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The Routledge Companion to Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Century Urban Design

Book

The Routledge Companion to Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Century Urban Design

DOI link for The Routledge Companion to Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Century Urban Design

The Routledge Companion to Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Century Urban Design book

A History of Shifting Manifestoes, Paradigms, Generic Solutions, and Specific Designs

The Routledge Companion to Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Century Urban Design

DOI link for The Routledge Companion to Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Century Urban Design

The Routledge Companion to Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Century Urban Design book

A History of Shifting Manifestoes, Paradigms, Generic Solutions, and Specific Designs
ByJon Lang
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2020
eBook Published 10 November 2020
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003016670
Pages 448
eBook ISBN 9781003016670
Subjects Built Environment, Urban Studies
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Lang, J. (2020). The Routledge Companion to Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Century Urban Design: A History of Shifting Manifestoes, Paradigms, Generic Solutions, and Specific Designs (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003016670

ABSTRACT

The Routledge Companion to Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Century Urban Design is a fully illustrated descriptive and explanatory history of the development of urban design ideas and paradigms of the past 150 years. The ideas and projects, hypothetical and built, range in scale from the city to the urban block level. The focus is on where the generic ideas originated, the projects that were designed following their precepts, the functions they address and/or afford, and what we can learn from them.

The morphology of a city—its built environment—evolves unselfconsciously as private and governmental investors self-consciously erect buildings and infrastructure in a pragmatic, piecemeal manner to meet their own ends. Philosophers, novelists, architects, and social scientists have produced myriad ideas about the nature of the built environment that they consider to be superior to those forms resulting from a laissez-faire attitude to urban development.

Rationalist theorists dream of ideal futures based on assumptions about what is good; empiricists draw inspirations from what they perceive to be working well in existing situations. Both groups have presented their advocacies in manifestoes and often in the form of generic solutions or illustrative designs. This book traces the history of these ideas and will become a standard reference for scholars and students interested in the history of urban spaces, including architects, planners, urban historians, urban geographers, and urban morphologists.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

part Prologue|14 pages

The Nature of Urban Design

part Part I|72 pages

Antecedents of Twentieth-Century Urban Design

chapter 1|14 pages

Religious Canons and Prescriptions

chapter 2|17 pages

The Classical and Beaux Arts Tradition

chapter 3|11 pages

Social and Philanthropic Urban Design

chapter 4|12 pages

The Garden Suburb

chapter 5|10 pages

The Urbanist Tradition

part Part II|74 pages

Early-Twentieth-Century Manifestoes, Paradigms, Generic Concepts, and Specific Designs

chapter 6|15 pages

The City Beautiful

chapter 7|21 pages

Modern Empiricism

chapter 8|30 pages

The Rationalist Response

part Part III|92 pages

Post–World War Two Pragmatic Urban Design and the Rationalist and Empiricist Responses

chapter 9|33 pages

The Post–World War Two Rationalists

chapter 10|30 pages

The Post–World War Two Empiricists

chapter 11|19 pages

The Postmodernist and the Deconstructivist Response

part Part IV|88 pages

Urban Design in an Age of Corporate Financial Capital

chapter 12|18 pages

Modernist, Neo-modernist, and Hyper-modernist Urban Design

chapter 13|12 pages

Hyper-modernism, Parametricism, and Urban Design

chapter 14|17 pages

The Empiricist Responses

chapter 15|21 pages

Sustainable Urbanism and Urban Design

chapter 16|10 pages

Smart Cities and Urban Design

part |35 pages

Epilogue

chapter 17|15 pages

A Critique of Twentieth- and Early-Twenty-First-Century Urban Design

chapter 18|16 pages

The Way Forward

Toward Compact Cities
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