The Seduction of Place: The City in the Twenty-first CenturyOne of the most highly respected architectural historians of our time takes on the question of whether or not we have the cities we need and what we can do to create them. To understand why people love or hate their cities and why cities succeed or fail their inhabitants, Joseph Rykwert examines a broad spectrum of urban centers. Among them are Mexico City, the world's largest metropolis, sprawled around its old center; Berlin, newly reunited and furiously rebuilding; New Delhi and Islamabad, new capitals that exist alongside older towns; grandly planned cities like Chandigarh, Canberra, and Brasilia; and more modest new towns like Columbia, Maryland, and Celebration, Florida, built in an attempt to correct the problems endemic to big cities. Rykwert looks at image, style, and ornament; at public space and buildings; at infrastructure and street layout; at the visual qualities of contrast, strife, and energy that contribute to a city's appeal. Discussing both successes and failures, he suggests ways in which we can retain--or return to--the sense of place and individuation that determines the nourishing character and soul of the urban landscape. |
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Page 135
... become more difficult to devise and slow to attract validation by the public . That is why many artists who are invited to commemo- rate something or someone turn to light displays or temporary installa- tions . A much bigger and more ...
... become more difficult to devise and slow to attract validation by the public . That is why many artists who are invited to commemo- rate something or someone turn to light displays or temporary installa- tions . A much bigger and more ...
Page 153
... become one of the staples of world tourism . Walt Disney himself , having created the very profitable Anaheim Disneyland against the advice of his associates and his bankers , had much greater ambitions . He had built it on 160 acres ...
... become one of the staples of world tourism . Walt Disney himself , having created the very profitable Anaheim Disneyland against the advice of his associates and his bankers , had much greater ambitions . He had built it on 160 acres ...
Page 236
... become the only universally recognized insti- tutional building , and it has therefore assumed an unprecedented impor- tance as a type in modern cities . In that modern sense , " museums " have existed for three hundred years or so ...
... become the only universally recognized insti- tutional building , and it has therefore assumed an unprecedented impor- tance as a type in modern cities . In that modern sense , " museums " have existed for three hundred years or so ...
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American architects architecture Avenue became become blocks Britain British builders building built called Calvert Vaux capital central Chandigarh Chicago church competition Crystal Palace Daniel Burnham decades designed dominant Ebenezer Howard economic engineer English Europe European factory Fourier France Frederick Law Olmsted French garden city George Gilbert Scott Gothic grid grid plan hall high-rise housing impact industry inevitably inhabitants institutions iron J. M. W. Turner land later Le Corbusier linear city London Louis Manhattan manufacturers ment modern monuments move Museum Napoléon III Nations nineteenth century organized ornament Paris Parisian park phalanstery planners political population problems produced proposed quoted railway reformers Revolution River roads Saint seemed settlements skyscraper social society Soviet space square steam Street style suburbs success tion tower town traffic United urban fabric Urbanists utopian vast workers York zoning