ABSTRACT

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.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Framing the Asian city

part 1|82 pages

Traditions Editor's introduction

chapter 1|10 pages

Anointed Cities

The incremental urbanism of Hindu India

chapter 2|9 pages

Cultivating Cultural Memory

Observing ethnic transitions in Inner Mongolia

chapter 3|10 pages

The Paradise Between Two Worlds

Rereading Taj Mahal and its environs

chapter 4|10 pages

Vernacular Shifts

Observing dwelling patterns in Anatolian Turkey

chapter 5|10 pages

Axes and Alleyways

The tradition of duality in contemporary Korean cities

chapter 7|10 pages

The New Old City

Nostalgia, representation and gentrification in historic Damascus

part 2|84 pages

Tensions Editor's introduction

chapter 9|11 pages

Tensions Manifested

Reading the Viceroy's House in New Delhi

chapter 10|9 pages

Macau Paradox

Post-colonial Portuguese-Chinese urban manifestations

chapter 11|10 pages

Le Corbusier's Ruin

The changing face of Chandigarh's Capitol

chapter 12|10 pages

High Dreams and Stark Realities

Reading Islamabad

chapter 13|9 pages

An (Almost) All-American City

The vision and legacy of the Tehran Comprehensive Plan

chapter 15|10 pages

Manifesting Democracy

Public space and the search for identity in post-war Japan

chapter 16|11 pages

The Post-Colonial Unconscious

Observing mega-imagistic urban projects in Asia

part 3|86 pages

Transformations Editor's introduction

chapter 17|10 pages

Global Architecture and Ethnic Enclaves

Reading Kuala Lumpur's city centre

chapter 18|10 pages

Making Way for a Global Metropolis

Mumbai's rapidly transforming informal sector

chapter 19|10 pages

From Handshake Buildings to Golf Villas

How the flash cities of Manchester and Shenzhen came of age

chapter 20|12 pages

Reshaping Hong Kong

Dimensions of change in a compact city

chapter 21|9 pages

Building Utopias

China's emerging new town movement

chapter 22|10 pages

Vertical Urbanism, Horizontal Urbanity

Notes from east Asian cities

chapter 23|10 pages

The Museum as Economic Catalyst

Abu Dhabi's new cultural district

chapter 24|11 pages

The ‘Dubai Effect'

The Gulf, the art world and globalization

chapter |2 pages

Epilogue

Engaging the Asian city