In 1933, Christaller looked at Southern Germany and realized that the size, number, and spacing of towns weren’t random. They formed a highly organized, mathematical hierarchy based entirely on consumer shopping habits.
To understand Walter Christaller’s Central Place Theory (CPT), it helps to start with a simple observation from everyday life: Why is it that you can find a small grocery store or a gas station on almost every street corner, but you have to travel to a major city to find a specialized cancer hospital, a luxury car dealership, or an international airport?
The Two Pillars: Range and Threshold
Before looking at maps or geometry, Christaller established two basic concepts that dictate where any business can survive:
Why the World is Made of Hexagons
If you map out the “Range” of a store in all directions on a flat plain, you get a circular market area.
To solve this spatial problem efficiently, the circles press against one another and flatten into hexagons. Hexagons are the perfect geometric compromise: they leave absolutely no empty spaces, and they minimize the distance from the center of the market to its outermost edges.
In Walter Christaller’s Central Place Theory (CPT), the entire spatial model is built like a geometry proof. He begins with a set of core economic behaviors—the Fundamental Principles—and uses deductive logic to arrive at the spatial structures, networks, and hierarchies that must inevitably emerge from them—the Derivative Principles.
These are the baseline economic and spatial concepts that act as the building blocks of Christaller’s theory. They dictate how an individual business or consumer behaves in space.
The Principle of Centrality Centrality is the core reason why a settlement exists. It is not just about physical location, but the functional surplus of a place. A “Central Place” is a settlement that provides goods and services to a surrounding rural population (its hinterland) that cannot produce those goods itself.
The Range of a Good (The Upper Limit) The range is the maximum distance a consumer is willing to travel to buy a good or service, or the maximum distance over which a central place can attract customers.
The Threshold of a Good (The Lower Limit) The threshold is the minimum market size, population, or purchasing power required for a central place function to remain economically viable and profitable.
The Complementary Area This is the rural hinterland or the “market area” surrounding a central place. It represents a symbiotic relationship: the central place provides urban services, and the complementary area provides the population base and economic demand to fulfill the threshold requirement.
The derivative principles are the logical spatial configurations that are deduced when the fundamental principles are forced to interact on a uniform, isotropic plain.
When multiple central places compete for space, their individual market areas must adjust.
Because different goods have completely different ranges and thresholds, they cannot all be produced in the same numbers or places. This derives a strict, step-like vertical hierarchy of settlements:
Christaller derived three distinct geometric arrangements depending on which macro-force (economic, logistical, or political) dominant in organizing the landscape. These are expressed as K-values, where K represents the total number of lower-order market areas served by a higher-order central place.
The Marketing Principle (K=3)
Core Difference with Lösch
While Christaller’s model is incredibly rigid (higher-order places rigidly contain all the functions of lower-order places, and the K-value is locked for the entire landscape), Lösch’s model is highly flexible (hexagons can vary continuously in size, allowing smaller towns to specialize in massive manufacturing sectors).
August Lösch’s model can feel incredibly abstract when you read textbook definitions about “superimposed hexagonal nets.” But at its core, Lösch was trying to answer a very practical question: If you started with a completely blank, flat map, how would businesses, transport links, and cities naturally arrange themselves over time?
While Walter Christaller’s Central Place Theory looked at the world from the top down (starting with a massive city and breaking down its services), Lösch built his model from the bottom up (starting with a single entrepreneur and building a whole economy).
The Single Business (The “Demand Cone”)
Imagine a completely flat plain where people are evenly distributed. You decide to open a brewery at Point P.
If you draw this boundary all around your brewery, you get a circular market area. If you graph the sales, it looks like a cone—high sales at the center, tapering off to zero at the edges. This is the Demand Cone.
The Hexagonal Net
You are making a lot of money, so other people open competing breweries on the plain. Soon, the map is full of circular markets.
Now, the entire map is a perfect grid of hexagons, like a honeycomb. Lösch calls this a Market Net.
The difference from Christaller- Different Goods, Different Hexagons
This is where Lösch broke away from Christaller. Christaller assumed that a single hexagonal grid rule applied to everything. Lösch said, “That makes no sense. A bakery needs a very small hexagonal market to survive. A car factory needs a massive hexagonal market.”
Every single product or service has its own unique threshold and market size. Therefore, the map actually has hundreds of different hexagonal grids layered on top of each other—some tiny (bakeries), some medium (hospitals), some massive (shipyards).
Creating the “Economic Landscape” (The Overlay & Rotate)
This is Lösch’s genius move. Imagine you print all these different-sized hexagonal grids onto clear plastic sheets.
When you do this math, a fascinating pattern emerges. The map naturally divides into 12 alternating pie-slices (sectors) radiating out from the Metropolis like a wheel:
The “Economic Landscape”: This alternating pattern of hyper-developed corridors (city-rich) and underdeveloped rural gaps (city-poor) radiating from a major metropolis is what Lösch termed the Economic Landscape.
Redefines “Central Places”
In Christaller’s world, everything is a strict pyramid: a small town only has a bakery; a medium city has a bakery and a high school; a large city has everything.
Lösch’s central places are much more dynamic and realistic: