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Sustaining Cities - Urban Policies, Practices, and Perceptions (Hardcover, New)
Linda Krause; Contributions by Alfonso Iracheta, Linda McCarthy, Sherry Ahrentzen, Charles Waldheim, …
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R4,437
R2,939
Discovery Miles 29 390
Save R1,498 (34%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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What has happened to cities after the global economic recession?
Sustaining Cities answers this question by explaining how failed
governmental policies contributed to urban problems and offering
best practices for solving them. From social scientists and urban
planners to architects and literary and film critics, the authors
of this unique collection suggest real responses to this crisis.
Could the drastic declines in housing markets have been avoided?
Yes, if we reframe our housing values. Do you want to attract
corporate investment to your town? You might want to think twice
about doing so. The extinction of the "Celtic Tiger" may be charted
in statistics, but the response in popular Irish mystery novels is
much more compelling. China, while not immune to market
vicissitudes, still booms, but at a considerable cost to its urban
identities. Whether constructing a sustainable social framework for
Mexican mega-cities or a neighborhood in London, these nine essays
consider some strikingly similar strategies. And perhaps, as the
contributors suggest, it's time to look beyond the usual boundaries
of urban, suburban, and exurban to forge new links among these
communities that will benefit all citizens. Accessible to anyone
with an interest in how cities cope today, Sustaining Cities
presents a cautionary tale with a hopeful ending. |What has
happened to cities after the global economic recession? Sustaining
Cities answers this question by explaining how failed governmental
policies contributed to urban problems and offering best practices
for solving them. From social scientists and urban planners to
architects and literary and film critics, the authors of this
unique collection suggest real responses to this crisis. Could the
drastic declines in housing markets have been avoided? Yes, if we
reframe our housing values. Do you want to attract corporate
investment to your town? You might want to think twice about doing
so. The extinction of the "Celtic Tiger" may be charted in
statistics, but the response in popular Irish mystery novels is
much more compelling. China, while not immune to market
vicissitudes, still booms, but at a considerable cost to its urban
identities. Whether constructing a sustainable social framework for
Mexican mega-cities or a neighborhood in London, these nine essays
consider some strikingly similar strategies. And perhaps, as the
contributors suggest, it's time to look beyond the usual boundaries
of urban, suburban, and exurban to forge new links among these
communities that will benefit all citizens. Accessible to anyone
with an interest in how cities cope today, Sustaining Cities
presents a cautionary tale with a hopeful ending.
Is Landscape . . . ? surveys multiple and myriad definitions of
landscape. Rather than seeking a singular or essential
understanding of the term, the collection postulates that landscape
might be better read in relation to its cognate terms across
expanded disciplinary and professional fields. The publication
pursues the potential of multiple provisional working definitions
of landscape to both disturb and develop received understandings of
landscape architecture. These definitions distinguish between
landscape as representational medium, academic discipline, and
professional identity. Beginning with an inquiry into the origins
of the term itself, Is Landscape . . . .? features essays by a
dozen leading voices shaping the contemporary reading of landscape
as architecture and beyond.
Is Landscape . . . ? surveys multiple and myriad definitions of
landscape. Rather than seeking a singular or essential
understanding of the term, the collection postulates that landscape
might be better read in relation to its cognate terms across
expanded disciplinary and professional fields. The publication
pursues the potential of multiple provisional working definitions
of landscape to both disturb and develop received understandings of
landscape architecture. These definitions distinguish between
landscape as representational medium, academic discipline, and
professional identity. Beginning with an inquiry into the origins
of the term itself, Is Landscape . . . .? features essays by a
dozen leading voices shaping the contemporary reading of landscape
as architecture and beyond.
A definitive intellectual history of landscape urbanism It has
become conventional to think of urbanism and landscape as opposing
one another-or to think of landscape as merely providing temporary
relief from urban life as shaped by buildings and infrastructure.
But, driven in part by environmental concerns, landscape has
recently emerged as a model and medium for the city, with some
theorists arguing that landscape architects are the urbanists of
our age. In Landscape as Urbanism, one of the field's pioneers
presents a powerful case for rethinking the city through landscape.
Charles Waldheim traces the roots of landscape as a form of
urbanism from its origins in the Renaissance through the twentieth
century. Growing out of progressive architectural culture and
populist environmentalism, the concept was further informed by the
nineteenth-century invention of landscape architecture as a "new
art" charged with reconciling the design of the industrial city
with its ecological and social conditions. In the late twentieth
and early twenty-first centuries, as urban planning shifted from
design to social science, and as urban design committed to
neotraditional models of town planning, landscape urbanism emerged
to fill a void at the heart of the contemporary urban project.
Generously illustrated, Landscape as Urbanism examines works from
around the world by designers ranging from Ludwig Hilberseimer,
Andrea Branzi, and Frank Lloyd Wright to James Corner, Adriaan
Geuze, and Michael Van Valkenburgh. The result is the definitive
account of an emerging field that is likely to influence the design
of cities for decades to come.
Airports are central to the life of cities but have remained
relatively peripheral in design discourse. In Airport Landscape,
case study projects for the ecological enhancement of operating
airports and the conversion of abandoned airports demonstrate,
through a range of practices, the significance of airports as sites
of design.
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Technical Lands (Paperback)
Jeffrey S Nesbit, Charles Waldheim
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R15,733
R770
Discovery Miles 7 700
Save R14,963 (95%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Technical lands are spaces united by their "exceptional"
status-their remote locations, delimited boundaries, secured
accessibility, and vigilant management. Designating land as
"technical" is thus a political act. Doing so entails dividing,
marginalizing, and rendering portions of the Earth inaccessible and
invisible. An anti-visuality of technical lands enables forms of
hypervisibility and surveillance through the rhetorical veil of
technology. Including the political and physical boundaries,
technical lands are used in highly aestheticized geographies to
resist debate surrounding production and governance. These critical
sites and spaces range from disaster exclusion and demilitarized
zones to prison yards, industrial extraction sites, airports, and
spaceports. The identification and instrumentalization of technical
lands have increased in scale and complexity since the rise of
neoliberalization. Yet, the precise theoretical contours that
define these geographies remain unclear. Technical Lands: A
Critical Primer brings together authors from a diverse array of
disciplines, geographies, and epistemologies to interrogate and
theorize the meaning and increasing significance of technical
lands.
What has happened to cities after the global economic recession?
Sustaining Cities answers this question by explaining how failed
governmental policies contributed to urban problems and offering
best practices for solving them. From social scientists and urban
planners to architects and literary and film critics, the authors
of this unique collection suggest real responses to this crisis.
Could the drastic declines in housing markets have been avoided?
Yes, if we reframe our housing values. Do you want to attract
corporate investment to your town? You might want to think twice
about doing so. The extinction of the "Celtic Tiger" may be charted
in statistics, but the response in popular Irish mystery novels is
much more compelling. China, while not immune to market
vicissitudes, still booms, but at a considerable cost to its urban
identities. Whether constructing a sustainable social framework for
Mexican mega-cities or a neighborhood in London, these nine essays
consider some strikingly similar strategies. And perhaps, as the
contributors suggest, it's time to look beyond the usual boundaries
of urban, suburban, and exurban to forge new links among these
communities that will benefit all citizens. Accessible to anyone
with an interest in how cities cope today, Sustaining Cities
presents a cautionary tale with a hopeful ending.
When you think of modern architecture, you think of Chicago, the
mythical birthplace of the skyscraper, the cradle of
twentieth-century American design, and the home of iconic works by
such heroic modernist figures as Louis Sullivan, Ludwig Mies van
der Rohe, and Frank Lloyd Wright. Idealized and commodified through
tourism and contemporary culture, the city's skyline and landmark
buildings are evidence of the founding myths of the modern movement
internationally.In "Chicago Architecture," Charles Waldheim and
Katerina Ruedi Ray revise and offer alternatives to the archetypal
story of modern architecture in Chicago. Together with an esteemed
group of contributors they assert that the mythic status of Chicago
architecture has distorted our understanding of the historical
circumstances in which it was realized. This searching volume
illuminates the importance of photographs, books, magazines, and
other media in the cultivation of an international audience for
Chicago architecture; it explores the pivotal role of real estate
developers, finance and insurance sectors, and speculative capital
markets in the development of the city itself; and perhaps most
notably, it examines a wide variety of overlooked architectural
works and their creators-individuals who did not fit into the
dominant modernist narrative. Offering new insights on Chicago
public housing and O'Hare International Airport, on the Columbian
Exposition and Marina City, on the city's grid system and the place
of women architects in the story of Chicago modernism, and on the
subjective experience of living inside Chicago's most well-known
buildings, "Chicago Architecture" is a work of enormous scope and
vision--a book as heady asthe city it considers.
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