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July 26, 2006

Map of the Day: The Donut Hypothesis

2006_7_donuthypoth1.jpg

Radical Cartography has launched another interesting comparative maps project called City Income Donuts:

These maps show the distribution of income (per capita) around the 25 largest metropolitan areas in the US (all those with population greater than 2,000,000). The goal was to test the "donut" hypothesis — the idea that a city will create concentric rings of wealth and poverty, with the rich both in the suburbs and in the "revitalized" downtown, and the poor stuck in between.

This does seem to have some validity in older cities like Boston, New York, Philadelphia, or Chicago, but in newer cities it is not the case. Instead of donuts, one finds "wedges" of wealth occupying a continuous pie-slice from the center to the periphery.

NYC certainly does have some ringage: very rich people at the center in Manhattan, then poor people out in Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx, and then rich people again in Westchester, Long Island, and Jersey. Interesting! [Via the JK.]

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Comments (2)

Would be curious to see these overlaid with topography maps. From the cities I know, seems rich people like to live on the beach or on high ground (big surprise). Also- what's up with Phoenix? Granted I know next to nothing about the city, but why so segregated?

 

that website just sucked up 2 hours of my time! High five!

 
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