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All Ebook Formats $27.99 ISBN: 9781597262682 Published April 2006
Hardcover $45.00 ISBN: 9781559631846 Published June 2003
Paperback $28.00 ISBN: 9781597260855 Published April 2006

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Global City Blues

 Global City Blues
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Daniel Solomon

272 pages | 6 x 9

"This is a book about the making of cities and the buildings that compose them. It is about the conditions under which an architect engaged in those activities now works, how those conditions evolved and why they are changing. It is about the qualities of life that are threatened by the ways cities are built at the beginning of the 21st century and intelligent response to those threats. It is about why the city planning ideas and the cultural cuisinart that came in the box with modern architecture are a lingering menace." -- from Global City Blues.


Much of the architecture and town planning of the past fifty years has been based on an unsubstantiated optimism about the promise of modernity. In our rush to embrace the future, we invented new ways of building that rejected the past and sent people headlong into a placeless limbo where they are insulated from each other and cut off from such basic experiences of location as the weather and the time of day. Despite calamitous results, many architects and planners remain enamored of the modernist ideals that underlie these changes.


In Global City Blues, renowned architect Daniel Solomon presents a perceptive overview and an insightful assessment of how the power and seductiveness of modernist ideals led us astray. Through a series of independent but linked essays, he takes the reader on a personal picaresque, introducing us to people, places, and ideas that have shaped thinking about planning and building and that laid the foundation for his beliefs about the world we live in and the kind of world we should be making.


As an alternative, Daniel Solomon discusses the ideas and precepts of New Urbanism, a reform movement he helped found that has risen to prominence in the past decade. New Urbanism offers a vital counterbalance to the forces of sprawl, urban disintegration, and placelessness that have so transformed the contemporary landscape.


Global City Blues is a fresh and original look at what the history of urban form can teach us about creating built environments that work for people.

Introduction
   
Part 1:  Nearness
 Chapter 1: Measure the Night with Bells
 Chapter 2: Peaches
 Chapter 3: Alice
 Chapter 4: The Monster
   
Part 2:  Times
 Chapter 5: Eichlers
 Chapter 6: Three Eras
 Chapter 7: The Dawn of Nonhistory
 Chapter 8: The Moderns
 Chapter 9: Turning Twenty
 Chapter 10: Deliverance at the White Table
 Chapter 11: Panic
 Chapter 12: Erasure
   
Part 3:  Site Versus Zeit
 Chapter 13: Colin Rowe
 Chapter 14: Black Plans
 Chapter 15: Style
 Chapter 16: Why the City Is Not a Work of Art
 Chapter 17: Another Truth
   
Part 4:  Urbanism
 Chapter 18: At Home
 Chapter 19: The Twelfth Map
 Chapter 20: Surviving Success
 Chapter 21: Out of Town
 Chapter 22: Gemeindebauen
   
Part 5:  In Asia
 Chapter 23: Dorothy Lamour on a Flying Pigeon
 Chapter 24: The Diagram
 Chapter 25: The Prosperity Bomb
 Chapter 26: Nearness for the Rich: The Case of Adrian Zecha
   
Part 6:  Cybertime
 Chapter 27: Good Technology, Bad Technology
 Chapter 28: New Words
 Chapter 29: The Interview
   
Part 7:  Signs of Life
 Chapter 30: CNU
 Chapter 31: HOPE VI
 Chapter 32: Monuments
 Chapter 33: Plano
   
Epilogue
Bibliography
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