This study examines the growth of the information society and
the impact of its technologies on city form and urban life. It
establishes a theoretical framework that integrates the
consequences of technology on the physical city, the dynamics of
its economic activities and location decisions, and its social
processes.
Tarik A. Fathy's main concern in this work is the relationship
between socioeconomic forces of social change and the physical
transformation process of the existing city in Western countries.
The focus is on the influence of technology, not as an autonomous
or deterministic factor, but as an analytical element in order to
investigate which form of the city accommodates these social
changes and which structure appropriates them. The complexity of
the social impact of technology and the broad interests of many
disciplines in technological change foreshadow an innovative
approach that establishes the influence of current social
transformations and their forms in urban life. Fathy argues that
the revolutionary use and application of information technologies
produces a telecity--a critical mass of inhabitants engaged in
interactive communication networks where remote services,
facilities, and work dominate life. He finds that this new telecity
is strikingly different in physical layout and needs, and economic
and social processes from the nineteenth- and early
twentieth-century city. He concludes this study of the telecity
concept by proposing four public policy implications. Scholars and
designers in the fields of urban studies, urban planning,
sociology, and urban/regional economics will find this work of
great interest.
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