Messy Cities

Why We Can't Plan Everything

John Lorinc (Hrsg.), Dylan Reid (Hrsg.), Zahra Ebrahim (Hrsg.), Leslie Woo (Hrsg.)

EPUB
ca. 15,99 (Lieferbar ab 03. Juni 2025)

Coach House Books img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Pädagogik

Beschreibung

Can messiness make our cities more livable, lively, and inclusive?

Crowded streets, sidewalk vendors, jumbled architecture, constant clamour, graffitied walls, parks gone wild: are these signs of a poorly managed city or indicators of urban vitality?

Messy Cities: Why We Can’t Plan Everything argues that spontaneity and urban work-around are not liabilities but essential elements in all thriving cities. Forty essays by a range of writers from around the world illuminate the role of messy urbanism in enabling creativity, enterprise, and grassroots initiatives to flourish within dense modern cities.

With pieces on guerrilla beaches, desire lines, urban interruptions, and the inner lives of unlovely buildings written by experts from all walks of life, Messy Cities makes the case for embracing disorder while not shying away from confronting its challenges.

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Schlagwörter

queer ecologies, Jane’s Walk, Hong Kong, flaneur, grassroots, ParkPeople, architecture, municipal, planning, 15 minute city, policy, heritage architecture, housing, guerrilla gardening, public space, urbanism, Tokyo, geography, pedestrian, placemaking, urban ecology, metropolitan, urban development