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The Seduction of Place: The History and Future of Cities

door Joseph Rykwert

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What do our cities say about us? What have we made them, and how ought they to be? How has our vision of the city evolved over time, and can we really influence change and effect improvements?In this vibrant cultural history of the city, Joseph Rykwert explores the great cities of the modern world, examining their fabric and assessing how successfully they have met the needs of their inhabitants. From the teeming city centres of the industrial revolution to the exclusive gated suburbs ofthe 21st century, from the Parisian boulevards of Haussmann to the 'green' architecture of Emilio Ambasz, Rykwert charts the complex story of the growth of the city, setting architectural development firmly within a political, economic, social, and cultural context.Drawing on examples from Brasilia to Islamabad, Shanghai to Houston, Rykwert presents a fascinating analysis of urban growth, arguing forcefully that as voters and consumers we need to consider the economic, social, and cultural implications of developments and demonstrate our resistance to them ifnecessary. The arguments over the future of the Ground Zero site in Manhattan encapsulate the conflicting demands of civic pride and public utility set against private gain that vie for dominance in the 21st century, and exemplify the choices that, as citizens, we must all eventually make.… (meer)
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Toon 4 van 4
shelved at: 05 : Urban design /
  PeterKent2015 | Feb 14, 2016 |
shelved at: 05 : Urban design /
  mwbooks | Jan 22, 2016 |
I mostly enjoyed Rykwerk’s book. It seems a bit like Lewis Mumford’s City in History tome in a smaller format. In short, I feel it might be better titled The Seduction of All the Crap I Know About. Not a slam – I can only hope to be able to someday collate whatever it is I should remember about the built world into a single publication, but as I selected it as a commuter selection, it’s not a very good read at 20 minutes a pop. Rykwerk, at the subtitle suggests, concludes with possible panaceas for the 21st century city’s inevitable urban malaise with fairly basic suggestions similar to what we’ve already read from Jane Jacobs, The New Urbanists, and even Peter Blake. In short, he proffers urban and architectural “solutions” that are pretty common sense but indeed oft-ignored or only lightly implemented in most capitalist societies. Not really a strong conclusion to such a densely filled book, but overall, a well written history of almost everything about cities. ( )
  mjgrogan | May 14, 2009 |
The author takes an academic and often highly indirect approach to exploring the shape, design and planning of the city, as influenced by three factors:

* the Industrial Revolution
* utopianism
* architectural and design styles

In many ways he looks more at the ideas that have shaped the city, than the city itself.

He seems to think that he has made a coherent argument throughout the book, but I have to say, I didn't see it.

James Howard Kunstler's Geography of Nowhere is a much stronger book, however Seduction of Place is not bad as a companion work - it does much deeper dives into areas that Kunstler only skims over.

Part of the difference is in that Kunster's book is much more of a polemic, where as Rykwert's is more descriptive, with an academic style. On page 244, nearing the end of the book, Rykwert quotes a 1998 European Town-planning charter draft:

' "For most citizens and visitors," the charter says, for instance, "the character of a city is defined by the quality of its buildings and the spaces between them. In many cities, the urban fabric, including many heritage assets, have been destroyed by inappropriate plans for spatial reorganization, road construction, and uncontrolled actions by the property industry." '

Rykwert follows this by stating 'This dogmatically sums up what I have been arguing so far.' I have to say, it would have been better if he had clearly laid out of the terms and structure of his argument at the beginning of the book, because I really didn't find that this argument was conveyed throughout the book. ( )
  rakerman | Nov 18, 2007 |
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What do our cities say about us? What have we made them, and how ought they to be? How has our vision of the city evolved over time, and can we really influence change and effect improvements?In this vibrant cultural history of the city, Joseph Rykwert explores the great cities of the modern world, examining their fabric and assessing how successfully they have met the needs of their inhabitants. From the teeming city centres of the industrial revolution to the exclusive gated suburbs ofthe 21st century, from the Parisian boulevards of Haussmann to the 'green' architecture of Emilio Ambasz, Rykwert charts the complex story of the growth of the city, setting architectural development firmly within a political, economic, social, and cultural context.Drawing on examples from Brasilia to Islamabad, Shanghai to Houston, Rykwert presents a fascinating analysis of urban growth, arguing forcefully that as voters and consumers we need to consider the economic, social, and cultural implications of developments and demonstrate our resistance to them ifnecessary. The arguments over the future of the Ground Zero site in Manhattan encapsulate the conflicting demands of civic pride and public utility set against private gain that vie for dominance in the 21st century, and exemplify the choices that, as citizens, we must all eventually make.

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