In AP Human Geography, the built landscape is the collection of human-made physical features in a place, including buildings, infrastructure, monuments, and land-use patterns, that geographers "read" as visible evidence of the culture, beliefs, and history of the people who created it.
The built landscape is everything humans have physically constructed on the land. Houses, highways, temples, terraced fields, strip malls, skyscrapers, all of it counts. It's the tangible, visible layer of culture you could photograph from a street corner.
The CED folds the built landscape into the bigger idea of a cultural landscape (Topic 3.2). Under learning objective 3.2.A, a cultural landscape combines physical features, agricultural and industrial practices, religious and linguistic characteristics, evidence of sequent occupancy, and architecture (both traditional and postmodern). The built landscape is the architecture-and-structures slice of that definition. Geographers treat it like a text you can read. A mosque's minaret, a New England town green, or Inca terraces still in use all tell you who lived there, what they believed, and how they used space. Under 3.2.B, landscape features also reflect identities, so ethnic neighborhoods, indigenous lands, and gendered spaces show up in what gets built and where.
This term lives in Unit 3: Cultural Patterns and Processes, Topic 3.2 (Cultural Landscapes), supporting learning objectives 3.2.A (describe the characteristics of cultural landscapes) and 3.2.B (explain how landscape features and land use reflect cultural beliefs and identities). The skill the exam actually wants is landscape interpretation. When you see a photo of a neighborhood, you should be able to decode it. Colonial-era facades signal sequent occupancy. New luxury condos next to old row houses signal gentrification. Uniform fast-food strips signal cultural globalization. The built landscape is also your bridge into Unit 6, where renovation of older built landscapes drives questions about urban change. If you can explain what a structure reveals about culture, you've mastered the core move of Topic 3.2.
Keep studying AP® Human Geography Unit 3
Built Environment (Unit 3)
These two terms are nearly interchangeable on the exam. Both refer to the human-made physical setting. If anything, "built environment" is the slightly broader everyday phrase, while "built landscape" emphasizes the geographer's habit of reading structures as cultural evidence. Treat them as the same concept unless a question forces a distinction.
Sequent Occupancy (Unit 3)
The built landscape is where sequent occupancy becomes visible. Each group that occupies a place leaves physical layers behind. Inca terraces sitting alongside Spanish colonial plazas in Bolivia is the classic example, and it shows up in practice questions in almost exactly that form.
Gentrification (Unit 6)
When wealthier residents renovate an older built landscape, the demographic profile of the neighborhood changes too. The 2018 FRQ used this exact framing, so the term is your vocabulary link between cultural landscapes in Unit 3 and urban change in Unit 6.
Cultural Globalization (Unit 3)
Globalization makes built landscapes converge. The same glass towers, franchise architecture, and big-box stores appear worldwide, creating "placeless" landscapes. That tension between local traditional architecture and global postmodern sameness is a favorite MCQ setup.
Built landscape almost always shows up attached to a visual stimulus. The 2018 FRQ (Question 2) described an older neighborhood whose "existing built landscape is renovated" as its demographic profile changed, and asked about the urban processes behind it, which is gentrification territory. Multiple-choice questions give you a scenario and ask which concept explains the pattern, like Quechua communities in Bolivia still using Inca terraces while cities display Spanish colonial architecture (that's sequent occupancy written into the built landscape). Your job is never just to define the term. You have to interpret what a structure or land-use pattern reveals about culture, identity, or change over time, and name the process responsible.
The built landscape is a part of the cultural landscape, not a synonym for it. The cultural landscape (per LO 3.2.A) includes physical features, agricultural and industrial practices, religious and linguistic characteristics, and evidence of sequent occupancy. The built landscape is just the constructed, physical portion of that, the buildings, roads, and structures you can actually touch. A church building is built landscape; the worship practices inside it are part of the cultural landscape but not the built landscape.
The built landscape is the human-made physical layer of a place, including buildings, infrastructure, monuments, and land-use patterns.
It's one component of the cultural landscape defined in Topic 3.2, alongside practices, religious and linguistic features, and evidence of sequent occupancy.
Geographers "read" the built landscape as evidence of cultural beliefs and identities, which is exactly what LO 3.2.B asks you to explain.
Layered built landscapes, like Inca terraces beneath Spanish colonial cities, are visible proof of sequent occupancy.
On the exam, built landscape questions usually come with an image, and renovation of an older built landscape is classic gentrification language (it appeared on the 2018 FRQ).
It's the human-made physical features of a place, including buildings, roads, infrastructure, and land-use patterns. In Topic 3.2, it's the visible, constructed part of a cultural landscape that geographers interpret as evidence of culture.
No. The built landscape is one piece of the cultural landscape. The cultural landscape also includes agricultural and industrial practices, religious and linguistic characteristics, and evidence of sequent occupancy, not just physical structures.
Almost nothing for AP purposes. Both refer to the human-made physical setting of a place. The exam may use either term, so be ready to recognize both as the same idea.
Bolivia, where Quechua communities still use Inca terraces and irrigation systems while cities display Spanish colonial architecture. Each occupying group left a physical layer on the landscape, which is the definition of sequent occupancy.
Usually with a photo or scenario you have to interpret. The 2018 FRQ described an older neighborhood's built landscape being renovated as its demographics changed, and the expected concept was gentrification. MCQs often test whether you can match a landscape pattern to the process that created it.
Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.
Review units, study guides, and course resources.
Check this vocabulary in multiple-choice context.
Apply key concepts in written AP responses.
Estimate the exam score you are working toward.
Review the highest-yield facts before practice.
Put the full course together before test day.