Toward an Understanding of the Metropolis
Author: Robert Murray Haig
Publisher:
Published: 1926
Total Pages:
ISBN-13:
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Author: Robert Murray Haig
Publisher:
Published: 1926
Total Pages:
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Robert Murray Haig
Publisher: New York : Arno Press
Published: 1976
Total Pages: 80
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Robert Murray Haig
Publisher:
Published: 196?
Total Pages: 63
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Robert Murray Haig
Publisher:
Published: 1926
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Robert Murray Haig
Publisher:
Published: 1926
Total Pages: 63
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: David Owen
Publisher: Penguin
Published: 2009-09-17
Total Pages: 253
ISBN-13: 1101140313
DOWNLOAD EBOOKLook out for David Owen's next book, Where the Water Goes. A challenging, controversial, and highly readable look at our lives, our world, and our future. Most Americans think of crowded cities as ecological nightmares, as wastelands of concrete and garbage and diesel fumes and traffic jams. Yet residents of compact urban centers, Owen shows, individually consume less oil, electricity, and water than other Americans. They live in smaller spaces, discard less trash, and, most important of all, spend far less time in automobiles. Residents of Manhattan—the most densely populated place in North America—rank first in public-transit use and last in percapita greenhouse-gas production, and they consume gasoline at a rate that the country as a whole hasn’t matched since the mid-1920s, when the most widely owned car in the United States was the Ford Model T. They are also among the only people in the United States for whom walking is still an important means of daily transportation. These achievements are not accidents. Spreading people thinly across the countryside may make them feel green, but it doesn’t reduce the damage they do to the environment. In fact, it increases the damage, while also making the problems they cause harder to see and to address. Owen contends that the environmental problem we face, at the current stage of our assault on the world’s nonrenewable resources, is not how to make teeming cities more like the pristine countryside. The problem is how to make other settled places more like Manhattan, whose residents presently come closer than any other Americans to meeting environmental goals that all of us, eventually, will have to come to terms with.
Author: William Cronon
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Published: 2009-11-02
Total Pages: 590
ISBN-13: 0393072452
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and Winner of the Bancroft Prize. "No one has written a better book about a city…Nature's Metropolis is elegant testimony to the proposition that economic, urban, environmental, and business history can be as graceful, powerful, and fascinating as a novel." —Kenneth T. Jackson, Boston Globe
Author: Douglas S. Kelbaugh
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Published: 2015-07-16
Total Pages: 240
ISBN-13: 0295997516
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRepairing the American Metropolis is based on Douglas Kelbaugh’s Common Place: Toward Neighborhood and Regional Design, first published in 1997. It is more timely and significant than ever, with new text, charts, and images on architecture, sprawl, and New Urbanism, a movement that he helped pioneer. Theory and policies have been revised, refined, updated, and developed as compelling ways to plan and design the built environment. This is an indispensable book for architects, urban designers and planners, landscape architects, architecture and urban planning students and scholars, government officials, developers, environmentalists, and citizens interested in understanding and shaping the American metropolis.
Author: Chiara Cavalieri
Publisher: Park Publishing (WI)
Published: 2019
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13: 9783038600626
DOWNLOAD EBOOKTwo contrasting terms are joined to conjugate the traditional idea of metropolis with horizontality; to combine the center of a vast territory--hierarchically organized, dense, vertical, and produced by polarization--with the idea of a more diffuse, isotropic urban condition, where center and periphery blur. Beyond a simplistic center versus periphery opposition, the concept of a horizontal metropolis reveals the dispersed condition as a potential asset, rather than a limit, to the construction of a sustainable and innovative urban dimension. Around 1990, Terry McGee, an urban researcher at University of British Columbia, coined the term desakota, deriving from Indonesian “desa” (village) and “kota” (city). Desakota areas typically occur in Asia, especially South East Asia. The term describes an area situated outside the periurban zone, often sprawling alongside arterial and communication roads, sometimes from one agglomeration to the next. They are characterized by high population density and intensive agricultural use, but differ from densely populated rural areas by more urban-like characteristics. The new book The Horizontal Metropolis investigates such areas alongside examples in the US, Italy, and Switzerland. The study highlights the advantages of the concept and its relevance under economical, ecological, and social aspects. The concept reflects a vision of global urbanization that does no longer allow for “outside” areas and that will test the urban ecosystem to its limits.
Author: Hugh Ferriss
Publisher: Courier Corporation
Published: 2012-03-14
Total Pages: 146
ISBN-13: 0486139441
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe metropolis of the future — as perceived by architect Hugh Ferriss in 1929 — was both generous and prophetic in vision. This illustrated essay on the modern city and its future features 59 illustrations.