Context of a City (Edexcel GCSE Geography B)

Revision Note

Bridgette Barrett

Written by: Bridgette Barrett

Reviewed by: Jenna Quinn

Site, Situation & Connectivity

Site and situation

  • Londinium was established by the Romans in CE43 on the River Thames

  • It was built on the flat land either side of the river at a bridging point

  • It was an ideal location for a port

  • London is the capital city of United Kingdom

  • It is located in south-east England

  • Easy access to Europe via the Thames 

  • It location between the international time zones of USA (5+ hours behind) and south-east Asia (5+ hours ahead) which makes it ideal for people working internationally

Map of northwest Europe highlighting the UK's strategic location: London on the Thames, close to Europe for trade, near Germany, France, and Belgium.
Location of London

London's Importance

Area 

Connectivity and importance

Regional

Many people commute into London, and it provides many jobs for people

Wealthy city with higher-than-average house prices and earnings 

Europe's fastest-growing technology cluster, with 3,000 companies concentrated in the East End

The capital generates 22% of UK GDP despite accounting for only 12.5% of the UK population

National

Over 40 leading universities and research

Central government is based in Whitehall

6 major train stations and 5 international airports around London and is home to the second biggest port in the UK

International

Considered a ‘world city’ and is one of three important financial centres in the world with New York and Tokyo

Major international centre for fashion, art, theatre, and film 

Headquarters of major TNCs

Cultural context

  • London is one of the most diverse cities in the world

    • 1.37 million London residents were born in Europe outside the UK

    • 1.15 million were born in the Middle East and Asia

    • 1.06 million in the rest of the world including Africa, the Americas and Oceania

  • The top non-UK country of birth was India with 323,000 London residents

  • Over 300 languages are spoken in London

  • Over 44% of Londoners are from minority ethnic groups

City Structure

Land use pattern

  • The oldest buildings in London are located in the original Central Business District (CBD)

  • As in the Burgess and Hoyt models:

    • London's original CBD is located in the centre of the settlement 

    • The average housing age decreases with distance from the CBD

    • The city becomes more suburban with distance from the CBD

    • As in the Hoyt model there are areas of high class housing radiating out from the CBD to the west side of London (upwind of the industrial areas) such as Kensington 

    • Working class housing was located in the east (downwind of the industries) around the docks

    • With distance from the CBD air quality and traffic improves, population density decreases

  • The structure of London does not fit either model as the pattern of land use is more complex

  • Many of the inner city housing areas were demolished in the 1960s

  • The financial centre has moved to the docklands area which has been redeveloped leading to two CBDs

Concentric circles depicting city zones: orange core, green inner-city ring, yellow suburban ring, and blue urban fringe with a key below.
Burgess concentric ring model
Concentric circle urban model diagram with segments for central business district, industry, and varying housing classes, each identified by colour key.
Hoyt Model

CBD

  • The oldest buildings and the high rise buildings in London are found in the CBD 

  • The radial roads mean that accessibility was good here, train lines also met here

  • High rise buildings have increased and  are the result of high land value, maximising the use of the space

  • High street chain stores tend to locate here

  • Lots of traffic/ people

Inner city

  • Outside the CBD is the inner city area which consists of:

    • Terraced housing: such as housing around the dock areas

    • Old factories/warehouses and dock areas many of which have now been converted and regenerated

    • Blocks of flats have replaced terrace housing in many areas

  • There are some high income areas such as Kensington to the west of the city

Suburbs

  • Housing size increases in these areas 

  • Houses are newer often inter-war (1920s/30s)

  • Attractive to families 

  • Expansion of the underground system allowed people to live further from the city

  • Smaller shops 

  • Lower population density

  • Areas such as Wimbledon and Tooting 

Urban/rural fringe

  • Building and population density is lower

  • Housing here was built in the 1970s/80s and 1990s

  • Increasingly industry, retail and businesses are moving to these areas due to:

    • Cheaper land

    • More space

    • Nicer environment

    • Better accessibility next to M25 - Thurrock Shopping Park, Watford Business Park

  • Areas such as Boreham Wood and Orpington are in this location

Land values 

Diagram showing peak land value model with main roads, outer ring road, and city boundary, highlighting areas of peak, secondary, and declining land value.
Distribution of urban land value
  • Any land that has 'purpose' will be valuable and cost more to buy or rent

  • Usually, retail shops can make money and seek prime positions

  • Therefore, land uses of similar activities will come together creating 'peaks' and 'troughs' of land values across the urban landscape

  • There are two points to consider:

    • The value of the land:

      • Varies across the urban areas

      • Usually decreases from the centre, outwards

      • Higher land prices are also found along main roads, urban hubs and around ring roads

    • The location of the land:

      • Is important to value

      • The closer to key functions, the higher the value

      • Accessibility and desirability increase land value

Worked Example

Identify one piece of evidence that this is a high street in the suburbs rather than in a city centre.

(1 mark)

Answer

  • No obvious national chain stores (1)

  • Shops are quite small (1)

  • Not much ‘footfall’ on pavement (1)

  • No/little traffic on road (1)

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Bridgette Barrett

Author: Bridgette Barrett

Expertise: Geography Lead

After graduating with a degree in Geography, Bridgette completed a PGCE over 25 years ago. She later gained an MA Learning, Technology and Education from the University of Nottingham focussing on online learning. At a time when the study of geography has never been more important, Bridgette is passionate about creating content which supports students in achieving their potential in geography and builds their confidence.

Jenna Quinn

Author: Jenna Quinn

Expertise: Head of New Subjects

Jenna studied at Cardiff University before training to become a science teacher at the University of Bath specialising in Biology (although she loves teaching all three sciences at GCSE level!). Teaching is her passion, and with 10 years experience teaching across a wide range of specifications – from GCSE and A Level Biology in the UK to IGCSE and IB Biology internationally – she knows what is required to pass those Biology exams.