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Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region Debnath Mookherjee* Manie (H.S.) Geyer** Eugene Hoerauf* IGU Urban Geography Commission Canterbury UK Christ Church University August 14-20, 2011 *Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225, USA ** Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch 7602, South Africa

Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

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Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region. Debnath Mookherjee* Manie (H.S.) Geyer** Eugene Hoerauf * IGU Urban Geography Commission Canterbury UK Christ Church University August 14-20, 2011 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Debnath Mookherjee* Manie (H.S.) Geyer**

Eugene Hoerauf*

IGU Urban Geography CommissionCanterbury UK

Christ Church UniversityAugust 14-20, 2011

*Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225, USA ** Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch 7602, South Africa

Page 2: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Conceptual Background

• Core/Periphery – The Semantics of Peripheral Relevance

• Dimensions –Spatial / Aspatial• The Centricity Continuum – From Monocentric to

Polycentric• Agreements & Ambiguities – Scale, Definition,

Disciplinary Approaches, Measurements

References: Potter (2001), Copus (2001), Geyer (2006)

Page 3: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Agreements & Ambiguities

• Broad Consensus (Developed Countries)-- The ‘Demise’ of Monocentricity-- Decentralization of Economic Activities-- Implications of Changes in the ‘Demographic

Regime’-- Mono/Polycentricity – A Continuum, Not an ‘Either /Or’-- Morphological & Functional Dimensions

Page 4: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Agreements & Ambiguities (Cont.)

• Ambiguities –‘No Real Consensus,’ e.g.,-- Definitions of Polycentricity, ‘What it Really Means’-- Scales -- Polycentric Forms (PUR, City Regions)-- Measurement Criteria, Variables

References: Davoudi (2003), Kloosterman and Musterd (2001), Champion (2001), Meijers and Burger (2010)

Page 5: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Polycentric Urban Regions (PURs)

• Distinctive Spatial Structure: PUR

-- Clustering of Centers-- Size, Spacing, and Size Distribution-- Center-Specialization-- Multi-Centered Metro Areas-- Uniform Homogeneous Regions

Page 6: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Polycentric Urban Regions (PURs)• Study Approaches/ Orientations

--Functional/ Relational and Morphological-- Scalar Variations – Meso, Macro, Mega

Inter and Intra-Regional Perspectives• Dimensions/ Characteristics

-- Physical Forms, Political Entity, Functional Relationships, Historical/ Cultural Identity

References: Par (2004), Green (2007), Veneri & Burgalassi (2010), Davoudi (2002)

Page 7: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Polycentric Urban Regions (PURs) (cont.)

-- Urban System – Conforms Broadly to the Central Place Model-- Particular Form of Nodal Region-- Bi-Nodal City-Region

• General Agreement: Studies are More or Less Context Specific.

Reference: Par (2004), Turok & Bailey (2004), Dick & Rimmer (1998), Davoudi (2002)

Page 8: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Important Reminders for Us

• Most Research, Conceptualizations, and Debates are in the Context of Developed Countries

• Research is Lagging far behind in Context of the Developing World

• Context-Specific Empirical Research is Needed for Academic & Policy Purposes

Page 9: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

An Empirical Observation: The Case of NCR in India

• The Delhi core (NCT) grew dramatically during the past five decades .

Page 10: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Decadal Growth Rates of Top Metropolitan Agglomerations & the Delhi Core, 1951-2001

Page 11: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

A Regional Planning Approach

• Concerns over Delhi’s Urban Growth and Spatial Impact Prompted Action

• National Commission on Urbanization (NCOU), 1988

• National Capital Region Planning Board (NCRPB), 1985

Page 12: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region
Page 13: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

The Constituent Areas of the NCR

• Following an act of Parliament in 1985, a National Capital Region Planning Board (NCRPB) was set up

• The NCR was delineated across parts of three adjacent states, Rajasthan, UP, and

Haryana

• The states voluntarily agreed to surrender their constitutional rights in favor of the Board

for planning development of NCR… (NCRPB, 2000, p.xix)

Page 14: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region
Page 15: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

The NCR Policy Zones• Three concentric policy zones were formed

with the intent of development of urban centers outside of the NCT-Delhi in a polycentric fashion.

-- NCT-Delhi (1483 sq. km)-- Delhi Metropolitan Area (DMA) excluding the NCT-Delhi (1697 sq. km)-- The rest of the NCR (27,063 sq km).-- Also, a ‘Highway Corridor Zone’, and a ‘Central National Capital Region’ (CNCR) based on the former Delhi Metropolitan Area (DMA), were identified.

Page 16: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

National Capital Region: Policy Zones

Page 17: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Planning Objectives

• Halting the Concentration in Delhi• Redistribution of Population and Activities within

the NCR• Avoidance of “Amorphous Blobs on the

Landscape”• Postulate: Future Settlements would Emerge in

PUR forms

References: NCOU Report (1988), NCRPB Report (1985)

Page 18: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Research Focus • Primary Research Focus in Literature:

Resources, Management, Directions of Growth, Carrying Capacity, Infra-Structural Stress

• Focus of Our Study: To Observe the Settlement Patterns in the Peripheral Region of the NCR from the Perspective of some Morphological Elements of Polycentric Development as a Baseline Prior to the 2011 Census Reports.

References: Ahmed & Choi (2011), Bhandari et al (2007), Jain et al (2011), Banerjee (1996), Mookherjee & Geyer (2011)

Page 19: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Research Focus (Contd.)• Study Design:

-- The Spatial Entity: The National Capital Region (Core and Periphery)-- The Data Set: Census data—Demographic (Population), Economic (Workers), Spatial (Distance from the Core)-- Urban Settlements: Centers of 20,000 and Over Population Size-- Descriptive Statistics: Core-Periphery Differentials of Population and Occupational Growth Rates, Size and Distance Patterns

Page 20: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region
Page 21: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region
Page 22: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Growth Rates Main Workers: Delhi Core and Peripheral Centers, 1991-2001

Page 23: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Growth Rates Other Workers: Delhi Core and Peripheral Centers, 1991-2001

Loni

(NP)

Behta

Hajipu

r (CT)

Bhiwad

i (CT)

Ghazia

bad (

M Corp

.)

Bahad

urgarh

(M C

l )

Noida (

CT)

Dadri (

MB)

Farida

bad (

M Corp

.)

Palwal

(M C

l )

Sohna

(MC)

Muradn

agar

(MB)

Samalk

ha (M

C)

Hodal

(MC)

Sonipa

t (M C

l)

Gohan

a (MC)

Delhi C

ore (N

CTD)0

50

100

150

200

250

Chart Title

Other Workers

Page 24: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Growth Rates Household Workers: Delhi Core and Peripheral Centers, 1991-2001

Loni

(NP)

Behta

Hajipu

r (CT)

Bhiwad

i (CT)

Ghazia

bad (

M Corp

.)

Bahad

urgarh

(M C

l )

Noida (

CT)

Dadri (

MB)

Farida

bad (

M Corp

.)

Palwal

(M C

l )

Sohna

(MC)

Muradn

agar

(MB)

Samalk

ha (M

C)

Hodal

(MC)

Sonipa

t (M C

l)

Gohan

a (MC)

Delhi C

ore (N

CTD)0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

Chart Title

Household Workers

Page 25: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Findings• Cities and Towns were concentrated within the

40 km contour line from the NCT-Delhi core

• About one-third of Urban Centers (n=51) with growth rates exceeding Delhi core growth were located within the 20 km contour line.

• Six of these Centers appear to form a Node around Ghaziabad – a large city of nearly one million population

• Distribution of the centers also varied per the state’s developmental status.

Page 26: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Findings (contd.)• Majority of the cities and towns in UP grew at a

very moderate pace; some showed negative growth.

• A cluster of six centers with Ghaziabad as the node in the east appear to be emerging.

• An elongated corridor-like zone of four centers extending northward from Sonipat is

noticeable. • These zones may evolve into some forms of

polycentric urban regions.

Page 27: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Concluding Remarks• We have to remember that this has been a glimpse

backward at the settlement status a decade ago. Only the new census data can offer us current information.

• Our observations clearly point to a trend in spatial development in the NCR at the peripheral region

of Delhi.• The trend: a predominantly higher growth rates of

population and workers at the immediate periphery of Delhi that far surpassed the growth rates of the core.

• However, such a trend, while encouraging, is not impressive.

Page 28: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Concluding Remarks (Contd.)• We further detected a possible shaping of future spatial

forms in the distribution of urban centers—a ‘node’ in the east and a ‘corridor’ in the north-west.

• These are among the rapidly growing centers that may be the ‘incubators’ of regional growth in the future

• Above patterns may result partly from NCR policies

• It can also be argued that in view of the wide diversity within the NCR and the influence of the Delhi core, such a trend could be inevitable and may have emerged independently.

• Answers to such queries must await new data.

Page 29: Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank ~

• Stephan Freelan, GIS Specialist, WWU, for drawing some of the illustrations; and,

• Jonah White, Graduate Student at WWU, for initial compilation of some Census data.