Granville, Ohio
This city is larger than its long lost brother in Massachusetts. Granville, OH is just outside of Columbus, the state capital. Although the population isn't large it is still connected throughout the region with major routes and interstates.
Granville, Massachusetts
The original Granville (and perhaps better?) this small town located in Western Massachusetts has a different development pattern of the colonial variety. Granville's center has a common green which historically served as grazing grounds for cattle. Settlement branches from the common in all directions without a set spatial design. Town is more popular towards the center yes, but reasons for dispersion and somewhat spontaneous layout could be results of time, agricultural rise and decline, industrial progression and even population growth.
Granville, Iowa
Quite flat and predictable compared to the other Granvilles. You can see perfectly sectioned areas of land that represent 1 square mile of farmland. Each piece of land has a building situated with a driveway (usually a house or a barn). Some would say this is in the middle of nowhere but I look at it as if that's the somewhere in the middle of nowhere. Small towns don't have economic advantages or competition like cities so each business in a town like this is vital to the livelihood of the citizens and the township. Local farmers rely on their town as a geographical location for business.
It's pretty interesting to analyze different towns across the United States. The developmental patterns and local networking systems in different regions vary significantly and I find it intriguing how each area functions in relation to its surrounding features.



