Urban land
城市土地利用与交通模型
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- Very slow change: networks, land use. Urban transport, communications and utility networks are the most permanent elements of the physical structure of cities. Large infrastructure projects require a decade or more, and once in place, are rarely abandoned. The land use distribution is equally stable; it changes only incrementally. - Slow changes: workplaces, housing. Buildings have a life-span of up to one hundred years and take several years from planning to completion. Workplaces (non-residential buildings) such as factories, warehouses, shopping centers or offices, theatres or universities exist much longer than the firms or institutions that occupy them, just as housing exists longer than the households that live in it. - Fast change: employment, population. Firms are established or closed down, expanded or relocated; this creates new jobs or makes workers redundant and so affects employment. Households are created, grow or decline and eventually are dissolved, and in each stage in their life cycle adjust their location and motorisation to their changing needs; this determines the distribution of population and car ownership. - Immediate change: goods transport, travel. The location of human activities in space gives rise to a demand for spatial interaction in the form of goods transport and travel. These interactions are the most flexible phenomena of spatial urban development; they can adjust in minutes or hours to changes in congestion or fluctuations in demand, though in reality adjustment may be retarded by habits, obligations or subscriptions.
规划建设用地标准术语
规划建设用地标准术语(1)城乡用地town and country land : 指市(县)域范围内所有土地,包括建设用地与非建设用地。
建设用地包括城乡居民点建设用地、区域交通设施用地、区域公用设施用地、特殊用地、采矿用地等,非建设用地包括水域、农林用地以及其他非建设用地等。
(2)城市建设用地urban development land : 指城市和县人民政府所在地镇内的居住用地、公共管理与公共服务用地、商业服务业设施用地、工业用地、物流仓储用地、交通设施用地、公用设施用地、绿地。
城市建设用地内各类用地的单位为hm2。
(3)人口规模population : 人口规模分为现状人口规模与规划人口规模,人口规模应按常住人口进行统计。
常住人口指户籍人口数量与半年以上的暂住人口数量之和,计量单位应为万人,应精确至小数点后两位。
(4)人均城市建设用地urban development land per capita : 指城市和县人民政府所在地镇内的城市建设用地面积除以中心城区(镇区)内的常住人口数量,单位为m2/人。
(5)人均单项城市建设用地single-category urban development land per capita: 指城市和县人民政府所在地镇内的居住用地、公共管理与公共服务用地、交通设施用地以及绿地等单项城市建设用地面积除以中心城区(镇区)内的常住人口数量,单位为m2/人。
(6)人均居住用地residential land per capita : 指城市和县人民政府所在地镇内的居住用地面积除以中心城区(镇区)内的常住人口数量,单位为m2/人。
(7)人均公共管理与公共服务用地administration and public services land per capita : 指城市和县人民政府所在地镇内的公共管理与公共服务用地面积除以中心城区(镇区)内的常住人口数量,单位为m2/人。
威尼斯 城市规划
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圣马可广场总体环境布局分析
URBAN IMAGES
San Marco‘s Cathedral/圣马可大教堂
1 URBAN LANDMARK / 城市地标
雄伟壮丽的圣马可大教堂始建于 829年,重建于公元1043~1071 年,它曾是中世纪欧洲最大的教堂, 是威尼斯建筑艺术的经典之作。圣 马可大教堂融合了东、西方的建筑 特色,它原为一座拜占庭式建筑, 15世纪加入了哥特式的装饰,如 尖拱门等;17世纪又加入了文艺 复兴时期的装饰,如栏杆等。从外 观上,它的五座圆顶据说是来自土 耳其伊斯坦堡的圣索菲亚教堂;正 面的华丽装饰是源自拜占庭的风格; 而整座教堂的结构又呈现出希腊式 的十字形设计,这些建筑上的特色 让人惊叹不已。圣马可教堂最引人 注目的一是内部墙壁上用石子和碎 瓷镶嵌的壁画;一是大门顶上正中 部分,雕有四匹金色的奔驰着的骏 马。大教堂是东方拜占庭艺术、古 罗马艺术、中世纪哥德式艺术和文 艺复兴艺术多种艺术式样的结合体, 结合得和谐,结合得协调,美不胜 收,无与伦比。
URBAN IMAGES
2 THE SCENES/ 城市印象
威尼斯是建筑在水上的城市,寸土寸金,
不可能想北京那样有宽阔的大街小巷。 这里的小巷才真叫一个小,两人并排走 基本很困难,对面来人最好停步,免得 撞个满怀。
水路纵横自由,感觉并不是模式化的规划 使然,而是自发形成。水路一直修到各家 各户,门口即是船。
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Case study of Venice / An introduction of Urban Design
RELATED
水上建城
2 WAY OF CONSTRUCTION/建筑方法
木桩一个挨一个,这就是地基,打牢了,铺上木板,然后就 盖房子,那儿的房子无一不是这么建造的。所以有人说,威 尼斯城上面是石头,下面是森林。当年为建造威尼斯,意大 利北部的森林全被砍完了。这样的房子,也不用担心水下的 木头烂了,它不会烂的,而且会越变越硬,愈久弥坚。此前 考古者挖掘马可· 波罗的故居,挖出的木头坚硬如铁,出水 后见了氧才朽。
土地使用简介(5-6)
长沙的多中心规划图
不同交通方式按0.5小时计算的通勤半径:
自行车 5km
步行 2.5km
公交:10km 地铁:15km 小汽车:20km
本章知识要点:
1. 深入理解交通系统和土地利用的相互关系。 2. 理解区位理论。 3. 了解土地使用的分类方法。 4. 理解汉森模型的建模方法,掌握相关计算。
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5. 理解劳瑞模型的建模方法。
交通和区位理论 (zone theory):
普鲁士经济学者。他的学说被认为是经济地理学和 农业地理学的开创者。他被费尔南· 布劳岱尔称为除 了马克思之外十九世纪的最伟大的经济学者。他在 1826年出版的著作《孤立国》(The Isolated State)中, 分析了一系列影响农业土地利用的因素。
土地利用模型 (land use model):描述地区内部经济活动的 选址行为及其作用结果的土地利用空间分布的数学模型。 a.预测模型 (prediction model):在一定的制约条件下,对各 种经济主体的选址行动结果的土地利用形态的跟踪模型。 b.优化模型 (optimization model):在一定的制约条件下,社 会效益目标最大化所对应的土地利用状况。
汉森(Walter G. Hansen)模型
城市用地 urban land
城市用地urban land按城市中土地使用的主要性质划分的居住用地、公共设施用地、工业用地、仓储用地、对外交通用地、道路广场用地、市政公用设施用地、绿地、特殊用地、水域和其它用地的统称。
居住用地residential land在城市中包括住宅及相当于居住小区及小区级以下的公共服务设施、道路和绿地等设施的建设用地。
公共设施用地public facilities城市中为社会服务的行政、经济、文化、教育、卫生、体育、科研及设计等机构或设施的建设用地。
工业用地industrial land城市中工矿企业的生产车间、库房、堆场、构筑物及其附属设施(包括其专用的铁路、码头和道路等)的建设用地。
仓储用地warehouse land城市中仓储企业的库房、堆场和包装加工车间及其附属设施的建设用地。
对外交通用地intercity transportation land城市对外联系的铁路、公路、管道运输设施、港口、机场及其附属设施的建设用地。
道路广场用地roads and squares城市中道路、广场和公共停车场等设施的建设用地。
市政公用设施用地municipal utilities城市中为生活及生产服务的各项基础设施的建设用地,包括:供应设施、交通设施、邮电设施、环境卫生设施、施工与维修设施、殡葬设施及其它市政公用设施的建设用地。
绿地green space城市中专门用以改善生态、保护环境、为居民提供游憩场地和美化景观的绿化用地。
特殊用地specially-designated land一般指军事用地、外事用地及保安用地等特殊性质的用地。
水域和其它用地waters and miscellaneous城市范围内包括耕地、园地、林地、牧草地、村镇建设用地、露天矿用地和弃置地,以及江、河、湖、海、水库、苇地、滩涂和渠道等常年有水或季节性有水的全部水域。
保留地reserved land城市中留待未来开发建设的或禁止开发的规划控制用地。
城市规划基本术语标准GBT50280-98
都市全然术语标准(GB/T50280—98)一、总那么1、为了科学地统一和标准都市术语,制定本标准.2、本标准适用于都市的设计、治理、教学、科研及其他相关领域。
1、居民点settlement人类按照生产和生活需要而形成的集聚定居地点。
按性质和人口规模,居民点分为都市和乡村两大类。
2、都市〔城镇〕city以非农不业和非农业人口聚拢为要紧特征的居民点。
包括按国家行政建制设立的市和镇。
3、市municipality;city经国家批准设市建制的行政地域。
4、镇town.经国家批准设市建制的行政地域。
5、市域administrativeregionofacity都市行政管辖的全部地域。
6、都市化urbanization人类生产和生活方式由乡村型向都市型转化的历史过程,表现为乡村人口向都市人口转化以及都市不断开展和完善的过程。
又称城镇化、都市化。
7、都市化水平urbanizationlevel衡量都市化开展程度的数量指标,一般用一定地域内都市人口占总人口的比例来表示。
8、都市群agglomeration一定地域内都市分布较为密集的地区。
9、城镇体系urbansystem一定区域内在经济、社会和空间开展上具有有机联系的都市群体。
10、卫星城〔卫星城镇〕satellitetown在大都市市区外围兴建的、与市区既有一定距离又相互间紧密联系的都市。
三、都市概述1、镇体系 urbansystemplanning一定地域范围内,以区域生产力合理布局和城镇职能分工为依据,确定不同人口规模等级和职能分工的城镇的分布和开展。
2、都市 urbanplanning对一定时期内都市的经济和社会开展、土地利用、空间布局以及各项建设的综合部署、具体安排和实施治理。
3、都市设计urbandesign对都市体型和空间环境所作的整体构思和安排,贯穿于都市的全过程。
4、都市总体纲要masterplanningoutline确定都市总体和重大原那么的纲领性文件,是编制都市总体的依据。
urban的名词形式
urban的名词形式
Urban一词作为形容词表示“城市的、都市的”,而它的名词形式是Urbanization,表示“城市化”。
Urbanization是一个涵盖面广的概念,包括城市人口、城市规模、城市化程度、城市结构等多个方面。
在现代社会,城市化已成为一种全球性趋势,很多国家都面临着快速城市化的挑战和机遇。
Urbanization对经济、社会、文化等各个领域都产生了深刻影响。
在经济上,城市化促进了产业转型和创新,提高了生产效率和竞争力;在社会上,城市化带来了更多的就业机会和提高了生活质量;在文化上,城市化推动了多元文化的交流和融合。
然而,城市化也带来了一系列的问题,如城市贫困、社会分化、环境污染、公共安全等。
因此,在推进城市化的同时,各国政府和社会各界也需要积极应对城市化带来的挑战,推动城市化朝着可持续、公正、包容的方向发展。
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城乡用地评定标准
城乡用地评定标准(CJJ132-2009)Standard for Urban Landuse Evaluation1 总则1.0.1 为保障城乡人居环境的安全,合理选择城乡用地,提高城乡总体规划编制中的城乡用地评定水平,制订本标准。
1.0.2 本标准适用于建制市、建制镇、乡(集镇)、村庄的总体规划编制工作。
1.0.3 城乡用地评定的主要内容包括:对可能(拟)作为城乡发展的用地,根据其自然环境条件,提出城乡用地评定的适用性分析及分类定级的技术成果。
1.0.4 城乡用地评定必须符合中国国情,因地制宜,结合城乡用地的自然环境条件及人为影响因素,重点分析与评定影响突出的主导环境要素和关联性强的环境要素,从三维空间即地下、地表及一定空域,综合评定城乡用地的建设适宜性,并应遵守下列基本原则:1 现场踏勘与调查资料分析相结合,定性分析与定量计算相结合的原则。
2 优化城乡生态环境, 可持续发展的原则。
规避自然灾害,保障城乡用地的安全性,评定城乡用地的适宜性, 提高城乡人居环境质量。
3 适当考虑人为影响因素的原则。
接受人类社会活动在城乡用地上已形成的特殊情况、现象及国家政策规定等人为因素的影响。
1.0.5 城乡用地评定,除执行本标准外,尚应符合国家现行强制性标准的规定。
2 术语2.0.1 城乡用地评定urban and country landuse evaluation根据城乡发展的要求,对可能作为城乡发展用地的自然环境条件及其工程技术上的可能性与经济性,进行综合质量评定,以确定用地的建设适宜程度,为合理选择城乡发展用地提供依据。
2.0.2 不可建设用地unbuildable landuse场地工程建设适宜性很差,完全或基本不能适应城乡建设要求,或具有很强的生态和人为因素影响限制的用地。
2.0.3 不宜建设用地unsuitable landuse场地工程建设适宜性差,必须采取特定的工程措施后才能适应城乡建设要求,或具有较强的生态和人为因素影响限制的用地。
the urban landscape听力
the urban landscape听力【释义】the urban landscape城市景观【短语】1demonstrated in the urban landscape表现在城市景观;展示城市景观的2The urban landscape planning城市夜景规划3the urban landscape renewal城市景观恢复4in the urban landscape城市之间5the urban landscape design城市景观设计6Greening The Urban Landscape城市景观绿化7Trees in the Urban Landscape书名8reorganization of the urban landscape景观组成方案9The Modern Urban Landscape现代都市地景10the urban zonal landscape城市带状景观【例句】1The urban landscape of common foliage plants.是城市园林绿化中常见的观叶植物。
2The spacious deck terrace offers nice views of the urban landscape.开阔的甲板露台为住户提供绝佳的城市景观。
3But the urban landscape also functions as an economic differentiator.城市景观也会在经济方面起作用。
4The most attractive feature of the urban landscape is brilliant summation.城市景观特色是对城市魅力最精彩的概括。
5The urban sculpture is one of the critical ingredients of the urban landscape.城市雕塑是城市景观的重要组成部分。
农村和城市土地开发和土地所有权制度:一个比较南非和博茨瓦纳(外文)
RURAL AND URBAN LAND DEVELOPMENT AND LAND TENURE SYSTEMS: A COMPARISON BETWEEN SOUTH AFRICA AND BOTSWANASusan BouillonLegal Advisor: City Council of PretoriaINTRODUCTIONFranklin D. Roosevelt once said that ‘Every person who invests in land near a growing city, adopts the surest and safest method of becoming independent, for land is the basis of wealth.’The purpose of this paper is to discuss the rural and urban land development and land tenure systems of South Africa and Botswana, and to explain their contributions to urban sustainability.DEVELOPMENT PLANNING IN BOTSWANABotswana is located at the centre of the South African plateau, and is bordered by South Africa on the south and southeast, Zimbabwe on the northeast and Namibia on the west and northwest. Approximately 23% of the population is in urban areas and 77% in rural areas. Botswana has a rich tribal culture, and therefore it is not surprising that the Botswana legal system consists of local tribal courts, which adjudicate traditional matters and Tribal Land Boards, which rule on land use matters in tribal lands and traditional villages. Town Councils rule on land use matters in urban areas.The government of Botswana has adopted a system of development planning which has coped relatively well compared with other African countries. Development planning involves the preparation of land use plans for both urban and rural areas. The practice in Botswana is that the public is made aware of the implications of land useplans before land is zoned for various uses. Public awareness and participation is ensured by giving land users an opportunity to select preferred land use options from a range of options determined through the evaluation of physical and economic suitability of land resources (bottom-up approach).PROPERTY RIGHTS AND LAND TENURE IN BOTSWANA It is the policy of the Government that all citizens should have easy and equal access to land. In order to realize this, three land tenure systems have been put in place. Tribal land covers 71% of the total land area of the country. It is allocated to citizens free of charge for all types of uses. State land is owned by the state and comprises 23% of the total area. Most of this land is used as National Parks, or Forest and Game Reserves within which no settlements are permitted. However, a small percentage of this land is allocated for residential purposes, particularly in urban centers. Freehold land comprises only 6% of the total area and is privately owned. Most of the government policies to date are therefore directed at tribal land.RURAL LANDPrior to independence, Botswana had established traditional ways of allocating and managing tribal land and its resources through chiefs and communities. Soon after independence, the authority to allocate tribal land was shifted from the chiefs to the Tribal Land Boards which were established by the Tribal Land Act,but the management of the resources remains the responsibility of the users and their communities. According to this act, almost 71% of the available land is administered as tribal land according to an integrated system of customary land tenure. Although the tenurial rules for tribal land have been changed considerably by this act, it is considered a very innovative way to combine individual land tenure security withtribal land-use.The Land Boards were established for a specified tribal territory, and took over the administrative functions from chiefs and other tribal authorities. Title of the land vested in the Land Boards. The Land Boards were initially entitled to make customary and common law grants, for residential, grazing or cultivation purposes, to members of the different tribes living in the specified territories only, but since 1993 any citizen of Botswana is entitled to apply for these rights. Land Boards maintain their own record or registration system and rights are not registered in the central deeds registration system of Botswana, apparently to keep them more affordable. The Land Boards are entitled to issue certificates of customary grants or certificates of occupation. Provision has been made for the conversion of these certificates into titles registrable in the deeds registry once demand arises to deal with these certificates in the commercial lending market. Any change in right-holder must be reported to the land board in order to maintain the accuracy of the record system of the land board. Shelter provision in rural areas has been on individuals initiatives. The most important prerequisite for housing development, which is access to land, has not really been a disturbing issue due to the fact that all male and female citizens are allocated tribal land for free, but in an effort to facilitate shelter provision in rural areas, the government intends to introduce a rural housing program.Land use planning is not a new phenomenon in Botswana. Past experiences and records indicate that the traditional chiefs who had authority on land have always done some form of land use planning. Formal land use planning in Botswana started with the implementation of the Tribal Grazing Land Policy in 1975, when some areas were zoned for wildlife use, others became reserved areas, while other areascontinued to be for communal use. This policy enabled individuals or groups to have exclusive use of land in areas zoned for such use. These rights are permanent, exclusionary and inheritable. They may only be revoked by the land board in circumstances where the right-holder fails to utilize the land on terms specified by the land board, or fails to develop the land according to the specified purposes within five years or where the land was not distributed fairly. In these instances, the land does not revert to the government but is reallocated by the land board to other applicants. This policy was therefore a major program through which rural development was to be achieved.The districts up to now continue to prepare and update their respective integrated land use plans. In the preparation of such plans the communities have major inputs with regard to the various land uses. This is in realization of the fact that to have an implementable and sustainable land use plan, the communities should be the ones who decide the uses on a particular type of land. It should be noted, however, that not all districts have such plans.URBAN LANDAn urban centre in Botswana is defined as All settlements on state land and settlements on tribal land with a population of 5000 or more persons with at least 75% of the labor force in non-agricultural occupations. Generally, an urban centre should be seen to provide its population with infra-structural and environmental services similar to that which exists in a modern city. Rural-urban migration has played an important role in the growth of urban areas. Several urban development policies have been evolved over the years to guide the growth and development of the urban areas. Due to the fact that a large part of the people of Botswana are living in rural areas,most of the development is aimed at the rural areas, but a few programs were introduced in order to better the circumstances of those living in urban areas. The Self Help Housing Program was introduced to assist the low income urban households to develop their own houses. Under this scheme, the Government provides basic services such as roads, water stand pipes, and a pit-latrine to each plot. Plot holders were given tenure security through a Certificate of Rights. This program has also been used in upgrading the squatter settlements which existed prior to its inception.Shortage of serviced land has been identified as one of the major constraints to urban housing development. Therefore a major land servicing program, the Accelerated Land Servicing Program, was introduced. The objective of the program was to service land for all uses, such as residential, commercial and industrial, in all urban areas. A Housing Department has been established, which is charged with the responsibility of promoting housing development and improvement through policy initiatives that create an enabling environment for shelter provision.The Town and Country Planning Act, which is the main legislation guiding physical planning in Botswana, makes provisions for an orderly and progressive development and control of land in both urban and rural areas. The Urban Development Standards and the Development Control Code also facilitate the orderly planning of settlements. Sustainable urban development depends on the availability of clean water supply and provision of infrastructure for sanitation and waste management. An integrated approach in the provision of environmentally sound infrastructures in human settlements is seen as an investment that fosters sustainable development and that can improve the quality of life, increase productivity, improve health, and reduce poverty.Although the concept of sustainable development gained prominence on the international scene only a few years back, it has been one of the objectives of development planning in Botswana since independence in 1966. The term has appeared as an objective in all the subsequent development plans, but its meaning has been expanded to reflect the changing development realities over the years.LAND DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH AFRICAThe shape and form of the cities in South Africa are the result of conscious apartheid planning in the past. When South Africa’s first democratically elected government came into power in 1994, it inherited the fragmented, unequal and incoherent planning systems which developed under apartheid. During apartheid, land deve lopment planning in the then four provinces, ten homelands and the ‘group area’ racial zones, fell under many different laws, ordinances, procedures and regulations. There was a lack of coordination, an unequal distribution of resources and a lot of ‘red t ape’ which slowed down development projects.A National Development and Planning Commission were appointed to advise the Minister of Land Affairs and the Minister of Housing on planning and development. Among other things, the Commission was requested to prepare a Green Paper on planning which would review and recommend changes to the apartheid legislation and process of land development in South Africa. The Commission decided to focus on the spatial planning system for urban and rural development. A land development policy, the Reconstruction and Development Program (RDP), a comprehensive and sectorally-based socio-economic policy framework that established the developmental foundations for the removal of apartheid and the building of a democratic, non-racial and non-sexist future, was adopted. This policy is based upon integrated developmentplanning, a process which aims to maximize the impact of scarce resources and limited capacity. The prime purpose of this policy was to establish procedures to facilitate the release of appropriate public land for affordable housing, public services and productive as well as recreational purposes. In settlements which have been established in remote locations, without formal planning, land development involves upgrading services and infrastructure in situ.Planning in South Africa in the past and at present is done according to the Town Planning Ordinances of the various provinces. Although mechanisms for forward planning have long existed, the town planning scheme, which was established in terms of the Ordinances, is at the heart of the town planning system. While this system was strictly enforced in most white, Indian and colored areas, only simplified versions were later introduced to urban townships, further complicating the land administration system. As a result hereof South African settlements in both urban and rural areas were generally inefficient, fragmented and inconvenient. In large part, this is the result of the interplay between historical spatial planning policies and practices and the implementation of the ideology of apartheid. Despite this, there are few signs that significant and wide reaching improvements have been set in place since 1994. The Constitution of South Africa has a bearing on the planning system in those new constitutional requirements such as cooperative governance, procedural and participatory rights to ensure accountability for decision-making, the promotion of social and economic rights and the protection of the environment create imperatives that profoundly affect planning. In the planning sphere, legislation has shifted, with the passing of the Development Facilitation Act, which was the first national planning legislation promulgated after the first democratic elections in 1994, from beingcontrol-orientated towards being normatively-based. It was passed to begin the process of transforming planning to meet the needs of the new democracy.The Development Facilitation Act introduces the concept of land development objectives. These are plans approved by political decision-makers that set their objectives and targets for development of an area. The land development objectives’ intentions are to create a clear spatial framework for the area and to create a proactive rather than a reactive planning system. In terms of the Local Government Transition Second Amendment Act municipal authorities are required to create integrated development plans. An integrated development plan is a plan aimed at the integrated development and management of the area of jurisdiction of the municipality concerned, and which has been compiled having regard to the general principles contained in the Development Facilitation Act. A common intention of both integrated development plans and land development objectives is to tie public agency plans to budgets. In drawing up both land development objectives and integrated development plans, local authorities are required to try to achieve the intentions of the Development Facilitation Act principles. A land development application may not be approved if such application is inconsistent with any land development objective or integrated development plan, although land owners and developers may make proposals to change land use if they can motivate that the change would be consistent with both integrated development plans and land development objectives and the Development Facilitation Act principles. The onus of responsibility to demonstrate this is on the developer.PROPERTY RIGHTS AND LAND TENURE IN SOUTH AFRICALand tenure in post-apartheid South Africa is a contentious issue and has longbeen a source of conflict. As is the case in many transitional political situations, there are also differences of opinion regarding the role and definition of ownership and other rights in property. The Constitution of South Africa provides in section 25(1) for the acknowledgement of different rights in property. It is clear that not only ownership, but also other rights in immovable property are recognized and protected. In terms of section 25(6) the state has the obligation to secure by means of legislation, other forms of land tenure which are insecure as a result of the apartheid legislation and policies.In order to rectify the injustices of the past, the Department of Land Affairs started with a program of land reform by means of restitution, redistribution and tenure reform. This program resulted in the following acts being promulgated: the Restitution of Land Rights Act(regarding the restitution of land to persons dispossessed of land after 1913 as a result of racially discriminatory legislation), the Development Facilitation Act (regarding quicker and cheaper planning and development methods), the Land Reform (Labor Tenants) Act (regarding the security of housing, grazing and cultivating rights of labor tenants), the Communal Property Associations Act (regarding the creation of associations to own, control and deal with communal/common property), the Interim Protection of Informal Land Rights Act (regarding the interim protection of the rights of people in rural areas), the Extension of Security of Tenure Act (regarding the protection of laborers other than labor tenants in rural areas) and the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act(regarding the measures to protect vulnerable occupiers and evict squatters).The vision and strategy for South Africa's land policy, a policy that is just, buildsreconciliation and stability and contributes to economic growth, is set out in the White Paper on South African Land Policy. The government's land reform programme is made up of land restitution(which involves returning land lost since 1913 because of racially discriminatory laws, or compensating victims for loss of land due to racially discriminatory laws), land redistribution (makes it possible for poor and disadvantaged people to buy land with the help of a Settlement/Land Acquisition Grant) and land tenure reform (it aims to bring all people occupying land under a unitary, legally validated system of landholding.) This programme will devise secure forms of land tenure, help resolve tenure disputes and provide alternatives for people who are displaced in the process. In the long run, as part of the land tenure reform programme, government is committed to the transfer of the land, which is in the nominal ownership of the state, to its real owners. The White Paper emphasizes the importance of local participation in decision-making, gender equity, economic viability, and environmental sustainability in the implementation of the land reform programmers. This White Paper is not only focusing on the urban areas but also on the rural areas.The deeds registration system in South Africa differs from the Botswana system. It has only one deeds registration system, and this system does not provide for the registration of all the different land tenure rights that are statutorily recognized. A large part of the population, notably people in informal settlements and in rural areas where a system of communal property still prevails, is excluded from the deeds registration system. In the White Paper on South African Land Policy a part of the land policy has been set aside for development of the registration system to make the registration of informal land rights in urban and rural areas possible.。
城乡用地评定标准
城乡用地评定标准(CJJ132-2009)Standard for Urban Landuse Evaluation1 总则为保障城乡人居环境的安全,合理选择城乡用地,提高城乡总体规划编制中的城乡用地评定水平,制订本标准。
本标准适用于建制市、建制镇、乡(集镇)、村庄的总体规划编制工作。
城乡用地评定的主要内容包括:对可能(拟)作为城乡发展的用地,根据其自然环境条件,提出城乡用地评定的适用性分析及分类定级的技术成果。
城乡用地评定必须符合中国国情,因地制宜,结合城乡用地的自然环境条件及人为影响因素,重点分析与评定影响突出的主导环境要素和关联性强的环境要素,从三维空间即地下、地表及一定空域,综合评定城乡用地的建设适宜性,并应遵守下列基本原则:1 现场踏勘与调查资料分析相结合,定性分析与定量计算相结合的原则。
2 优化城乡生态环境, 可持续发展的原则。
规避自然灾害,保障城乡用地的安全性,评定城乡用地的适宜性, 提高城乡人居环境质量。
3 适当考虑人为影响因素的原则。
接受人类社会活动在城乡用地上已形成的特殊情况、现象及国家政策规定等人为因素的影响。
城乡用地评定,除执行本标准外,尚应符合国家现行强制性标准的规定。
2 术语城乡用地评定 urban and country landuse evaluation根据城乡发展的要求,对可能作为城乡发展用地的自然环境条件及其工程技术上的可能性与经济性,进行综合质量评定,以确定用地的建设适宜程度,为合理选择城乡发展用地提供依据。
不可建设用地 unbuildable landuse场地工程建设适宜性很差,完全或基本不能适应城乡建设要求,或具有很强的生态和人为因素影响限制的用地。
不宜建设用地 unsuitable landuse场地工程建设适宜性差,必须采取特定的工程措施后才能适应城乡建设要求,或具有较强的生态和人为因素影响限制的用地。
可建设用地 buildable landuse自然条件较好,场地较适宜工程建设,需采取工程措施,条件改善后方能适应城乡建设要求,没有生态及人为因素影响限制的用地。
城市土地集约利用度英语
城市土地集约利用度英语一、单词1. Intensive英语释义:Characterized by a high degree of concentration, thoroughness, or strength.用法:“intensive”可以作形容词,用于修饰名词。
例如:intensive use (集约利用)。
双语例句:The city is promoting intensive land use.(这个城市正在推进土地集约利用。
)2. Utilization英语释义:The action or fact of making practical and effective use of something.用法:“utilization”是名词,常与介词“of”搭配。
例如:the utilization of land(土地利用)。
双语例句:The efficient utilization of urban land is crucial for sustainable development.(城市土地的高效利用对可持续发展至关重要。
)3. Degree英语释义:The amount, level, or extent to which something happens or is present.用法:“degree”是名词,可用于表示程度。
例如:a high degree of intensive land use(高度的土地集约利用)。
双语例句:We need to measure the degree of land intensive utilization.(我们需要衡量土地集约利用的程度。
)二、短语1. Urban land intensive utilization英语释义:The efficient and concentrated use of urban land resources.用法:可作主语、宾语等。
2020年考研英语阅读材料:Urban land
2020年考研英语阅读材料:Urban land 2020年考研英语阅读材料:Urban landBUY land, advised Mark Twain; they're not making it any more. In fact, land is not really scarce: the entire population of America could fit into Texas with more than an acre for each household to enjoy. What drives prices skyward is a collision between rampant demand and limited supply in the great metropolises like London, Mumbai and New York. In the past ten years real prices in Hong Kong have risen by 150%. Residential property in Mayfair, in central London, can go for as much as 55,000 (82,000) per square metre. A square mile of Manhattan residential property costs 16.5 billion.Even in these great cities the scarcity is artificial. Regulatory limits on the height and density of buildings constrain supply and inflate prices. A recent analysis by academics at the London School of Economics estimates that land-use regulations in the West End of London inflate the price of office space by about 800%; in Milan and Paris the rules push up prices by around 300%. Most of the enormous value captured by landowners exists because it is well-nigh impossible to build new offices to compete those profits away.The costs of this misfiring property market are huge, mainly because of their effects on individuals. High housing prices force workers towards cheaper but less productive places. According to one study, employment in the Bay Area around San Francisco would be about five times larger than it is but for tight limits on construction. Tot up these costsin lost earnings and unrealised human potential, and thefigures become dizzying. Lifting all the barriers to urban growth in America could raise the country's GDP by between6.5% and 13.5%, or by about 1 trillion-2 trillion. It is difficult to think of many other policies that would yield anything like that.参考译文:马克吐温曾建议说“都去买地吧”,但现在他们已经不这么做了。
城乡用地评定标准
创作编号:GB8878185555334563BT9125XW创作者:凤呜大王*城乡用地评定标准(CJJ132-2009)Standard for Urban Landuse Evaluation1 总则1.0.1 为保障城乡人居环境的安全,合理选择城乡用地,提高城乡总体规划编制中的城乡用地评定水平,制订本标准。
1.0.2 本标准适用于建制市、建制镇、乡(集镇)、村庄的总体规划编制工作。
1.0.3 城乡用地评定的主要内容包括:对可能(拟)作为城乡发展的用地,根据其自然环境条件,提出城乡用地评定的适用性分析及分类定级的技术成果。
1.0.4 城乡用地评定必须符合中国国情,因地制宜,结合城乡用地的自然环境条件及人为影响因素,重点分析与评定影响突出的主导环境要素和关联性强的环境要素,从三维空间即地下、地表及一定空域,综合评定城乡用地的建设适宜性,并应遵守下列基本原则:1 现场踏勘与调查资料分析相结合,定性分析与定量计算相结合的原则。
2 优化城乡生态环境, 可持续发展的原则。
规避自然灾害,保障城乡用地的安全性,评定城乡用地的适宜性, 提高城乡人居环境质量。
3 适当考虑人为影响因素的原则。
接受人类社会活动在城乡用地上已形成的特殊情况、现象及国家政策规定等人为因素的影响。
1.0.5 城乡用地评定,除执行本标准外,尚应符合国家现行强制性标准的规定。
2 术语2.0.1 城乡用地评定urban and country landuse evaluation根据城乡发展的要求,对可能作为城乡发展用地的自然环境条件及其工程技术上的可能性与经济性,进行综合质量评定,以确定用地的建设适宜程度,为合理选择城乡发展用地提供依据。
2.0.2 不可建设用地unbuildable landuse场地工程建设适宜性很差,完全或基本不能适应城乡建设要求,或具有很强的生态和人为因素影响限制的用地。
2.0.3 不宜建设用地unsuitable landuse场地工程建设适宜性差,必须采取特定的工程措施后才能适应城乡建设要求,或具有较强的生态和人为因素影响限制的用地。
城市规划基本术语标准GBT50280-98
城市规划基本术语标准GBT50280-98 (GB/T 50280—98)一、总则1、为了科学地统一和规范都市规划术语,制定本标准.2、本标准适用于都市规划的设计、治理、教学、科研及其他有关领域。
3、都市规划使用的术语,除应符合本标准的规定外,尚应符合国家有关强制性标准、规范的规定。
二、都市和都市化1、居民点settlement人类按照生产和生活需要而形成的集聚定居地点。
按性质和人口规模,居民点分为都市和乡村两大类。
2、都市(城镇)city以非农不业和非农业人口集合为要紧特点的居民点。
包括按国家行政建制设置的市和镇。
3、市municipality; city经国家批准设市建制的行政地域。
4、镇town.经国家批准设市建制的行政地域。
5、市域administrative region of a city都市行政管辖的全部地域。
6、都市化urbanization人类生产和生活方式由乡村型向都市型转化的历史过程,表现为乡村人口向都市人口转化以及都市持续进展和完善的过程。
又称城镇化、都市化。
7、都市化水平urbanization level衡量都市化进展程度的数量指标,一样用一定地域内都市人口占总人口的比例来表示。
8、都市群agglomeration一定地域内都市分布较为密集的地区。
9、城镇体系urban system一定区域内在经济、社会和空间进展上具有有机联系的都市群体。
在大都市市区外围兴建的、与市区既有一定距离又相互间紧密联系的都市。
三、都市规划概述1、镇体系规划urban system planning一定地域范畴内,以区域生产力合理布局和城镇职能分工为依据,确定不同人口规模等级和职能分工的城镇的分布和进展规划。
2、都市规划urban planning对一定时期内都市的经济和社会进展、土地利用、空间布局以及各项建设的综合部署、具体安排和实施治理。
3、都市设计urban design对都市体型和空间环境所作的整体构思和安排,贯穿于都市规划的全过程。
land词根的单词
land词根的单词
"Land"这个词根在英语中常常用于表示与土地、地面或国家相关的概念。
以下是一些使用了这个词根的单词:
1. Landlord (房东) "land"表示土地,"lord"表示主人,因此房东即为土地的主人。
2. Landmark (地标) "land"表示土地,"mark"表示标记,因此地标即为在土地上的标记物。
3. Landform (地貌) "land"表示土地,"form"表示形状,因此地貌即为土地的形状或特征。
4. Landlocked (内陆的) "land"表示土地,"locked"表示被锁住,因此内陆的意思即为被陆地包围的。
5. Landslide (山崩) "land"表示土地,"slide"表示滑动,因此山崩即为土地滑动的现象。
这些单词都是使用了"land"这个词根,它们都与土地或地面有关。
希望这些例子能帮到你理解这个词根的意思。
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Urban landSpace and the city2015-4-10来源:Economist Poor land use in the world's greatest cities carries a huge cost.BUY land, advised Mark Twain; they're not making it any more. In fact, land is not really scarce: the entire population of America could fit into Texas with more than an acre for each household to enjoy. What drives prices skyward is a collision between rampant demand and limited supply in the great metropolises like London, Mumbai and New York. In the past ten years real prices in Hong Kong have risen by 150%. Residential property in Mayfair, in central London, can go for as much as 55,000 (82,000) per square metre. A square mile of Manhattan residential property costs 16.5 billion.Even in these great cities the scarcity is artificial. Regulatory limits on the height and density of buildings constrain supply and inflate prices. A recent analysis by academics at the London School of Economics estimates that land-use regulations in the West End of London inflate the price of office space by about 800%; in Milan and Paris the rules push up prices by around 300%. Most of the enormous value captured by landowners exists because it is well-nigh impossible to build new offices to compete those profits away.The costs of this misfiring property market are huge, mainly because of their effects on individuals. High housing prices force workers towards cheaper but less productive places. According to one study, employment in the Bay Area around San Francisco would be about five times larger than it is but for tight limits on construction. Tot up these costs in lost earnings and unrealised human potential, and the figures become dizzying. Lifting all the barriers to urban growth in America could raise the country's GDP by between 6.5% and 13.5%, or by about 1 trillion-2 trillion. It is difficult to think of many other policies that would yield anything like that.Metro stopsTwo long-run trends have led to this fractured market. One is the revival of the city as the central cog in the global economic machine. In the 20th century, tumbling transport costs weakened the gravitational pull of the city; in the 21st, the digital revolution has restored it. Knowledge-intensive industries such as technology and finance thrive on the clustering of workers who share ideas and expertise. The economies and populations of metropolises like London, New York and San Francisco have rebounded as a result.What those cities have not regained is their historical ability to stretch in order to accommodate all those who want to come. There is a good reason for that: unconstrained urban growth in the late 19th century fostered crime and disease. Hence the second trend, the proliferation of green belts and rules on zoning. Over the course of the past century land-use rules have piled up so plentifully that getting planning permission is harder than hailing a cab on a wet afternoon. London has strict rules preventing new structures blocking certain views of St Paul's Cathedral. Google's plans to build housing on its Mountain View campus in Silicon Valley are being resisted on the ground that residents might keep pets, which could harm the local owl population. Nimbyish residents of low-density districts can exploit planning rules on everything from light levels to parking spaces to block plans for construction.A good thing, too, say many. The roads and rails criss-crossing big cities already creak under the pressure of growing populations. Dampening property prices hurts one of the few routes to wealth-accumulation still available to the middle classes. A cautious approach to development is the surest way to preserve public spaces and a city's heritage: give economists their way, and they would quickly pave over Central Park.However well these arguments go down in local planning meetings, they wilt on closer scrutiny. Home ownership is not especially egalitarian. Many households are priced out of more vibrant places. It is no coincidence that the home-ownership rate in the metropolitan area of downtrodden Detroit, at 71%, is well above the 55% in booming San Francisco. You do not need to build a forest of skyscrapers for a lotmore people to make their home in big cities. San Francisco could squeeze in twice as many and remain half as dense as Manhattan.Property wrongsZoning codes were conceived as a way to balance the social good of a growing, productive city and the private costs that growth sometimes imposes. But land-use rules have evolved into something more pernicious: a mechanism through which landowners are handed both unwarranted windfalls and the means to prevent others from exercising control over their property. Even small steps to restore a healthier balance between private and public good would yield handsome returns. Policymakers should focus on two things.First, they should ensure that city-planning decisions are made from the top down. When decisions are taken at local level, land-use rules tend to be stricter. Individual districts receive fewer of the benefits of a larger metropolitan population (jobs and taxes) than their costs (blocked views and congested streets). Moving housing-supply decisions to city level should mean that due weight is put on the benefits of growth. Any restrictions on building won by one district should be offset by increases elsewhere, so the city as a whole keeps to its development budget.Second, governments should impose higher taxes on the value of land. In most rich countries, land-value taxes account for a small share of total revenues. Land taxes are efficient. They are difficult to dodge; you cannot stuff land into a bank-vault in Luxembourg. Whereas a high tax on property can discourage investment, a high tax on land creates an incentive to develop unused sites. Land-value taxes can also help cater for newcomers. New infrastructure raises the value of nearby land, automatically feeding through into revenues—which helps to pay for the improvements.Neither better zoning nor land taxes are easy to impose. There are logistical hurdles, such as assessing the value of land with the property stripped out. The politics is harder still. But politically tricky problems are ten-a-penny. Few offer the people who solve them a trillion-dollar reward.。