Traditional zoning is a land-use planning approach that separates a city into distinct zones for different uses (residential, commercial, industrial, institutional), so each activity gets its own geographic area. In AP Human Geography, it explains the internal structure of cities in Topic 6.5.
Traditional zoning (sometimes called Euclidean or single-use zoning) is how most U.S. cities have been planned since the early 1900s. Local governments draw a map, label each area with one permitted use (residential here, commercial there, industrial way over there), and enforce it through law. The logic was to protect homes from factory smoke and noisy businesses, and it worked. But it also baked separation into the landscape, which is why so many American suburbs are nothing but houses for miles, with stores only reachable by car.
For AP purposes, traditional zoning is the legal machinery behind the city models you study in Topic 6.5. The Burgess concentric zone model, the Hoyt sector model, and the multiple-nuclei model all show cities sorted into use-based districts. Zoning is one big reason that sorting exists and persists. Bid-rent theory explains where uses want to locate based on land prices, and traditional zoning is the government saying where they're allowed to locate. Real cities are shaped by both forces working together.
Traditional zoning lives in Unit 6 (Cities and Urban Land-Use Patterns and Processes), Topic 6.5, and supports learning objective 6.5.A, which asks you to explain the internal structure of cities using models and theories. EK PSO-6.D.1 lists those models, and zoning is the policy tool that makes their separated land-use rings, sectors, and nodes show up in real cities. It also sets up later Unit 6 topics. Urban sprawl, car dependency, and food deserts are all partly downstream effects of strict single-use zoning, and reforms like mixed-use development and New Urbanism exist specifically as reactions against it. If you can explain what traditional zoning does, you can explain both why cities look the way they do and why planners want to change them.
Keep studying AP® Human Geography Unit 6
Burgess Concentric Zone Model (Unit 6)
The Burgess model shows a city as rings of separated uses, with a CBD in the center and residential zones farther out. Traditional zoning is the legal version of that picture. The model describes the pattern; zoning laws lock the pattern in place.
Central Business District (CBD) (Unit 6)
Traditional zoning concentrates commercial activity in designated districts, and the CBD is the biggest one. When zoning keeps retail and offices out of residential areas, it funnels that activity toward the core, reinforcing the CBD's dominance.
Edge Cities and the Galactic City Model (Unit 6)
Suburban zoning created huge single-use residential areas with no jobs or shopping nearby. Edge cities grew at highway intersections to fill that gap, which is exactly the dispersed, node-based pattern the galactic city model captures.
Urban Sustainability and New Urbanism (Unit 6)
New Urbanism and mixed-use development are direct pushback against traditional zoning. By putting homes, shops, and offices in the same walkable area, they try to undo the car dependency and sprawl that single-use zoning produced.
Multiple-choice questions usually test traditional zoning indirectly, through stems about why land uses are separated in a city, why suburbs lack commercial services, or what policy change would reduce sprawl (answer: shifting away from single-use zoning toward mixed-use). On FRQs, zoning shows up in urban planning and revitalization prompts. The 2017 FRQ asked about counteracting inner-city decline after deindustrialization and suburbanization, and rezoning (for example, converting industrial zones to mixed-use residential and commercial) is exactly the kind of policy response those questions reward. Your job is to explain effects, not just define the term. Be ready to say what traditional zoning does to a city's spatial pattern, and what changing it would do.
Traditional zoning separates uses; mixed-use zoning combines them. Under traditional zoning, a block is residential OR commercial, never both, which forces people to drive between home, work, and shopping. Mixed-use zoning allows apartments above storefronts and offices next to housing, creating walkable neighborhoods. On the exam, traditional zoning is usually the cause of sprawl, and mixed-use zoning is the proposed fix.
Traditional zoning separates residential, commercial, industrial, and institutional land uses into distinct geographic zones enforced by local law.
It supports LO 6.5.A because it helps explain why real cities show the separated land-use patterns in the Burgess, Hoyt, and multiple-nuclei models.
Bid-rent theory explains where land uses want to go based on price, while traditional zoning legally controls where they are allowed to go.
Strict single-use zoning is a major cause of urban sprawl, car dependency, and suburbs without nearby shops or services.
Mixed-use zoning and New Urbanism are planning reforms designed to reverse traditional zoning's separation and create walkable neighborhoods.
On FRQs about revitalizing declining inner cities, rezoning old industrial land for mixed-use development is a classic high-scoring answer.
Traditional zoning is a planning approach that divides a city into distinct zones, each limited to one type of land use such as residential, commercial, or industrial. It appears in Topic 6.5 as part of explaining the internal structure of cities.
No, they're opposites. Traditional zoning keeps land uses apart (one zone, one use), while mixed-use zoning deliberately combines housing, retail, and offices in the same area to make neighborhoods walkable.
It's a major contributor, yes. By requiring large single-use residential zones, traditional zoning spread homes far from jobs and stores, which fueled car-dependent, low-density development across U.S. suburbs in the second half of the twentieth century.
The Burgess model depicts a city as rings of separated land uses around a CBD, and traditional zoning is the legal mechanism that creates and preserves that kind of separation. The model describes the pattern; zoning enforces it.
To fight problems the old system created, like sprawl, car dependency, and inner-city decline. Rezoning former industrial areas for mixed-use development is a common revitalization strategy, the kind of policy response that urban planning FRQs reward.
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