, 256 Kampala, 329, 333, 537 Kansas City, 52, 93 Kaohsiung, 484, 495 Karachi, 369, 374, 375, 398, 403,
409, 537, 541 Kathmandu, 32, 400, 402, 404,
405 Khabarovsk, 239 Kiev, 241, 243 Kilwa, 332 Kingston, 112, 575 Kinshasa, 323, 327, 337, 340,
341, 342, 343, 347, 359, 365, 537, 557
Kitwe, 334, 340 Kolkata, 13, 370, 374, 375, 382,
383, 386, 389, 390, 395, 397, 398, 408
Kostroma, 244 Krasnodar, 254 Kuala Lumpur, 77, 413, 414, 426,
427, 429, 433, 439, 440, 441, 442, 449, 450
Lagos, 40, 323, 336, 338, 345, 346, 347, 537, 541
Lahore, 370, 374, 381 Las Vegas, 30, 52, 73, 93, 460,
551 Leningrad, 265, 266 Lhasa, 489, 490 Lima, 121, 122, 135, 137, 138,
142, 143, 144, 150, 153, 155, 167, 168, 169, 171, 173, 174, 183, 185
Ljubljana, 191, 205 London, 3, 5, 21, 22, 26, 36, 46,
54, 64, 77, 95, 135, 187, 188, 192, 193, 197, 198, 201, 202, 203, 204, 208, 209, 211, 212, 213, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 223, 225, 227, 233, 274, 275, 312, 319, 332, 334, 366, 403, 409, 441, 500, 533, 540, 544, 551, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 563, 564, 569
Long Beach, 13 Los Angeles, 11, 13, 26, 46, 49,
51, 52, 56, 60, 62, 66, 67, 68, 76, 77, 80, 85, 92, 110, 111, 122, 410, 414, 442, 444, 445, 540, 545, 551, 555, 557
Lourenço Marques, 332 Luanda, 323, 332, 333, 337, 338,
350, 359 Lusaka, 334, 335, 336, 338, 358,
359, 361, 363, 364, 365 Lyon, 42, 198, 223
Madrid, 77, 187, 192, 208, 223, 563
Madurai, 380 Magadan, 239 Makasar, 420 Manama, 281, 287, 288, 294, 308 Manila, 21, 28, 413, 414, 417,
418, 422, 423, 425, 426, 427, 430, 431, 432, 433, 435, 439, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 551
Maracaibo, 144 Mecca, 46, 280, 284, 303, 304,
308, 309, 310, 320 Medellín, 135, 138, 143, 148, 185
Geographical Index 577
Medina, 280, 281, 284, 303, 309, 320, 353
Melbourne, 77, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 513, 514, 519, 529, 533, 552, 568
Memphis, 76, 559 Mexico City, 8, 11, 13, 26, 39, 40,
77, 97, 99, 101, 102, 103, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 121, 122, 128, 133, 142, 537, 541
Miami, 34, 49, 52, 57, 76, 77, 80, 94, 550, 557
Milan, 77, 187, 191, 198, 203, 233, 555
Milwaukee, 551, 563 Mohenjo Daro, 377, 378, 389 Mombasa, 332, 333, 340 Monterrey, 97, 99, 102, 103,
133, 134 Montevideo, 137, 141, 143,
144, 150 Montreal, 46, 50, 51, 52, 54,
69, 70, 75, 77, 79, 80, 83, 92, 274, 568
Mumbai, 3, 8, 9, 13, 37, 39, 40, 77, 369, 370, 371, 372, 374, 375, 377, 382, 383, 386, 390, 391, 392, 393, 398, 403, 406, 407, 408, 409, 537, 541, 557, 563
Mumbai-Pune corridor, 392 Munich, 193, 198, 201, 208, 211,
233, 568 Murmansk, 251 Musqat, 284
New Delhi, 369, 395, 396, 409, 410
New York, 3, 5, 8, 11, 13, 21, 29, 37, 40, 42, 43, 46, 49, 50, 51, 52, 54, 55, 62, 64, 65, 66, 67, 73, 75, 76, 77, 80, 81, 83, 84, 85, 87, 88, 91, 93, 95, 109, 113, 126, 135, 144, 164, 182, 185, 192, 199, 216, 232, 233, 274, 275, 319, 403, 409, 414, 416, 433, 453, 454, 474, 476, 485, 486, 500, 533, 536, 540, 541, 545, 550, 551, 555, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 563, 564,
569, 574, 575 Newcastle, 194, 507, 529, 532,
576 Niamey, 327, 537 Nile Valley, 11, 282 Nineveh, 283 Norilsk, 247, 252, 268, 269, 270 Novgorod, 241 Novosibirsk, 43, 247
Orlando, 52, 57, 73, 75 Osaka, 11, 457, 464, 465, 467,
540, 541 Oslo, 226, 568 Ottawa, 50, 70, 71, 72, 80, 83, 90,
567, 568 Ouagadougou, 537
Palembang, 420 Paris, 5, 11, 13, 42, 46, 77, 82,
151, 157, 174, 175, 187, 188, 191, 192, 193, 197, 198, 201, 202, 203, 209, 210, 211, 221, 222, 223, 227, 228, 229, 231, 233, 249, 301, 312, 419, 439, 540, 545, 551, 555, 559, 563, 572
Pawtucket, 55, 572 Pearl River Delta, 463, 482 Perth, 504, 507, 513, 525, 526,
527, 534, 567, 568 Philadelphia, 50, 52, 54, 67, 75,
77, 85, 320 Phnom Penh, 414, 415, 417, 419,
428, 430, 431, 432, 445, 446, 447, 448, 450, 451, 453
Pleiku, 418 Port Elizabeth, 332 Port Moresby, 505, 506, 510,
511, 531, 532 Port Vila, 510 Port-au-Prince, 129, 130,
131, 134 Pretoria, 354 Punjab, 375 Putrajaya, 439, 440 Pyongyang, 489, 557
Quebec City, 28, 51, 52, 53, 54, 71, 75, 76
Quezon City, 442, 443, 453 Quito, 138, 144, 148
Raleigh, 52 Randstad, 39, 195, 198, 204 Rangoon (Yangon), 418 Recife, 150, 182 Reykjavik, 193 Rhine-Ruhr, 39, 194, 198 Richmond, 52, 77 Riga, 209 Rio de Janeiro, 42, 135, 137, 138,
142, 143, 144, 150, 151, 155, 156, 158, 160, 163, 164, 182, 185, 359
Rome, 13, 14, 15, 77, 188, 189, 203, 211, 243, 310, 312
Rotterdam, 194, 196, 203, 233, 550
Salvador, 72, 104, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 134, 139, 149, 150, 171, 183, 572
San Diego, 51, 52, 56, 57, 98, 172, 557, 561
San Francisco, 19, 46, 49, 52, 56, 57, 60, 77, 83, 557, 567
San José, 97, 99, 107, 116, 119, 120, 128, 133, 134
San Juan, 99, 112, 126, 127, 128 Santiago, 109, 135, 137, 138, 141,
143, 144, 150, 185 Santo Domingo, 111, 112 São Paulo, 3, 8, 13, 26, 42, 116,
137, 138, 142, 143, 144, 149, 150, 154, 155, 156, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 174, 182, 185, 537, 541
Sarajevo, 202, 231 Saratov, 537 Savannah, 51, 60, 61 Seattle, 37, 44, 51, 52, 57, 76, 77,
557 Shahjahanabad, 381, 393 Shakhrisabz, 20 Shanghai, 3, 8, 13, 26, 28, 39, 77,
203, 439, 457, 458, 461, 463, 464, 466, 476, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 492, 495, 497, 498, 541, 558, 559, 571, 574
578 GEOGRAPHICAL INDEX
Shenzhen, 482, 488, 491 Silicon Valley, 57, 71, 76, 393,
406, 474 Singapore, 3, 4, 5, 19, 46, 77, 124,
203, 413, 414, 416, 423, 426, 427, 429, 430, 431, 433, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 442, 448, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 534, 557
Sofia, 193, 233 Soweto, 356 St. Petersburg, 42, 243, 244,
245, 248, 255, 258, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 271, 537, 572, 574
Stavropol, 254 Stockholm, 77, 205, 568 Strasbourg, 203, 223 Surat, 375, 377 Suva, 505, 506, 510, 531 Sydney, 46, 77, 503, 504, 505,
506, 507, 508, 512, 513, 514, 516, 517, 518, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 528, 529, 533, 534, 568, 572, 574, 576
Taipei, 45, 77, 457, 458, 461, 462, 466, 480, 484, 486, 491, 492, 494, 495, 498
Teheran, 277 Tel Aviv, 277, 285, 288 Tema, 339, 344, 345 Tenochtitlan, 39 Ternate, 420 Tijuana, 98, 103, 135, 185, 561 Timbuktu, 330 Tokyo, 3, 8, 9, 11, 13, 40, 46, 64,
77, 192, 199, 216, 273, 403, 414, 436, 457, 458, 459, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 486, 492, 493, 498, 537, 540, 541, 550, 560
Toronto, 46, 49, 50, 51, 52, 54, 70, 71, 75, 76, 77, 79, 80, 81, 83, 85, 92, 93, 94, 95, 480, 568, 573
Tripoli, 285 Tshwane, 354, 355 Tunis, 39, 298, 299 Tver, 244, 574
Ur, 11, 282, 533 Uruk, 282
Vancouver, 50, 52, 56, 76, 77, 79, 80, 94, 480, 568
Varanasi, 375, 380 Vatican City, 203
Venice, 43, 191, 207 Veracruz, 102 Vereeniging, 354, 355 Vienna, 77, 192, 193, 202, 210,
212, 227, 312, 567, 568 Vladivostok, 238, 239, 247, 250,
252, 257, 271, 272, 273, 571 Voronezh, 256
Warsaw, 197, 198, 199, 204, 205, 216, 231, 233
Washington, DC, 46, 50, 62, 70, 72, 73, 75, 77, 79, 80, 85, 86, 92, 233, 275, 454, 557, 562, 570
Wellington, 504, 509, 516, 567, 568
Windsor, 68, 92 Wollongong, 507, 529 Wuhan, 492
Xidan, 474
Yamoussoukro, 339, 537 Yerevan, 283
Zacatecas, 101 Zaporizhzhya, 537 Zurich, 77, 568
abnorms, 554 agglomeration, 45, 144 air pollution, 92, 162, 180,
184, 494 air quality, 315 Al-Qaeda, 452 ancient cities, 13 antidevelopment, 263
bazaar, 384, 390, 402 BIDs, 65, 79 Blue Banana, 198, 200 Bollywood, 390, 391 borders, 226 boundaries, 320, 529 brand, 576 BRICS, 337
California lifestyle, 67 caste, 378, 379 central place theory, 17 Chinatowns, 73, 426 Citadel, 303, 318 Civil Lines, 388, 390, 395 Civil war, 370 climate change, 6, 95, 315, 512 CMSAs, 41 Cold War, 107, 188, 313,
458, 481 colonialism, 323, 347, 457, 507 communism, 43, 188, 197,
230, 232 communist, 22, 43, 124, 191,
194, 197, 198, 204, 205, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 239, 244, 245, 264, 275, 470, 476
conflict, 288, 525 connectivity, 5, 77, 553, 555,
557, 559 conurbation, 39, 194, 195 cyberabad, 393
cyberspace, 439
decentralization, 57, 493, 500 declining, 145, 204 degradation, 145, 315 deindustrialization, 196, 551 digital cities, 557 disaster, 405 drug, 132
earthquake, 404 Emirates, 288, 306, 560 ethnic, 34, 140, 202 EU, 188, 189, 202, 203, 204, 205,
211, 232, 233 European heritage, 137, 139 European Union, 188, 197, 200,
201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 221, 224, 226, 228, 232, 233, 271, 274, 556, 575
everyday life, 432
fast food, 425 FIFA, 157, 161, 225, 294, 356 flood/ flooding, 74, 130, 550 foreign investment, 264, 435 future, 93, 120, 133, 220, 233,
263, 273, 319, 410, 534, 537, 569, 570
gang, 67 gated communities, 116, 132 gateway, 69, 72, 119, 391, 515 GaWC, 5 gender, 15, 577 gentrification, 65, 529, 530 GIS, 35, 538, 539, 561, 562,
563, 566, 574 Global North, 154, 172, 545 Global South, 46, 362, 539, 541,
543, 575
globalization, 5, 35, 36, 75, 76, 81, 124, 132, 185, 201, 203, 205, 274, 370, 393, 402, 403, 405, 430, 453, 514, 556, 559
Golden Quadrilateral, 374, 375 Google Earth, 102, 105, 131,
539, 563 Google mapping, 563 governance, 37, 233, 532,
561, 563 governing, 365 GPS, 562 green, 46, 174, 205, 218, 233,
286, 403, 454, 485, 518, 524 Green City Index, 205 green space, 174 greening, 403, 495 growth, 3, 7, 13, 20, 28, 128,
169, 221, 235, 253, 341, 409, 424, 430, 468, 500, 537, 539, 541, 543
Hajj, 308 hill stations, 387 HIV/AIDS, 336 human security, 564 hyperurbanization, 30, 167
ICTs, 554 immigrants, 73, 80, 200,
210, 233 immigration, 34, 58, 67, 70, 73,
79, 80, 93, 95, 150, 174, 188, 194, 202, 233, 348, 426, 429, 510, 525, 544
indigenous, 513 Industrial Revolution, 15, 16, 18,
99, 210 infrastructure, 405, 534, 550 Internet, 183, 539, 557, 563 ISIS, 299, 300
Index to Subjects
580 INDEX TO SUBJECTS
Islam, 14, 243, 254, 262, 264, 277, 279, 280, 284, 295, 299, 301, 303, 308, 309, 310, 319, 422, 575
Islamic empires, 278
K-economies, 204, 554 Kentucky Fried Chicken,
449, 453
land reclamation, 414 Law of the Indies, 113, 116, 126 LDCs, 7, 11, 24, 26, 30, 32, 35,
36, 38, 557 localization, 76
McDonaldization, 409, 555 McDonalds, 370, 404 Medina, 280, 281, 284, 303, 309,
320, 353 megacity/megacities, 3, 9, 40, 49,
97, 116, 137, 160, 187, 235, 277, 323, 345, 369, 413, 440, 457, 468, 503
megalopolis, 40, 50, 64, 155, 287, 288, 375, 467
mercantile, 15 metacity/metacities, 40, 49, 97,
137, 369, 457 microrayon, 248 migrant, 430, 492 migration, 16, 80, 103, 108, 128,
135, 142, 150, 152, 168, 177, 193, 197, 200, 216, 221, 224, 250, 259, 285, 288, 289, 309, 315, 316, 329, 334, 341, 353, 354, 362, 363, 370, 393, 408, 419, 426, 427, 429, 430, 435, 445, 448, 452, 458, 466, 467, 469, 471, 475, 476, 486, 487, 488, 491, 510, 512, 513, 514, 515, 520, 522, 533, 541, 542, 574, 576
millennials, 544 mission, 403 modernization, 35, 246, 297,
410, 496 multiculturalism, 236, 275,
521, 522 muslim, 202, 262, 299, 304, 305,
378, 380, 381, 382, 384, 387,
392, 398, 399, 407, 414, 423, 437, 443, 489, 522, 572
network, 5, 71, 77, 178, 354, 569 new town, 41, 205 NGOs, 182, 406
Oblast, 246, 251 OECD, 202, 311, 550, 570 okrug, 241 Olympics, 69, 157, 160, 161,
225, 488 OPEC, 202
PMSAs, 41 polarization, 144 police, 67 policing, 65, 85, 86, 182, 231,
297, 563 pollution, 90, 230, 546 port cities, 148 post 9/11, 570 poverty, 108, 315, 409, 474, 500 Pre-Columbian, 147 preindustrial, 18, 41, 458 presidency town, 369, 382, 383 primate city, 99 psychogeography, 25
Quality of Life Index, 567
race, 171, 185 railway colonies, 387 recycling, 44, 184, 438 redevelopment, 68 revolution, 50, 101, 122, 222,
244, 264, 265, 299, 303, 366, 476
rickshaws, 377 Roma, 201, 202, 228, 334, 335 Russian history, 241 Rustbelt, 56
SARS, 482 satellite cities, 448 security, 72, 84, 182, 219, 451,
538, 561, 563 segregation, 63, 86, 98, 129, 132,
175, 181, 182, 183, 352, 387, 395, 431, 524, 575
sewage, 90, 163 Shanghaization, 409 Shantytowns, 183 site, 42, 308, 380, 481 situation, 42 slave, 353 slavery, 98, 135, 160, 346 slum, 408, 409 slumification, 256 smog, 26, 90, 92, 551 social movement, 145 socialist, 43, 197, 236, 445 souks, 296 Soviet era, 236, 256, 258, 265,
268, 275 squatter, 31, 481 Starbucks, 37, 286, 431, 449 stormwater, 29 suburban, 60, 78, 117, 209, 274,
492, 517, 530, 545, 546 suburbanization, 30, 56, 116,
154, 175, 196, 209, 211, 218, 255, 274, 316, 467, 486, 487, 498, 531
Subway, 293 Sunbelt, 75 suqs, 281, 571 surveillance, 219, 563 sustainability, 38, 44, 94, 95, 120,
130, 141, 155, 164, 177, 184, 211, 233, 238, 263, 307, 317, 452, 469, 495, 518, 530, 531, 546, 548, 552, 573
sustainable, 44, 177, 188, 206, 366, 534, 548
telecommuting, 553 terrorism, 84, 89, 299, 407, 453,
564, 566, 570 tourism, 101, 123, 132, 298,
405, 449, 482, 489, 515, 527, 528, 549
tourist, 18, 28, 65, 100, 101, 120, 124, 132, 157, 182, 206, 211, 216, 223, 225, 238, 251, 298, 328, 340, 381, 436, 443, 481, 523, 525, 527, 559, 560, 569
transnational, 105, 414, 564 transnational cities, 414
Index to Subjects 581
UNESCO, 70, 123, 160, 166, 168, 203, 267, 270, 380, 405, 420, 521, 572
UPP, 157 urban agglomerations, 554 urban area, 540 urban government, 37, 258, 564 urban growth, 54, 150, 429, 537 urban landscape, 8, 277, 413 urban region, 56 urban sprawl, 120 urbanism, 44, 46, 61, 147, 181,
233, 453, 507, 509
urbanization, 7, 8, 10, 11, 13, 15, 16, 44, 48, 81, 96, 99, 101, 103, 105, 107, 109, 111, 113, 128, 136, 142, 143, 144, 150, 164, 185, 186, 197, 245, 276, 284, 313, 322, 325, 327, 331, 333, 334, 336, 360, 368, 410, 412, 419, 421, 427, 429, 430, 431, 477, 499, 502, 510, 527, 536, 547
violence, 185, 403, 405 vulnerability, 133, 327, 569
vulnerable, 73, 129
water quality, 89 water security, 451 water supply, 89, 518 Westernization, 35, 555 WHO, 396 World Heritage City, 421 World Heritage Program, 160 World Heritage Site, 117, 123, 420 World Water Day, 155
Zócalo, 111, 116, 117, 118
About the Editor and Contributors
Roberto I. Albandoz is an academic adviser at the Pennsylvania State University’s World
Campus. He holds a bachelor’s degree in geog-
raphy from the University of Puerto Rico, a
master’s degree in environmental and urban
systems from Florida International University,
and a PhD in geography from the Pennsylva-
nia State University. His primary interests lie
in historical geography, cultural geography,
and geography-based travel. He has worked as
a member of the United States Coast Guard
and as an engineer at the Applied Research
Center at Florida International University.
He also writes travel articles for El Nuevo Día
newspaper in Puerto Rico.
Amal K. Ali is associate professor in the Department of Geography and Geosciences at
Salisbury University in Maryland. She teaches
and conducts research in land-use planning,
smart growth, and international development
planning.
Lisa benton-Short is associate professor and Geography Department chair at George
Washington University. She teaches courses
on cities and globalization, urban planning,
and urban sustainability. She has research
interests in urban sustainability, environmen-
tal issues in cities, parks and public spaces, and
monuments and memorials.
Alana boland is associate professor in the Department of Geography and Planning at the
University of Toronto. She teaches courses on
China, environment, and development. Her
research examines how the changing relation-
ship between the economy and environment
has influenced the management of resources
and governing of spaces in Chinese cities. Her
current work focuses on urban environmental
infrastructure in China during the 1950s and
1960s.
Timothy S. brothers is associate professor emeritus of geography at Indiana University
Perdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI). He
specializes in human-environment relations
in the Caribbean. His book Caribbean Land-
scapes is an interpretation of the most char-
acteristic natural and human landscapes of
the region based on satellite imagery, photo-
graphs, and essays.
Stanley D. brunn is emeritus professor of geography at the University of Kentucky.
He has taught classes on world cities, future
worlds, political and social geography, and the
geographies of information and communi-
cation. He has traveled in more than seventy
countries and taught in seventeen. He has
written and edited books and chapters on U.S.
elections, Walmart, post-9/11 worlds, ethnic-
ity, geography/technology interfaces, time/
space cartographies, religions, and mega-
engineering projects. Currently, he is editing
a book on world languages, studying discipli-
nary history questions, and writing poetry.
584 ABOUT THE EDITOR AND CONTRIBUTORS
Kam Wing Chan is professor of geography at the University of Washington. His main
research focuses on China’s cities, migration,
employment, and the household registration
system. He has served as a consultant for the
World Bank, Asian Development Bank, United
Nations, and McKinsey & Co. His recent com-
mentaries and interviews have appeared in the
Wall Street Journal, New York Times, The Econ-
omist, South China Morning Post, BBC, Caixin,
and China Daily.
Ipsita Chatterjee is assistant professor in the Department of Geography, University of
North Texas. She is interested in issues relat-
ing to globalization, neoliberalism, urban
transformation and renewal, conflict and vio-
lence, and social movements. Her research has
focused on issues of class and ethnic segrega-
tion, ghettoization, and other forms of urban
exclusions.
Megan L. Dixon is instructor of writing, geography, and environmental studies at The
College of Idaho. Her research in urban and
cultural geography focuses on high-profile
development in St. Petersburg and Shanghai
as well as on the impacts of Chinese migra-
tion to Russia. Current research involves over-
lapping Latino/Anglo narratives of place and
water use in the intermountain west (central
Idaho). Her persistent interest in shifting par-
adigms of place began with a visit to Kalinin/
Tver in 1989, just before the fall of the Berlin
Wall.
Seth Dixon is associate professor in the Geog- raphy Program at Rhode Island College. He
regularly teaches courses in urban geography,
cultural geography, GIS, and world regional
geography. Past research of his has centered
on urban landscapes of identity in Mexico as
well as the politicization of heritage. He has
served as the coordinator for the Rhode Island
Geography Education Alliance and as a blog-
ger for National Geographic Education. His
main project is to archive and share digital
geography education resources through social
media networks to other educators.
Robyn Dowling is an urban cultural geog- rapher at Macquarie University in Sydney,
Australia. Her primary research interests are
in cultures of everyday urban life, focusing
on gender, home and suburbs. She publishes
widely on issues such as home ownership,
suburban gender identities, and cultures of
transport. Her current research explores the
contours of privatization and privatism in
Sydney’s residential life.
Ashok K. Dutt is professor emeritus of geog- raphy, planning, and urban studies at the Uni-
versity of Akron in Ohio. His research focuses
on religion, language, development, crime,
and medical geographies of Indian cities. He
has authored, coauthored, edited or co-edited
23 books, and authored or coauthored more
than 80 journal articles and 60 book chapters.
Alexis Ellis is a research urban forester with the USDA Forest Service. Her work in this
field focuses on the research and development
of tools for analysis of urban tree growth and
mortality and their associated ecosystem ser-
vices. She has a background in geospatial anal-
ysis and is currently developing tools for the
spatial analysis of urban tree populations and
their associated benefits.
Irma Escamilla is a doctoral candidate in geography at the National Autonomous
University of Mexico, where she serves as
an academic technician in the Institute of
About the Editor and Contributors 585
Geography. Her research focuses on urban-
regional geography, urban labor markets,
population geography, gender and geography
and historical geography.
brian J. Godfrey is professor of geography at Vassar College. He studies urban and regional
change with a primary focus on the Ameri-
cas, including North America, Latin Amer-
ica, Brazil, and the Amazon Basin. Favoring
the analytical lens of historical geography,
his scholarship has examined such topics as
global cities and urbanization, neighborhood
change and gentrification, ethnic geography
and racial segregation, politics of memory
and historic preservation, urban political ecol-
ogy, and public space. His current research
explores the heritage-based redevelopment of
Brazil’s historic cities.
Jessica K. Graybill is associate professor of geography and director of Russian and Eura-
sian Studies at Colgate University. Ongoing
interdisciplinary research on coupled human
and natural systems investigates environmen-
tal change due to socioeconomic and political
transformation, natural resource extraction,
and climate change in multiple regions of the
Former Soviet Union, especially the Far North
and East. With students, she also examines the
human and natural ecologies of shrinking cit-
ies in upstate New York.
Maureen Hays-Mitchell is professor of geography at Colgate University. Her schol-
arly interests center broadly on the gendered
dimensions of development in the Global
South, with a primary focus on Latin America
where she conducts grassroots fieldwork. She
applies a feminist lens to issues involving the
urban informal economy, the role of women’s
associations in peace-building, the work of
truth commissions, and post-conflict recon-
ciliation. Her current research explores mem-
ory on the post-conflict landscape of several
Latin American countries.
Ishrat Islam is professor and chair of the Department of Urban and Regional Planning
at the Bangladesh University of Engineering
and Technology (BUET). Her teaching and
research interests are spatial planning, wet-
lands preservation, disaster management, and
indigenous architecture.
brian Edward Johnson is director of the Uni- versity of Alabama at Birmingham’s Office for
Study Away, where he also teaches introduc-
tory, urban, population, and regional geog-
raphy courses. His research focuses on urban
planning in cities experiencing revitalization
and demographic change. He serves as chair
of the AAG’s Stand Alone Geographers Affin-
ity Group and is a City of Birmingham plan-
ning commissioner.
Corey Johnson is associate professor of geog- raphy at the University of North Carolina,
Greensboro. He teaches courses on Europe,
the European Union, and political and urban
geography. He has lived and worked in Ger-
many. His current research is on geopoli-
tics of energy and borders in the European
Union.
Nathaniel M. Lewis is lecturer in human geography at the University of Southampton.
His work focuses on relationships between
gender, sexuality, health, and the urban envi-
ronment. He completed his PhD at Queen’s
University in Kingston, Ontario, and a post-
doctoral fellowship at Dalhousie University
in Halifax, Nova Scotia. His recent publica-
tions can be found in journals such as Health
586 ABOUT THE EDITOR AND CONTRIBUTORS
& Place, Annals of the Association of American
Geographers, The Canadian Geographer, and
the Journal of Homosexuality.
Linda McCarthy is associate professor of geography and urban studies at the University
of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. She is also a certi-
fied planner. Her teaching interests include
Europe, cities, and globalization. Her research
focuses on public policy and economic devel-
opment. Her recent publications have been on
government subsidies to corporations, glo-
balization, and brownfields.
Pauline McGuirk is professor of human geog- raphy and director of the Centre for Urban
and Regional Studies at the University of
Newcastle, Australia. Her research focuses on
the politics, development, and governance of
metropolitan cities, but she has also published
widely on aspects of urban development, city
politics, planning, urban identity, and place
marketing. She is currently investigating new
forms of governance and residential housing
in Sydney.
Garth A. Myers is distinguished professor of Urban International Studies at Trinity College
in Hartford, Connecticut, and director of the
Urban Studies Program. He is the author of
four books and co-editor of two others. He
has also published more than 60 articles and
book chapters on African urban development,
and he teaches a variety of courses on African
geography and urban studies.
Arnisson Andre Ortega is assistant profes- sor at the University of the Philippines, Dili-
man. His research interests include urban
geography, migration, and critical demogra-
phy. His current projects focus on spatialities
of peri-urban transition, dispossession and
gentrification, and social politics of transna-
tional migration.
Francis Owusu is professor and chair of the Department of Community and Regional
Planning at Iowa State University. He has con-
ducted research in several African countries
and has published extensively on urban liveli-
hood strategies, development policy, and pub-
lic sector reforms. He teaches geography and
planning courses, including the geography
of Africa and a course on world cities. He is
originally from Ghana.
George Pomeroy is professor of geography- earth science at Shippensburg University of
Pennsylvania. He teaches land-use planning,
environmental planning, and courses related
to both South and East Asia. His research
focuses on new-towns planning and on build-
ing capacity for local government planning
activities.
zia Salim is assistant professor of geography at California State University, Fullerton. He
teaches courses on urban geography, geo-
graphic thought, and social and environmen-
tal issues in urban areas. His research interests
include urban inequality, uneven develop-
ment, and cultural landscapes. More spe-
cifically, his work has examined central city
redevelopment, affordable housing, home-
lessness, gated communities, nonprofit service
provision, and public art.
Joseph L. Scarpaci is associate professor of marketing at the Gary E. West College of Busi-
ness in West Liberty, West Virginia. He is also
the executive director of the Center for the
Study of Cuban Culture and the Economy. He
is the coauthor of Marketing Without Adver-
tising: Brand Preference and Consumer Choice
About the Editor and Contributors 587
in Cuba, among other works focused on Cuba
and the Caribbean.
benjamin Shultz is assistant professor at International Balkan University in Skopje,
Macedonia, where he teaches courses on
American society and politics, nationalism,
and cultural industries. His current research
interest is in the processes of integration of the
Balkan states into Europe. As a side project, he
is interested in applying spatial analysis meth-
ods to sports statistics.
Thomas Sigler is lecturer in human geogra- phy at The University of Queensland in Bris-
bane, Australia. He holds a bachelor’s degree
in geography and international relations from
the University of Southern California, and a
master’s degree and PhD in geography from
Penn State University. His primary interests lie
in economic and urban geography, specifically
in the evolution and formation of contem-
porary cities through historical interurban
networks. He has conducted research on the
United States, Panama, Hong Kong, and Aus-
tralia. Prior to finishing his PhD, he worked
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and
Honduras for governmental and nonprofit
organizations.
Angela Gray Subulwa is associate professor in the Department of Geography and Urban
Planning at the University of Wisconsin–
Oshkosh. Her research interests include exam-
ining the processes of forced displacement and
identity as they relate to development, gender,
political, and cultural geographies. Most of
her research focuses on southern Africa, with
a concentration on Zambia. In addition to
numerous geography courses, she also teaches
in the Women’s and Gender Studies Program.
James Tyner is professor of geography at Kent State University, where he teaches East and
Southeast Asia, political geography, and other
courses on social, population, and urban
geography. His current research focuses on
political violence in Southeast Asia and inter-
national population movements.
Donald J. zeigler is professor of geography at Old Dominion University in Hampton Roads,
Virginia. He teaches courses on the Middle
East, urban and cultural geography. He is an
avid traveler and photographer, a past presi-
dent of the National Council for Geographic
Education, and the current president of the
Southeast Regional Middle East and Islamic
Studies Seminar.