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The Asian urban landscape contains nearly half of the planet's
inhabitants and more than half of its slum population living in
some of its oldest and densest cities. It encompasses some of the
world's oldest civilizations and colonizations, and today contains
some of the world's fastest growing cities and economies. As such
Asian cities create concomitant imagery - polarizations of poverty
and wealth, blurred lines between formality and informality, and
stark juxtapositions of ancient historic places with shimmering new
skylines. This book embraces the complexity and ambiguity of the
Asian urban landscape, and surveys its bewildering array of
multifarious urbanities and urbanisms. Twenty-four essays offer
scholarly reflections and positions on the complex forces and
issues shaping Asian cities today, looking at why Asian cities are
different from the West and whether they are treading a different
path to their futures. Their combined narrative - spanning from
Turkey to Japan and Mongolia to Indonesia - is framed around three
sections: Traditions reflects on indigenous urbanisms and historic
places, Tensions reflects on the legacies of Asia's East-West
dialectic through both colonialism and modernism and
Transformations examines Asia's new emerging utopias and urban
aspirations. The book claims that the histories and destinies of
cities across various parts of Asia are far too enmeshed to unpack
or oversimplify. Avoiding the categorization of Asian cities
exclusively by geographic location (south-east, Middle East), or
the convenient tagging of the term Asian on selective regional
parts of the continent, it takes a broad intellectual view of the
Asian urban landscape as a 'both...and' phenomenon; as a series of
diverse confluences - geographic, historic and political -
extending from the deserts of the Persian Gulf region to the Pearl
River Delta. Arguing for Asian cities to be taken seriously on
their own terms, this book represents Asia - as a fount of
extraordinary knowledge that can challenge our fundamental
preconceptions of what cities are and ought to be.
The act of identifying, protecting, restoring, and reusing
buildings, districts, and built landscapes of historic and cultural
significance is, at its best, a reflective and consequential
process of urban and socio-economic reform. It has the potential to
reconcile conflicting memories, meanings, and cultural tensions,
bridging and expanding the perceived boundaries of multiple
disciplines towards bigger aspirations of city-making and social
justice. How and where do such aspirations overlap and differ
across nations and societies across the world? In places with
different histories, governance structures, regulatory stringency,
and populist dispositions, who are the specific players, and what
are the actual processes that bring about bigger and deeper change
beyond just the conservation of an architectural or urban entity of
perceived value? This collection of scholarly articles by
theorists, academics, and practitioners explores the global
complexity, guises, and potential of heritage conservation. Going
from Tokyo to Cairo, Shenzhen to Rome, and Delhi to Moscow, this
volume examines a vast range of topics - indigenous habitats, urban
cores, vernacular infrastructure, colonial towns, squatters, burial
sites, war zones, and modern landmarks. It surfaces numerous
inherent issues - water stress, deforestation, social oppression,
poverty, religion, immigration, and polity, expanding the
definitions of heritage conservation as both a professional
discipline and socio-cultural catalyst. This book argues that the
intellectual and praxis limits of heritage conservation - as the
agency of reading, defining, and intervening with built heritage -
can be expansive, aimed at bigger positive change beyond a specific
subject or object; plural, enmeshed with multiple fields and
specializations; and empathetic, born from the actual
socio-political realities of a place.
The Asian urban landscape contains nearly half of the planet's
inhabitants and more than half of its slum population living in
some of its oldest and densest cities. It encompasses some of the
world's oldest civilizations and colonizations, and today contains
some of the world's fastest growing cities and economies. As such
Asian cities create concomitant imagery - polarizations of poverty
and wealth, blurred lines between formality and informality, and
stark juxtapositions of ancient historic places with shimmering new
skylines. This book embraces the complexity and ambiguity of the
Asian urban landscape, and surveys its bewildering array of
multifarious urbanities and urbanisms. Twenty-four essays offer
scholarly reflections and positions on the complex forces and
issues shaping Asian cities today, looking at why Asian cities are
different from the West and whether they are treading a different
path to their futures. Their combined narrative - spanning from
Turkey to Japan and Mongolia to Indonesia - is framed around three
sections: Traditions reflects on indigenous urbanisms and historic
places, Tensions reflects on the legacies of Asia's East-West
dialectic through both colonialism and modernism and
Transformations examines Asia's new emerging utopias and urban
aspirations. The book claims that the histories and destinies of
cities across various parts of Asia are far too enmeshed to unpack
or oversimplify. Avoiding the categorization of Asian cities
exclusively by geographic location (south-east, Middle East), or
the convenient tagging of the term Asian on selective regional
parts of the continent, it takes a broad intellectual view of the
Asian urban landscape as a 'both...and' phenomenon; as a series of
diverse confluences - geographic, historic and political -
extending from the deserts of the Persian Gulf region to the Pearl
River Delta. Arguing for Asian cities to be taken seriously on
their own terms, this book represents Asia - as a fount of
extraordinary knowledge that can challenge our fundamental
preconceptions of what cities are and ought to be.
The act of identifying, protecting, restoring, and reusing
buildings, districts, and built landscapes of historic and cultural
significance is, at its best, a reflective and consequential
process of urban and socio-economic reform. It has the potential to
reconcile conflicting memories, meanings, and cultural tensions,
bridging and expanding the perceived boundaries of multiple
disciplines towards bigger aspirations of city-making and social
justice. How and where do such aspirations overlap and differ
across nations and societies across the world? In places with
different histories, governance structures, regulatory stringency,
and populist dispositions, who are the specific players, and what
are the actual processes that bring about bigger and deeper change
beyond just the conservation of an architectural or urban entity of
perceived value? This collection of scholarly articles by
theorists, academics, and practitioners explores the global
complexity, guises, and potential of heritage conservation. Going
from Tokyo to Cairo, Shenzhen to Rome, and Delhi to Moscow, this
volume examines a vast range of topics - indigenous habitats, urban
cores, vernacular infrastructure, colonial towns, squatters, burial
sites, war zones, and modern landmarks. It surfaces numerous
inherent issues - water stress, deforestation, social oppression,
poverty, religion, immigration, and polity, expanding the
definitions of heritage conservation as both a professional
discipline and socio-cultural catalyst. This book argues that the
intellectual and praxis limits of heritage conservation - as the
agency of reading, defining, and intervening with built heritage -
can be expansive, aimed at bigger positive change beyond a specific
subject or object; plural, enmeshed with multiple fields and
specializations; and empathetic, born from the actual
socio-political realities of a place.
Urbanism Beyond 2020 explores numerous questions triggered by the
COVID-19 pandemic: Why is city making a health project? How are
ecological and human wellbeing interrelated? How can leadership and
governance help bridge gaps in our unjust cities? How might we
renew our relationship with dwellings and neighbourhoods? How
resilient and adaptable are our cities during uncertain times?
Amidst climate change and global warming, is the pandemic a prelude
to the challenges to come? Addressed to anyone invested in the
well-being of our cities, this collection of essays by an
accomplished urban designer and city planner reminds us why the
pointers to our future will not emerge exclusively from affluent
nations or less developed societies alone, why we live in an
interconnected world, and why this pandemic is a crucial period to
reexamine the impact of our cities on our planet's future.
Offers a comprehensive survey of affordable housing across the
world. Presents numerous case-studies and best-practices on
affordable housing design. Presents clear and concise strategies on
how to make cities more affordable and inclusive. Offers interviews
and conversations with globally known figures in progressive
architecture and city planning. How are efforts at making cities
more inclusive and equitable playing out across nations and
societies, with different governance structures and varying
political circumstances? How is affordable housing bridging
economic gaps across different social and cultural geographies?
This collection of fifty essays and case studies engages in these
important questions and explores a wide array of strategies and
approaches, extracting their overlaps and contrasts. It features
interviews with influential administrators and planners such as
Somsook Boonyabancha (Thailand), and Jaime Lerner (Brazil). It
showcases projects by globally known architects and urbanists such
as MVRDV (The Netherlands), and Alejandro Aravena (Chile). And it
offers discussions on uplifting the base of the economic pyramid
through low-income and slum-upgradation projects in Mali,
Venezuela, Bogota, Myanmar, and Pune. This volume is not only an
invaluable resource for architects and planners interested in the
design of affordable housing, but for anyone interested in the
global multiplicity and complexity of urban affordability,
liveability and social justice.
This volume examines the multifarious dimensions that constitute
the workings of the Hindu temple as an architectural and urban
built form. Eleven chapters reflect on Hindu temples from multiple
standpoints - tracing their elusive evolution from wayside shrines
as well as canonization into classical objects; questioning the
role of treatises containing their building rules; analyzing their
prescribed proportions and orders; examining their presence in, and
as, larger sacred habitats and ritualistic settings; and affirming
their influential role in the contemporary Indian metropolis.Going
beyond stereotypical presentations of Hindu temples dominated by
chronological and stylistic themes, this study, addressed to
architects, urbanists, and builders, combines historic scholarship,
documentation, personal observations and fieldwork to expand the
idea of the Hindu temple as a complex and contradictory cultural
entity, that is both formal and informal, monumental and modest,
historic and modern, and deserving of a far broader and deeper
understanding.
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