Urban Sprawl is a problem that can have severe consequences for all life if the continuing expansion of developed landscape is left unrestricted. The unrestricted development of the United States and the world is rapidly contributing to the degradation of our ecosystem. Moreover, if over development continues there will be massive human suffering. Air and water quality are in jeopardy and topsoil is being lost at an alarming rate. If something isn't done soon to curtail rampant development there may be no way to prevent its destructive consequences. In order to understand Urban Sprawl it is imperative to understand the history and origin of cities.
As the nation shifted from agricultural society to a manufacturing, and then a technology driven social culture, workers incresingly left the rural life and homestead to find work and social support in the manufacturing centers. This development was based on the marketplace and was designed to maximize company profits rather than maximize the health and welfare of its inhabitants. The capitalist city had lower regard for ecological issues than for building a business structure which supported those who were dependant on the business. AS the manufacturing power grew, so did the factories to provide the goods, and the housing to support the workers. The result is a sprawling city that overflows its boundaries like a bottle of coke which is poured too quickly into a cold glass. The result is declining social and ecological conditions which contribute to the detriment of human and ecological health.
At no time was this more evident than The Industrial Revolution. Europeans and then Americans found it profitable to harness rivers for power. They built gristmills first, and then saw mills, then textile mills. Eventually, entrepreneurs would produce anything that they could create a market for. Along the way they exploited what ever was available. Men, women children and immigrants competed for the lowest wages. Rivers were harnessed for their ability to turn the wheels. They were also utilized as a means to carry away industrial...
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