Central Place Theory
Central Place Theory
Central Place Theory
Central Place
-is a settlement that provides goods &
services. It can be small (a village) or
large (primate city)
all settlements form a link in a
hierarchy
London 7m
Peterborough
156,000
Norwich 122,000
Cambridge
108,000
Settlement hierarchy
Why are there very few large settlements?
Large settlements need a very large population
(threshold) to support all of their functions
(services)
Large settlements provide very high order
functions (Great Ormond St, Houses of
Parliament). Because these functions are so
highly specialised there is not enough
demand to support more than a few of them
Sphere of influence
Is the area around each settlement that
comes under its economic, social &
political control.
Cambridge
Luton
Reading
London 7m
Sphere of influence
The extent of the sphere of influence will
depend upon the spacing size & functions
of the surrounding central places
Cambridge
Luton
Reading
London
Norwich
Reading
Cambridge
London
(k
e
ng
a
R
m)
Th
res
ho
ld
Number of functions
Settlement sizes
change over time (via
births, deaths,
migration)
1998
1940
Settlement functions
(services) change
over time
Over the past 50yrs in
the UK= decrease in
the no of services
available in small
settlements and an
increase in the no of
services provided by
larger settlements
Christaller stated that the best shape for a sphere of influence is a hexagon.
This shape means that consumers still have accessibility to the highest
order central place and its trading area from all parts of the hexagon.
Christaller's key idea was that customers would go to the nearest higher
order central place to buy goods and services
High order central places act like a magnet for consumers.
He called this phenomenon K=3 (or the marketing principle)
In order to make his theory work Christaller had to make a few assumptions
He assumed that each trading area had an isotropic surface (that the
whole area was the same all over) i.e.
the whole area was flat
there was only 1 form of transport (and transport costs were
proportional to distance)
the population was distributed evenly across the plain
Source: http://www.uwec.edu/bfoust/155/G155_RS3/sld002.htm
Like London
Z
Why is K=3 called K=3?
Hint look at the numbers of consumers
who visit the highest order settlement
Settlement X
-Half of them go to
settlement A and
the other half go to
a medium order
settlement (black
dot)
Why is K=4 called the Traffic
Principle (model)
A high order
central place is
shown.
-All the low order
settlements lie
within the
hexagonal trade
area (U,V,W,X,Y)