ABSTRACT

Baltimore: Reinventing an Industrial Legacy City is an exploration into the reinvention, self-reflection and boosterism of US legacy cities, taking Baltimore as the case study model to reveal the larger narrative. Author Klaus Philipsen investigates the modern urban condition and the systemic problems involved with adapting metropolitan regions into equitable and sustainable communities, covering topics such as growth, urban sprawl, the depletion of cities, social justice, smart city and open data, transportation, community development, sustainability and diversity. Baltimore’s proximity to the US capital, combined with its industrial past, presents the optimum viewpoint to investigate these challenges and draw parallels with cities across the world.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

part 1|32 pages

How we got where we are

chapter 1.1|2 pages

Population

From rank 2 to 26 and dropping

chapter 1.2|4 pages

Housing

From polished stoops to boarded shells and lofts

chapter 1.3|5 pages

Dispersal policies

From a compact city to suburban sprawl

chapter 1.4|4 pages

The inelastic city

From rapid growth to a “point of no return”

chapter 1.5|4 pages

Coming full circle

From riots to renaissance to riots

chapter 1.6|7 pages

Transportation

From streetcars to freeways to metro and light rail

chapter 1.7|4 pages

Making and production

From Bethlehem Steel to distribution warehouses and robots

part 2|75 pages

Case studies

chapter 2.1|9 pages

Sprawl and smart growth

chapter 2.2|10 pages

Transportation

chapter 2.3|25 pages

Housing and community development

chapter 2.4|11 pages

Preservation, adaptive reuse and heritage

chapter 2.5|18 pages

Innovation and making

part 3|20 pages

How to break the cycles

chapter 3.1|4 pages

Brownfield redevelopment

chapter 3.2|2 pages

Transportation

chapter 3.3|3 pages

Making and innovation

chapter 3.4|3 pages

Crowd-based production

chapter 3.5|3 pages

Staging a comeback

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion

Globalization, localization and cities