Description

Book Synopsis
A hard-hitting, highly readable look at what makes cities work -- or not work.

Trade Review
"Concern with traffic, environmental indifference and careless land development patterns, indeed, growing awareness of the many consequences of sprawl has led to calls for 'smart growth.' One of the smartest ways to prepare to effectuate smarter growth is to read How Cities Work. In a gentle but lucid and persuasive way Alex Marshall reminds us that the responsibility for making and maintaining good communities is a public one--that city-building is a public art dependent on public leadership, not acquiescence to private caprice. Anyone interested in helping to sustain rather than complain about the loss of community must read this book." --Alex Krieger, Chair, Department of Urban Planning and Design, Harvard Graduate School of Design "This is an outstanding book that I hope and expect will make a major contribution to the current debate on cities and suburbs." --Robert Fishman, author of American Planning Tradition: Culture and Policy and Bourgeois Utopias: The Rise and Fall of Suburbia " ... rich in evocative metaphors ... written in a lively style"--Geography, January 2002 "How Cities Work is an engaging read, containing important messages relevant not only to those in the urban design profession, but also to the wider public who have a role in deciding how cities should be shaped."--Journal of Urban Design, Vol. 7 No. 3, 2002

Table of Contents
  • Introduction: The Sex of Cities
  • Chapter 1: A Tale of Two Towns: Kissimmee versus Celebration and the New Urbanism
  • Chapter 2: The End of Place
  • Chapter 3: The Deconstructed City: The Silicon Valley
  • Chapter 4: Trading Places: The City and the Suburb
  • Chapter 5: Jackson Heights: An Anachronism Finds Its Way
  • Chapter 6: The Master Hand: The Role of Government in Building Cities
  • Chapter 7: Portland and Oregon: Taming the Forces That Create the Modern Metropolitan Area
  • Chapter 8: No Place Called Home: Community at the Millennium
  • Chapter 9: Conclusion. Getting There: Building Healthy Cities
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Selected References
  • Index

How Cities Work

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 27 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Alex Marshall

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      Publisher: University of Texas Press
      Publication Date: Publication Date: 01/01/2001
      ISBN13: 9780292752405, 978-0292752405
      ISBN10: 0292752407

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A hard-hitting, highly readable look at what makes cities work -- or not work.

      Trade Review
      "Concern with traffic, environmental indifference and careless land development patterns, indeed, growing awareness of the many consequences of sprawl has led to calls for 'smart growth.' One of the smartest ways to prepare to effectuate smarter growth is to read How Cities Work. In a gentle but lucid and persuasive way Alex Marshall reminds us that the responsibility for making and maintaining good communities is a public one--that city-building is a public art dependent on public leadership, not acquiescence to private caprice. Anyone interested in helping to sustain rather than complain about the loss of community must read this book." --Alex Krieger, Chair, Department of Urban Planning and Design, Harvard Graduate School of Design "This is an outstanding book that I hope and expect will make a major contribution to the current debate on cities and suburbs." --Robert Fishman, author of American Planning Tradition: Culture and Policy and Bourgeois Utopias: The Rise and Fall of Suburbia " ... rich in evocative metaphors ... written in a lively style"--Geography, January 2002 "How Cities Work is an engaging read, containing important messages relevant not only to those in the urban design profession, but also to the wider public who have a role in deciding how cities should be shaped."--Journal of Urban Design, Vol. 7 No. 3, 2002

      Table of Contents
      • Introduction: The Sex of Cities
      • Chapter 1: A Tale of Two Towns: Kissimmee versus Celebration and the New Urbanism
      • Chapter 2: The End of Place
      • Chapter 3: The Deconstructed City: The Silicon Valley
      • Chapter 4: Trading Places: The City and the Suburb
      • Chapter 5: Jackson Heights: An Anachronism Finds Its Way
      • Chapter 6: The Master Hand: The Role of Government in Building Cities
      • Chapter 7: Portland and Oregon: Taming the Forces That Create the Modern Metropolitan Area
      • Chapter 8: No Place Called Home: Community at the Millennium
      • Chapter 9: Conclusion. Getting There: Building Healthy Cities
      • Acknowledgments
      • Notes
      • Selected References
      • Index

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