- Hudson's village model
Hudson's village model is a geographical model of
United Kingdom villages which shows the development of rural settlement patterns in villages over time. It was developed around theLincoln, Lincolnshire area by Hudson. R (1977) an English born geographer specialising in Urban geography, who currently lectures at theuniversity of Durham .tages
The model consists of three stages:
#Change in land use, existing buildings converted into housing and infill of houses on vacant land. There are also some additions to the village edge including farm buildings
#Ribbon development – housing built along major routes from the village
#Large scale planned additions such ashousing estates on village fringeThe first stage consists of the initial village buildings that are the 'core' of the village. These tend to be located around the church. In the second stage, there is an infill of houses as the demand for them increases. This is linked with increases in population in the UK and improvements in healthcare and
quality of life .Stage three occurs mainly to coincide with the popularity ofCounter Urbanisation where dense housing estates are built to cater for people wanting to live in areas of high quality of environment, such as that found in many rural villages.References
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