THE MODERN CITY REVISITED.Edited by Thomas Deckker, London: E & FN Spon. 2000. [pound]27.50 The significance of this book will probably lie more in its actual publication than in its content. We have eloquent pieces on the Peterlee that never was, by Lubetkin's monographer mon·o·graph n. A scholarly piece of writing of essay or book length on a specific, often limited subject. tr.v. mon·o·graphed, mon·o·graph·ing, mon·o·graphs To write a monograph on. John Allen John Allen may refer to: Artists
Politicians
The actual content of the pieces is largely unsurprising. What stands out from the collection is Michael Sorkin's observation that pure Modernist planning sought to create an 'urbanism that ... seeks to make its peace with the planet': public spaces were to be generated by transportation interchanges rather than draughted, Beaux-Arts fashion, by the set-square; and the reallocation Noun 1. reallocation - a share that has been allocated again allocation, allotment - a share set aside for a specific purpose 2. reallocation of private space was, following Ebenezer Howard Ebenezer Howard (29 January 1850 [1]–May 1 1928[2]) was a prominent British urban planner. Early life Howard travelled to America from England at the age of 21, moved to Nebraska, and soon discovered that he was not meant to be a farmer. , to democratize de·moc·ra·tize tr.v. de·moc·ra·tized, de·moc·ra·tiz·ing, de·moc·ra·tiz·es To make democratic. de·moc city society. It is ironic that the gated classical-colonial estates of 1990s 'New Urbanists' have the bossiest and least democratic of all planning policies, but succeed most in the supposedly liberal USA: apparently, it is the actual built quality of the city that determines its success; but how one misses that mid-century vision and excitement today. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion