Walter Cristaller Central Place Theory
Why Cristaller?
Christaller was trying to explain the distribution of urban areas on the Northern European plain (in Germany)
Hinterland
How far will people travel to a city for the goods and services that city provides? The further people will travel, the larger the hinterland. Refers to economic reach ONLY!
town
Larger than a village, and has more degree of specialization (Ex: Fredericksburg, San Marcos
City
More specialization and a larger hinterland (economic reach); has suburbs (Ex: San Antonio, Austin, Houston, Dallas)
Rank Size Rule
The population of a city is inversely related to its ranking
Assumptions for the central Place theory
always works in the U.S. Midwest
Central Placce Theory
describes the spatial patterns of urban and outlying areas based on the flow of goods and services; this established a central place surrounded by a market area
Reach
how far a consumer will travel to obtain a good or service
Centrality
how influential is a city? How important is it economically and culturally on a global scale? (Overall influence)
Threshold
how many potential customers are needed to support a business
Lower Order Goods and Services
less costly have a smaller range (EX: Convenience Store)
Village
likely to offer several dozen services; limited specialization (EX: Hutto, TX)
Hamlet
provides some basic services to the people living there and those nearby (EX: Andice, TX, pop. 25)
Higher Order Goods and Services
relatively costly and have a larger range (EX: a concert stadium, a hospital)
Urban Hierarchy
type of living spaces and communities that vary in things due to population, specialization, variety of products increase with size
Central Place Theory doesn't work when....
● there are unitary systems of government ● they were former colonies ● Primate cities: where a large portion of the population lives in one city (Paris: 8x bigger next city; Rio 5xs; Mexico 7xs)