Cover art for The American City: What Works, What Doesn't
Published
Mcgraw Hill Usa, November 2013
ISBN
9780071801621
Format
Hardcover, 640 pages
Dimensions
28.2cm × 22.4cm × 4.3cm

The American City: What Works, What Doesn't 3rd edition

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The definitive guide to urban planning and design--completely updated and now in full colorIn the Third Edition of The American City: What Works, What Doesn't, award-winning city planner and renowned urban scholar Alexander Garvin examines more than 350 programs and projects that have been implemented nationwide in 150 cities and suburbs, evaluates their successes and failures, and offers relevant lessons learnedfrom them.

Nearly all of the book's 650 illustrations are now in full color and consist almost entirely of photographs, maps, and diagrams produced especially for the Third Edition. Garvin discusses major urban initiatives that have emerged over the past two decades, such as Chicago's Millennium Park, Houston's Uptown Business District, and Metropolitan Denver's FasTracks multicounty rapid transitnetwork. He reexamines the wide range of places and strategies covered in the previous edition, offering new analyses and insights. A new chapter on retrofitting the city for a modern commercial economy is included.

This practical guide presents six key ingredients of project success--market, location, design, financing, time, and entrepreneurship--and explains how to combine these elements in a mutually reinforcing manner. Garvin demonstrates how the synthesis of individual and private-sector efforts, community-level action, and broad-based government policy can--and has--achieved urban and suburban regeneration.

COVERAGE INCLUDES:

A realistic approach to city and suburban planning

Ingredients of success--market, location, design, financing, time, and entrepreneurship

Parks, playgrounds, and open space

Retail shopping

Palaces for the people--libraries, stadiums, museums, and other public facilities

Retrofitting the city for a modern commercial economy

The life and death of the City of Tomorrow--implications of national urban redevelopment programs

Downtown management

Increasing the housing supply

Reducing housing costs

Housing rehabilitation

Clearing the slums

Revitalizing neighborhoods

Residential suburbs

New-towns-in-town

New-towns-in-the-country

Land use regulation

Historic preservation

Comprehensive planning

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