All AP Human Geography Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #6 : Urban Planning & Design
Kevin Lynch’s Image of the City was primarily concerned with __________.
the individual’s mental understanding of the city they live in
the relationship between cities of various sizes to one another
how to determine the environmental impact of urban sprawl
the relationship between various districts of a city to one another
the negative consequences of gentrification and blockbusting
the individual’s mental understanding of the city they live in
Kevin Lynch wrote his seminal work Image of the City in the late 1950s based on a series of studies he conducted on Boston, Jersey City, and Los Angeles. The book is primarily concerned with how an individual creates a mental perception of the city they live in and what factors individuals consider when rating how happy, comfortable, and safe they feel in a city.
Example Question #1 : Urban Planning & Design
Which of these is not a feature of a city whose design was inspired by the “Beaux arts movement?”
All of these are features of a city inspired by the “Beaux arts movement.”
None of these are features of a city inspired by the “Beaux arts movement.”
Prominent national monuments
Expansive recreational areas
Wide open streets and avenues
All of these are features of a city inspired by the “Beaux arts movement.”
The “Beaux arts movement” was prominent in European urban architecture in the nineteenth century. Particularly in Paris, and other cities greatly influenced by French culture. A city whose design was inspired by this movement would feature expansive recreational areas, prominent national monuments, and wide-open streets and avenues.
Example Question #11 : Social Spaces
Who wrote the famous geographical work Image of the City?
Al Idrisi
Kevin Lynch
Carl Ritter
Immanuel Kant
Alexander von Humboldt
Kevin Lynch
The famous geographical work Image of the City was published by Kevin Lynch in 1960. It concerns how an individual perceives the city that they live in based on their experience of five main categories - paths, edges, districts, landmarks, and nodes.
Example Question #12 : Social Spaces
A coffee shop and an ice-cream shop are often found on the same block, in close proximity. This is an example of __________.
agglomeration
deglomeration
an export-processing zone
purchasing-power parity
agglomeration
Agglomeration is best exemplified in the modern shopping mall, wherein stores are clumped to take advantage of like-minded shoppers who may walk out of one store and be attracted to another. Coffee shops and ice cream shops tend to clump on blocks with the marketing strategy that customers may leave the coffee shop and want ice cream, or may decide against ice cream for coffee or mochas, or vice versa. Deglomeration is the opposite: the spreading out of formerly clustered industries that occurs when staying together becomes too expensive or cramped. An export processing zone is a maquiladora: a region set up specifically to lure factories. Purchasing-power parity is an equation used to compare the value of a certain good in two different countries.
Example Question #13 : Social Spaces
This architectural movement emerged in opposition to modern architecture.
Transmodern
Baroque
Poststructural
Postmodern
Transcendental
Postmodern
The modern architectural movement emphasized efficiency and disregarded anything deemed frivolous or unnecessary. This movement dominated for much of the second-half of the twentieth century. Postmodern architecture has emerged in recent years in opposition to modern architecture. It tries to recapture architectural themes from before the modern period and incorporates aesthetically-pleasing buildings.
Example Question #14 : Social Spaces
Above everything else, urban planners who were inspired by modern architecture wanted to emphasize __________ in their cities.
Cordiality
Patriotism
Culture
Efficiency
Religious devotion
Efficiency
Cities that were inspired by the modern architecture movement tended to emphasize efficiency above everything else. The imposing geometric glass and concrete buildings were meant to impose a feeling of futuristic industry and efficiency, in which little labor or money is wasted on artistic or aesthetic detail.
Example Question #15 : Social Spaces
Which South American city is considered a prototypical example of a city inspired by the modern architecture movement of the twentieth century?
Salvador
Recife
Brasilia
Santiago
Manaus
Brasilia
Brasilia, the capital city of Brazil, was designed and built in the mid-twentieth century. With its imposing geometric glass buildings and concrete structures it is the prototypical example of a city inspired by the modern architecture movement.
Example Question #16 : Social Spaces
Which of these is not one of the five categories that Lynch considers as having an impact on an individual’s perception of a city?
Parks
Nodes
Landmarks
Districts
Paths
Parks
In collecting research for his seminal work Image of the City (1960), Kevin Lynch determined that there were five main categories that affect an individual’s perception of the city that they live in. Those five main categories were paths, districts, nodes, landmarks, and edges. “Parks” would probably fit under the category of landmarks.
Example Question #17 : Social Spaces
This city’s wide streets and national monuments are prototypical of the “Beaux arts movement.”
Copenhagen
Amsterdam
Paris
Barcelona
Edinburgh
Paris
The “Beaux arts movement” was most influential in Paris, and other cities greatly influenced by French culture. Paris’ wide boulevards and prominent national monuments are classic examples of the “Beaux arts movement” which was so popular in nineteenth century European architecture.
Example Question #11 : Urban Planning & Design
Which of these best describes the priorities of the American City Beautiful movement?
To improve sanitation and educational facilities
To provide a higher standard of living to the working class
To better integrate agricultural regions with urban centers
To impose order on the chaotic urban sprawl
To provide a higher standard of living to the middle class
To impose order on the chaotic urban sprawl
The American City Beautiful movement, which took off in the second-half of the nineteenth century was primarily concerned with imposing order on the chaotic urban sprawl. The population of American cities had grown dramatically in recent years and many urban planners wanted to rectify the problems they identified with urban layout. The primary motivation was to make cities more orderly.
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