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GCSE/Geography/CCEA

U2.CS.1Urbanisation in the developed world: causes, urban morphology, central business district, suburbs

Notes

Urbanisation in the developed world

Urbanisation is the process by which an increasing proportion of a country's population comes to live in towns and cities. In the developed world (HICs such as the UK, Republic of Ireland, USA and Germany) urbanisation is now slow because most people already live in urban areas — the UK is over 84% urban, the ROI 64%.

Causes of urbanisation in HICs

  • Industrial Revolution legacy: 19th-century factories drew rural workers into Belfast, Manchester and Birmingham.
  • Tertiary and quaternary employment: modern cities such as Belfast and Dublin attract workers into finance, IT, healthcare and education.
  • Counter-urbanisation: in HICs, the trend has partly reversed since the 1970s — wealthier residents move outwards to commuter villages (e.g. Holywood, Bangor, Lisburn around Belfast) seeking more space, better schools and lower crime.
  • Re-urbanisation: regenerated inner-city zones (Titanic Quarter, Belfast; Docklands, Dublin and London) attract young professionals back into the city centre.

Urban morphology — the classic concentric model

Most HIC cities show four broad zones from the centre outwards.

ZoneLand useBelfast example
CBD (Central Business District)Shops, offices, government, transport hubsDonegall Square, Royal Avenue, Victoria Square
Inner city19th-century terraced housing, warehousing, often deprivedFalls Road, Shankill, Ormeau Road
Suburbs20th-century semis + estates, schools, parksAndersonstown, Stormont, Castlereagh
Rural-urban fringeOut-of-town retail parks, motorways, commuter villagesSprucefield, Knockmore, Lisburn

Characteristics of the CBD

  • Highest land values → tall buildings, intensive use of space.
  • Excellent public transport access (Belfast Grand Central station, Glider routes).
  • Pedestrianisation (Cornmarket, Royal Avenue) and 24-hour activity.
  • Decline pressures: out-of-town retail (Sprucefield, IKEA), online shopping, vacancy.

Suburbs

  • Low-density, mainly residential with local amenities (schools, shops, churches).
  • Often laid out in cul-de-sacs from the 1960s–1980s.
  • Higher car dependency and longer commutes.

CCEA tip

For "describe the land use of zone X" you must reference the named case study (Belfast is the safe default for CCEA). One named feature + one process scores B2.

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Practice questions

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  1. Question 14 marks

    Identify and describe an urban zone

    CCEA Unit 2 — short-answer

    (a) Define the term Central Business District (CBD). (2 marks)
    (b) State TWO features you would expect to find in the CBD of a city in a developed country (HIC). (2 marks)

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  2. Question 26 marks

    Counter-urbanisation in Northern Ireland

    CCEA Unit 2 — application

    Using a named example from a developed country, explain THREE reasons why people might move out of a city centre into the surrounding commuter villages. [6 marks]

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  3. Question 34 marks

    Land-use change in the inner city

    CCEA Unit 2 — interpretation

    The Titanic Quarter in Belfast was redeveloped from a derelict shipyard into a mixed-use area with offices, apartments, a museum and a university campus.

    (a) State ONE economic benefit of this redevelopment. (1 mark)
    (b) State ONE social benefit of this redevelopment. (1 mark)
    (c) Suggest ONE possible disadvantage of inner-city regeneration projects like this. (2 marks)

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Flashcards

U2.CS.1 — Urbanisation in the developed world: causes, urban morphology, central business district, suburbs

7-card SR deck for CCEA GCSE Geography — Leaves Batch 1 topic U2.CS.1

7 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)