In AP Human Geography, zones of abandonment are urban areas that lose population and investment, leaving behind vacant buildings, deteriorating housing, and weak infrastructure, usually because of economic decline (like deindustrialization) or demographic shifts out of the neighborhood.
A zone of abandonment is a part of a city that people and money have walked away from. Factories close or residents move out, property values drop, landlords stop maintaining buildings, businesses shut down, and the city cuts back on services. What's left is a landscape of boarded-up houses, empty warehouses, and vacant lots. Think of Rust Belt neighborhoods in cities like Detroit after manufacturing jobs left.
The CED names zones of abandonment in EK SPS-6.A.1 as one of the economic and social challenges that result when urban populations move within a city. The key idea is the feedback loop. Population loss leads to disinvestment, disinvestment leads to deterioration, and deterioration pushes even more people to leave. That loop is often kicked off or accelerated by earlier processes you've already studied, like redlining (banks refusing loans in certain neighborhoods) and deindustrialization (factories relocating and taking jobs with them).
This term lives in Topic 6.10, Challenges of Urban Changes, in Unit 6 (Cities and Urban Land-Use Patterns and Processes). It directly supports learning objective 6.10.A, which asks you to explain causes and effects of geographic change within urban areas. Zones of abandonment are the textbook "effect" in that cause-and-effect chain. The causes are things like deindustrialization, suburbanization (white flight), and discriminatory housing practices, and the effects are concentrated poverty, reduced access to services, environmental injustice, and rising crime. The CED also pairs this challenge with its responses, so knowing zones of abandonment sets you up to explain urban renewal, gentrification, and inclusionary zoning as attempts to fix or reverse the decline.
Keep studying AP® Human Geography Unit 6
Gentrification (Unit 6)
Gentrification is often what happens to a zone of abandonment next. Cheap, abandoned property attracts new investment and wealthier residents, which can reverse the decline but also displace the low-income residents who stayed. They're two stages of the same neighborhood life cycle.
Environmental Injustice (Unit 6)
Zones of abandonment frequently overlap with environmental injustice. When industry leaves, it often leaves contamination behind (brownfields, polluted warehouses), and the low-income communities stuck nearby bear the health costs. The CED lists both in the same essential knowledge statement for a reason.
Deindustrialization (Unit 7)
The biggest single cause of American zones of abandonment is the loss of manufacturing jobs, a Unit 7 concept. When you explain WHY a Rust Belt neighborhood emptied out, you're pulling Unit 7 economic geography into a Unit 6 urban answer. That cross-unit move is exactly what FRQ rubrics reward.
De Facto Segregation (Unit 6)
Redlining and blockbusting concentrated minority residents in specific neighborhoods, then starved those neighborhoods of investment. Zones of abandonment are often the spatial outcome of that de facto segregation, which is why the CED lists housing discrimination right alongside them.
Multiple-choice questions usually test this term in one of two ways. Either you get the definition and have to name the term ("urban neighborhoods experiencing disinvestment, population loss, and deteriorating buildings"), or you get a scenario, like industrial facilities relocating and leaving abandoned warehouses, contamination, and concentrated poverty, and you have to identify it as a zone of abandonment. Some questions also ask you to sequence the typical progression of neighborhood decline in post-industrial cities, so know the order: economic shift, job loss, population loss, disinvestment, deterioration. No released FRQ has used the term verbatim, but Topic 6.10 is prime FRQ territory, and zones of abandonment work perfectly as an "effect" when a prompt asks you to explain consequences of urban change or to evaluate responses like urban renewal.
The CED lists them in the same sentence, but they describe different situations. A zone of abandonment is an area people LEFT, usually in a post-industrial city in the developed world (think emptied-out Detroit neighborhoods). A disamenity zone is an area the poorest residents are stuck IN, often informal settlements lacking police, sewers, or other city services, classically shown on the periphery or steep slopes in the Latin American city model. One is defined by departure and vacancy; the other is defined by lack of services for people still living there.
Zones of abandonment are urban areas marked by population loss, disinvestment, and deteriorating housing and infrastructure.
They appear in EK SPS-6.A.1 under Topic 6.10 as one of the challenges created when urban populations move within a city.
The classic cause chain is deindustrialization or out-migration, followed by falling property values, disinvestment, deterioration, and more out-migration in a feedback loop.
Redlining and other forms of housing discrimination often set up which neighborhoods become zones of abandonment.
Gentrification and urban renewal are the CED's main responses to zones of abandonment, and both come with displacement trade-offs.
Don't confuse them with disamenity zones, which are underserved areas where poor residents still live, often informal settlements in developing-world cities.
It's an urban area that has lost population and investment, leaving vacant buildings, dilapidated housing, and crumbling infrastructure. The CED lists it in EK SPS-6.A.1 as a challenge caused by population movement within cities.
No. A zone of abandonment is an area people have left, typically in post-industrial cities like Detroit. A disamenity zone is a poor area people still live in but that lacks city services, like informal settlements in the Latin American city model.
Mainly deindustrialization (factories and jobs leaving), suburbanization pulling middle-class residents out, and discriminatory practices like redlining that cut off investment. Each cause feeds a loop of falling property values and further decline.
Neighborhoods in Rust Belt cities like Detroit are the go-to example. Auto plants closed, the population fell by hundreds of thousands, and entire blocks of houses and warehouses were left vacant and deteriorating.
Partly, which is why it's debated. Gentrification brings investment and rising property values back to abandoned areas, but it often displaces the low-income residents who remained, so the AP exam frames it as a response with trade-offs, not a clean solution.
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