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The urban design reader / edited by Michael Larice and Elizabeth Macdonald.

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Fine Arts Library NA9040 .U68 2007
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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Larice, Michael, 1962-
Macdonald, Elizabeth, 1959-
Series:
Routledge urban reader series
The Routledge urban reader series
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
City planning.
Physical Description:
xii, 541 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm.
Place of Publication:
London ; New York : Routledge, 2007.
Summary:
The Urban Design Reader brings together some of the most influential writing on the historical development and contemporary practice of urban design. Emerging as a distinct field of environmental design practice in the late 1950s, urban design bridges the fields of architecture, planning, landscape architecture, civil engineering, urban development, and social science - with a focus on physical form and the social use of space. Among university programs, the design professions, interest groups and city governments around the world, the practice of urban design is recognized as a means of addressing 21st Century urban challenges. As planning and development processes have become more participatory in recent years, the number of people interested in improving the design of their cities and neighborhoods has also grown. The timeliness of The Urban Design Reader parallels recent public interest in making better cities and urban places.
This anthology includes forty-one selections that illuminate the history, theory and practice of urban design. In addition to classic writings from the field's luminaries, such as Jane Jacobs, William H. Whyte, and Kevin Lynch, The Urban Design Reader provides recent material on the urban design aspects of contemporary urbanism, place-making, density, sustainability, neighborhood planning, traffic calming, green infrastructure, and the public realm. The readings are organized into eight topical sections beginning with historical precedents, continuing with a variety of theoretical and pragmatic concerns, and concluding with material on current professional practice. The sections begin with introductory essays that contextualize and situate major themes within the field. In addition, introductions for each selection highlight important lessons emanating from the literature, as well as biographical information on the authors and suggested supplemental reading.
The Urban Design Reader provides a set of essential readings that will be valuable to design and planning students, public decision makers and design professionals. For those interested in the design of our neighborhoods, towns and cities, these selections offer an indispensable intellectual and practical foundation for the urban design field.
Contents:
Historical precedents for the urban design field
Normative theories of good city form
Place theories in urban design
Dimensions of place-making
Typology and morphology in urban design
Contemporary challenges and responses
Elements of the public realm
Practice and process.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
0415333865
0415333873
OCLC:
66526983

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