Dublin Core
Titre
London and other Great American Cities 50 years on
Sujet
Jacobs Jane, London, Londres, aménagement urbain, The death and life of great American cities, Power Anne, Hall Peter, Greenhalgh Stephen, Rogers Ben, renouvellement urbain, forme urbaine
Description
Abstract from the distributor :
Jane Jacobs’ book, first published in 1961, transformed the way we think about our cities and helped discredit the then near universal belief in slum clearance, high rise housing projects and urban motorways.
Building on close observation of her own Greenwich Village neighbourhood, Jacobs mounted a thorough and original defence of 'traditional' city forms against the dominant approaches to urban planning in her day, including the 'garden city' movement and Modernist city planning. She argued that dense, mixed income mix-used neighbourhoods, designed around short city blocks with busy amenity-lined streets and small parks, had a huge range of benefits unappreciated by modern urban planners who mistakenly associated the old city with all the evils of the 19th century slum. Jacobs claimed that cities could be great engines of cohesion, innovation, and prosperity, but only where they were properly led and managed.
But has her thinking stood the test of time? What did she get right and what wrong? And in particular what are the implications of her insights for London, the UK's largest, and most unequal city?
Anne Power is Professor of Social Policy at the London School of Economics.
Peter Hall is Bartlett Professor of Planning and Regeneration at UCL.
Stephen Greenhalgh is Leader of the Council, London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham.