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Urban field

 
Geography Dictionary: urban field

That area surrounding a city which is influenced by it. The inhabitants of the urban field depend on the city for services such as hospitals, higher education, employment, retailing, marketing, and finance and the city is served in its turn by labour.

The delimitation of urban fields poses problems. For example, the area served by a city newspaper may not be the same as the area served by the city's public transport, so that the boundary of a city's field is not demarcated by a single line; in fact there is a hierarchy of urban fields. The smaller fields of a number of towns may be ‘nested’ within the larger urban field of a city. The fields fall into three zones: a core area composed of the built-up area of the town, an outer area which uses the town for high-order goods and services, and a fringe area which uses the urban area rarely and then only for very high-order goods and services.

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Wikipedia: Urban field
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The urban field is a form of urban habitat of relatively high density involving a good transportation system and a broad array of economic, social and recreational opportunities. Even though the sections of the urban field may still be in agricultural use, the area is nonetheless urbanized because anywhere within it a person is able to connect his/her home to telephones, radio and television facilities, electricity, gas, water supply systems and a network of freeway and primary roads.

Contents

Criteria

An urban field is a field in the centre of an urban area, with a boundary wall and road frontage. Planning permission is not essential for a field to be classed as an 'urban field', although Outline Planning Permission is desirable. It is centered on and dominated to a certain extent by a metropolitan area of at least 200,000-300,000 people. It's outer limits can be defined by two things.

1. The maximum time or distance that most people are prepared to commute.
2. The time or distance that most people are prepared to spend traveling to or from weekly or weekend recreational activities. The daily commute perspective defines the "hardcore" of the urban field and results in regions of about a 40-50 mile radius from the central metropolitan area. The weekend recreational area perspective results in a much wider field of about 100 miles with far less determinate boundaries.

Extent

The actual extent of the urban field depends upon the freeway facilities available and the density of metropolitan development. In the South, Midwest and on the Prairies the fields may be quite extensive. In the East and the area bordering the lower Great Lakes where metropolitan densities are rather high, the urban field are much more restricted and may run into each other to form "galaxies". In these higher density areas the extent of the field, as defined as criterion 1, may be only 20–30 miles and the recreational field about 75 miles.

Implications

The planning implications of the urban field have become quite obvious. These large areas are inhabited and used by urbanites but they involve vast quantities of land and often very sensities environmental conditions. The management questions involve the preservation of valuable agricultural land and the protection of this land from abuse. A related issue that is becoming more important involves the pricing of farms and farmland out of the realm of wealthy individuals seeking weekend retreats or good speculative investments. The management of recreational resources and the provision of land for campsites and second homes has also become a question of concern, along with questions of conservation. Thus, the definition of an urban area according to the extent of its urban field has raised an enormous number of questions related to the management of agricultural, natural and recreational resources around a major metropolitan center.

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Copyrights:

Geography Dictionary. A Dictionary of Geography. Copyright © Susan Mayhew 1992, 1997, 2004. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Urban field" Read more