City centre

For other uses, see City Center (disambiguation).
The city centre of Paris in the foreground, clearly contrasting with the CBD of La Défense in the background

A city centre (or city center) is the commercial, cultural and often the historical, political and geographic heart of a city.

Overview

The city centre is the (often historical) area of a city where commerce, entertainment, shopping and political power are concentrated. The term is most commonly used in the United Kingdom and Ireland, as opposed to "downtown", which is most commonly used in North America. In Canada, the terms "city centre" and "downtown" are used interchangeably. In Australia, CBD is widely used but the term "City Centre" is increasing, especially in Melbourne's CBD. While in many cities, the Central Business District (CBD) is within the city centre, the concept "city centre" differs from the CBD. The concept of the "CBD" solely revolves around economic and financial power, while the "city centre" also includes historical, political and cultural factors. A clear example is Paris: La Défense is the central business district of Paris, but is not the city centre. In most larger and/or older cities, the CBD and the city centre will only partially overlap, if at all.

A city centre is often the first settled part of a city, which can make it the most historical part of a city.

Usage

Australia

In most Australian cities, the city centre to some extent coincides with the central business district, with the result that "the City", "city centre" and "central business district" or "CBD" are regarded as near synonyms. However, in some Australian cities the city centre and the CBD are geographically separately identified. In Sydney and Brisbane for example, the term "CBD" is the preferred term for the city centre. In Melbourne and Adelaide, by contrast, the term "city centre" is preferred, and the CBD is not entirely regarded as coterminous. The term "CBD" is not often used in Canberra; its "city centre" is usually identified as the district called "City" or "Civic".

Netherlands

In Dutch, the terms binnenstad, centrum, stadscentrum or stadskern are used to describe the city centre. Amsterdam is a clear example of the city centre and the central business district not being the same area. The city centre of Amsterdam is Centrum, the historical heart of the city, while the CBD of Amsterdam is the Zuidas in the south.

Because of the bombardment of Rotterdam during World War II, and thus the loss of its historical core, the city centre and the CBD are the same area in Rotterdam.

China

In Chinese, the urban centre of a city is called the "city centre" or "urban core" (Chinese: 市中心; pinyin: shì zhōngxīn). In many cities, this is the historical city centre and the cultural and commercial centre. Historically, the CBD often occupied one portion of the city centre. In recent years, larger cities have often developed CBDs or financial districts that occupy a part of the city centre, or sit outside the historical city centre completely. For example, Beijing's historical city centre is defined by the former city walls and remains the political and cultural centre of the city, whereas Beijing's CBD sits in Chaoyang District, to the east of the historical city; Shanghai's city centre was defined by the Old Chinese City, the International Settlement and the French Concession and sat on the west bank of the Huangpu River, whereas the modern financial district is concentrated on Lujiazui, a newly developed area across the river from the traditional city centre (although parts of the traditional city centre remain key financial and business centres).

See also