Challenges and prospects of Danish service towns in the new urban geography

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference abstract in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

Challenges and prospects of Danish service towns in the new urban geography. / Fertner, Christian; Groth, Niels Boje.

Book of abstracts: EURA Conference 2012. Vienna, 2012. p. 82-83.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference abstract in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Fertner, C & Groth, NB 2012, Challenges and prospects of Danish service towns in the new urban geography. in Book of abstracts: EURA Conference 2012. Vienna, pp. 82-83, EURA Conference 2012, Vienna, Austria, 20/09/2012. <http://www.eura2012.org>

APA

Fertner, C., & Groth, N. B. (2012). Challenges and prospects of Danish service towns in the new urban geography. In Book of abstracts: EURA Conference 2012 (pp. 82-83). http://www.eura2012.org

Vancouver

Fertner C, Groth NB. Challenges and prospects of Danish service towns in the new urban geography. In Book of abstracts: EURA Conference 2012. Vienna. 2012. p. 82-83

Author

Fertner, Christian ; Groth, Niels Boje. / Challenges and prospects of Danish service towns in the new urban geography. Book of abstracts: EURA Conference 2012. Vienna, 2012. pp. 82-83

Bibtex

@inbook{3eef572e65c245e78ed886f320c2b437,
title = "Challenges and prospects of Danish service towns in the new urban geography",
abstract = "Many small towns in Denmark lost population and functions in recent decades. The service towns established between 1850 and 1940 take a considerable share of those. In that time almost 500 new towns emerged all over the country to serve the new export-oriented agricultural production as regional service centres. This development was accompanied by new communication and transport technologies including railways, which gave the towns the Danish name “stationsby” (“station town”). Many experienced rapid growth in population and economic activities, which first levelled off with the crisis of the 1930s and later with the introduction of the car as dominant mode of transport. After a municipal reform in 1970, some of the railway towns became administrative centres in the new larger municipalities followed by a pronounced growth. However, most of the service towns are still very small: 40 % have below 1000 inhabitants, only 10 % have more than 5000 inhabitants.More recently, with the emergence of functional urban regions around the biggest cities, their position as regional centres was weakened. Also, with the restructuring of the municipalities in Denmark in 2007 and the closure of several town halls, many service towns lost political and functional magnitude. In this context we will elaborate on the following research questions:- How can Danish service towns be empirically defined – also in opposition to e.g.traditional trade towns?- How was the situation and prospects of the service towns influenced by theemergence of the new functional urban geography and the administrative reforms?- What are the major challenges in urban development these towns are confronted with?We use historical register data as well as land use data to draw a broad picture of the development of Danish service towns. This research is part of a project on the current situation and future prospects of service towns in Denmark, started in March 2012.",
keywords = "Urban planning, Land use and management",
author = "Christian Fertner and Groth, {Niels Boje}",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-200-02766-4",
pages = "82--83",
booktitle = "Book of abstracts",
note = "EURA Conference 2012 : Urban Europe - Challenges to meet the urban future, EURA 2012 ; Conference date: 20-09-2012 Through 22-09-2012",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Challenges and prospects of Danish service towns in the new urban geography

AU - Fertner, Christian

AU - Groth, Niels Boje

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Many small towns in Denmark lost population and functions in recent decades. The service towns established between 1850 and 1940 take a considerable share of those. In that time almost 500 new towns emerged all over the country to serve the new export-oriented agricultural production as regional service centres. This development was accompanied by new communication and transport technologies including railways, which gave the towns the Danish name “stationsby” (“station town”). Many experienced rapid growth in population and economic activities, which first levelled off with the crisis of the 1930s and later with the introduction of the car as dominant mode of transport. After a municipal reform in 1970, some of the railway towns became administrative centres in the new larger municipalities followed by a pronounced growth. However, most of the service towns are still very small: 40 % have below 1000 inhabitants, only 10 % have more than 5000 inhabitants.More recently, with the emergence of functional urban regions around the biggest cities, their position as regional centres was weakened. Also, with the restructuring of the municipalities in Denmark in 2007 and the closure of several town halls, many service towns lost political and functional magnitude. In this context we will elaborate on the following research questions:- How can Danish service towns be empirically defined – also in opposition to e.g.traditional trade towns?- How was the situation and prospects of the service towns influenced by theemergence of the new functional urban geography and the administrative reforms?- What are the major challenges in urban development these towns are confronted with?We use historical register data as well as land use data to draw a broad picture of the development of Danish service towns. This research is part of a project on the current situation and future prospects of service towns in Denmark, started in March 2012.

AB - Many small towns in Denmark lost population and functions in recent decades. The service towns established between 1850 and 1940 take a considerable share of those. In that time almost 500 new towns emerged all over the country to serve the new export-oriented agricultural production as regional service centres. This development was accompanied by new communication and transport technologies including railways, which gave the towns the Danish name “stationsby” (“station town”). Many experienced rapid growth in population and economic activities, which first levelled off with the crisis of the 1930s and later with the introduction of the car as dominant mode of transport. After a municipal reform in 1970, some of the railway towns became administrative centres in the new larger municipalities followed by a pronounced growth. However, most of the service towns are still very small: 40 % have below 1000 inhabitants, only 10 % have more than 5000 inhabitants.More recently, with the emergence of functional urban regions around the biggest cities, their position as regional centres was weakened. Also, with the restructuring of the municipalities in Denmark in 2007 and the closure of several town halls, many service towns lost political and functional magnitude. In this context we will elaborate on the following research questions:- How can Danish service towns be empirically defined – also in opposition to e.g.traditional trade towns?- How was the situation and prospects of the service towns influenced by theemergence of the new functional urban geography and the administrative reforms?- What are the major challenges in urban development these towns are confronted with?We use historical register data as well as land use data to draw a broad picture of the development of Danish service towns. This research is part of a project on the current situation and future prospects of service towns in Denmark, started in March 2012.

KW - Urban planning

KW - Land use and management

M3 - Conference abstract in proceedings

SN - 978-3-200-02766-4

SP - 82

EP - 83

BT - Book of abstracts

CY - Vienna

T2 - EURA Conference 2012

Y2 - 20 September 2012 through 22 September 2012

ER -

ID: 37760764