TRP 2011 Volume 59
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Browsing TRP 2011 Volume 59 by Author "Van Eeden, Amanda"
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Item Open Access The geography of informal arts and crafts traders in South Africa’s four main city centres(Department of Urban and Regional Planning, University of the Free State, 2011) Van Eeden, AmandaEnglish: The choice of location of street traders and the products they sell reflect specific geographies of flows of people. In this study the focus is on the spatial relationships between arts and crafts trading and the tourist market. This article presents the outcomes of research into the characteristics and geographies of informal trade in arts and crafts in South Africa’s four main metropolitan city centres. The results show that informal selling of arts and crafts is a relatively small component of street trading in all four centres. Intracity variations are reported and the geographical patterns of arts and crafts traders in the four centres analysed with GIS software. The purpose of this analysis is to identify concentrations of traders specialising in arts and crafts within the general distributions of informal traders in the four cities.Item Open Access Land quality, urban development and urban agriculture within the Cape Town urban edge(Department of Urban and Regional Planning, University of the Free State, 2011) Geyer, Herman; Schloms, Bennie; Du Plessis, Danie; Van Eeden, AmandaEnglish: The article analyses the consumption of agricultural land within the Cape Town urban edge between 2002 and 2007. The agricultural potential of the developed land and the distribution of land uses are analysed to determine the impact of urban growth on urban agriculture. The research indicates that low-density residential development is still the major consumer of high-potential agricultural land within the Cape Town urban edge. Commercial, industrial and informal residential development has little impact on the loss of agricultural land. High-potential agricultural land is not sufficiently protected. Urban agriculture is limited by open competition with more profitable land uses such as residential development. Consequently, the paper argues for a flexible urban containment policy whereby high-potential agricultural land within the urban edge is reserved solely for agricultural production, while land with little agricultural potential outside the urban edge should be made available for future urban development.