ABSTRACT

This book examines the overlapping spaces in modern Western cities to explore the small-scale processes that shaped these cities between c.1750 and 1900. It highlights the ways in which time and space matter, framing individual actions and practices and their impact on larger urban processes.

It draws on the original and detailed studies of cities in Europe and North America through a micro-geographical approach to unravel urban practices, experiences and representations at three different scales: the dwelling, the street and the neighbourhood. Part I explores the changing spatiality of housing, examining the complex and contingent relationship between public and private, and commercial and domestic, as well as the relationship between representations and lived experiences. Part II delves into the street as a thoroughfare, connecting the city, but also as a site of contestation over the control and character of urban spaces. Part III draws attention to the neighbourhood as a residential grouping and as a series of spaces connecting flows of people integrating the urban space. Drawing on a range of methodologies, from space syntax and axial analysis to detailed descriptions of individual buildings, this book blends spatial theory and ideas of place with micro-history.

With its fresh perspectives on the Western city created through the built environment and the everyday actions of city dwellers, the book will interest historical geographers, urban historians and architects involved in planning of cities across Europe and North America.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

part I|70 pages

Houses and households

chapter 2|20 pages

Toronto’s early apartment houses

A micro-geography

chapter 3|18 pages

The brilliant idea of the book-keeper Johan Peter Frisk

A micro-historical study 1

chapter 4|17 pages

The shop and the home

Commercial and domestic space in 18th-century England

chapter 5|13 pages

Representing a disreputable house

part II|73 pages

Streets and pavements

chapter 6|18 pages

Sidewalks and alignment of the streets

The gap between large-scale planning and the building-scale in the 18th and 19th centuries (Brussels-Paris)

chapter 7|20 pages

Liberalism underfoot

A micro-geography of street paving and social dissolution – Brunswick Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, 1898–99

chapter 8|16 pages

Policing Stockholm’s filth

Flows to fixedness, 1776–1836 1

chapter 9|17 pages

Representing the ‘other’ Berlin, c.1900

Micro-geographies of the proletarian city

part III|64 pages

Neighbourhoods

chapter 10|20 pages

Public houses and hidden networks

Roles of women in mid-19th-century Montreal

chapter 12|15 pages

Trouble at the edge of town

Policing Montreal’s urban periphery in the middle of the 19th century

chapter 13|5 pages

Conclusions