Urbansprawal
Urbansprawal
Urbansprawal
URBAN SPRAWL.
INTRODUCTION: -
The history of urbanization is yet unwritten, only a small part of the preliminary work has been
done. The history of urbanization dates back from the ancient times of the origin of cities (during
what is referred as the first phase of urbanization in the world). In this long span, what was
witnessed was the evolution of cities from ancestral form (the village) to small port /rail based
towns and to the present day cities with skyscrapers adorning landscapes. By the end of the 20th
century, urban growth was rapidly pushing cities further and further out and the cities were
expanding spatially while in the 21st century the automobile revolution changed the dominant
form of city living. This stretched form of the city with low density at the periphery is sometimes
called sprawl. Since sprawl is one name for many situations, there has been no clear consensus
regarding what exactly ’urban sprawl’ is or how it is caused. Although many scholars tried to
come up with explanations of the term, the central component of most definitions and most
people’s understanding of sprawl is this: Sprawl is the spreading out of a city and its suburbs
over more and more rural land at the periphery of an urban area. This involves the conversion of
open space (rural land) into built-up, developed land over time.1
DEFINITION AND CONCEPT: -
Urban growth is a critical cause of Sprawl - as cities get bigger, they expand around their
Peripheries. But sprawl is more specific in nature, it is defined as ‘uncoordinated growth’: the
expansion of a community without a real concern for consequences of poor environmental
conditions or environmental impact.
On the other hand, The Oxford English Dictionary (2001) defines the word as "the straggling
expansion of an indeterminate urban or industrial environment into an adjoining countryside; the
area of this advancement." Here, sprawl as an adjective has been used to describe the pattern of a
city’s growth, as a verb- describing the process of that growth, and as a noun describing an urban
landform.
In a paper titled ‘Wrestling Sprawl to the Ground (2001)’ six general categories are put forward
of defining sprawl from an analysis in social science and planning perspective.5
Those most frequently mentioned are low-density, leapfrogging, distance to central facilities,
dispersion of employment and residential development, and continuous strip development. This
definition characterizes land use conditions, and it is conceivable that continuous, development
(ribbon development along corridors), and leapfrog development are two different kinds of
sprawl (Harvey and Clark 1965). Other development patterns frequently characterized as sprawl
in different literatures include large lot single-family residential, radial discontinuity, single land
use or physical separation of land uses and widespread commercial development.
Generally, sprawl is widely known as ugly development with tendency to discontinuity and
haphazard layout.
Thus generally speaking, as a noun, sprawl implies a condition characterizing an urban area or
part of it at a particular time. Based on descriptions of conditions characterizing sprawl in
literature and amplified by observation and experience, the following conceptual definition is
suggested (Galster, Hanson, R.Ratcliffe, Wolman, Coleman and Freihage, 2001)-
Sprawl is a pattern of land use in an urbanized area that exhibits low levels of some combination
of eight distinct dimensions: density, continuity, concentration, compactness, centrality,
nuclearity, diversity and proximity.
Urban sprawl can be caused by a variety of different things. These causes will mainly
include:
Improved
Infrastructure Rise in
Standard of Living
Consumer
Preferences Rise in
Population Growth
LOWER LAND RATES: Lower cost land and houses in the outer suburbs of the
cities, because the centers of urban development have really made people want to
stop settling in these areas and want to venture further out.
IMPROVED INFRASTRUCTURE: There is increased spending on certain types of
infrastructures, including roads and electricity. This is something that hasn’t always
been available, and there are still some areas that don’t have these luxuries. That
doesn’t mean that they aren’t working on it.
LACK OF URBAN PLANNING: People love to find areas that are less trafficked and
more calm, which leads them to sprawl out to other sections of the town.
Unprecedented development, cutting of trees, loss of green cover, long traffic jams,
poor infrastructure force people to move out to new areas.
LOWER HOUSE TAX RATES: Cities will usually have high property taxes, and you
can usually avoid these taxes by living in the outer suburbs because the taxes are
usually lower than they would be in other situations.
RISE IN POPULATION GROWTH: Another factor that contributes towards urban sprawl
is rise in population growth. As number of people in a city grows beyond capacity, the
local communities continue to spread farther and farther from city centers.
The causes and catalysts of urban growth and sprawl, discussed by several researchers,
can be summarised as follows- (for a general discussion one may refer Burchfield et al.
2006; Squires 2002; Harvey and Clark 1965). Bhatta (2010) has delineated twenty-five
different causes for the growth of urban sprawl.
EFFECTS, IMPACTS AND CONSEQUENCES OF URBAN SPRAWL:
The places of sprawl and the region that is impacted by it are distinct from each other. When
sprawl takes place at the periphery of a certain city it could have its direct or indirect impact on
other parts of the city within its administrative border or on a neighbouring city. Generally, two
conflicting views are taken about the consequences or effects of sprawl. On one hand some
authors argue that it is harmful and strong measures should be taken to fight it, others support
and even encourage it. Urban sprawl may have both positive and negative consequences and
impacts; but, negative impacts are often more highlighted as this is an uncontrolled or
uncoordinated growth and eventually the negative impacts obliterates the positive sides. There
are some positive impacts of urban sprawl, like increase in economic production, increase in
opportunities for employment, better opportunities and better services creating better living
conditions, better lifestyles. Urban sprawl can extend better basic services, infrastructure as well
as social capital such as transportation, sewer, and water, better educational facilities, health care
facilities to a larger population. However, since it is an uncontrolled and uncoordinated growth
resulting in sprawl, the positive impacts are covered up inviting focus only on the negatives.
During the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, in developed countries, urbanization was
created from and it also lead to industrialization. Surplus population from the villages were
motivated to make a mass movement towards cities because of new job opportunities created
there. For the cities too, these migrants provided cheap labour for the newly established factories.
Due to present globalized scenario and opening up of economies, the circumstances are similar in
developing countries. The huge concentration of investments in cities attracts large number of
migrants from villages who are looking for employment. This creates a large surplus labour
force, and because of which the wages remain low. Developed and developing countries of the
world differ not only in the number of people living in cities, but also in the way in which
urbanisation is occurring. In many megacities of developing world, urban sprawl is a common
problem and a substantial amount of city dwellers live in slums within the city or in urban
periphery in poverty and degraded environment. These high-density settlements are often highly
polluted owing to the lack of urban services, including running water, sewer, trash pickup,
electricity or paved roads. Nevertheless, cities provide poor people with more opportunities and
greater access to resources to transform their situation than rural areas.
Evidence of the environmental impacts of sprawl continues to mount. Kirtland et al. (1994)
report that the impact of urban land on environmental quality is much larger than its spatial
extent would imply. The consequences and significance of sprawl, good or ill, are evaluated
based on its socioeconomic and environmental impacts. Often these are overlapping or one may
have several indirect impacts. Major consequences of urban sprawl can be summarised as
follows:
Some organizations and planners see sprawl as a sign of economic vitality and not as ecological
threat. They claim that for countries like America with large land area, there are too vast
farmlands and open spaces to worry about how much land is converted. They also stress the
primary advantage of sprawl, which is decentralization of employment to different parts of a city.
They argue that car culture enables people to commute shorter distances at any time and own
bigger homes. In addition, it is not healthy for people to live in areas with increased densities and
smaller meter square of space per individual ratios since this creates psychological and health
problems. Therefore, their recommendation is for people to live in bigger plots with their own
green spaces away from city centres and work areas.
ECOLOGICAL IMPACTS: -
– LAND CONSUMPTION: The amount of open space used by each inhabitant has increased in
the last 20 years by two or three times.
– ENERGY CONSUMPTION: The level of gas consumption can be used as a parameter of the
level of car use. The United Nations and the European Union have moved in favour of the
compact city embracing the position, supported by research (that denser cities consume the least
amount of energy for transport.
-ATMOSPHERIC POLLUTION: The level of pollution due to motorcar dependency can more
easily be connected to population densities.
CONCLUSIONS: -
A new development be it planned or unplanned could arise on vacant land or on land that was
previously used for some other purpose. In most instances though, whenever the need arises, it is
the outskirts of the city that provides for "unlimited" vacant land since inner cities are usually
intact. Different situations are observed to cause sprawl. In almost all cases, rise in population
plays a major role as a main cause. Urban sprawl has been recognized as a problematic aspect of
metropolitan growth and development in the world over. The growing concern about the issue is
shared among planners, policy makers, environmentalists and people in general.