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All Ebook Formats $24.99 ISBN: 9781597267762 Published August 2009
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The Option of Urbanism

Investing in a New American Dream

The Option of Urbanism
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Christopher B. Leinberger

224 pages | 6 x 9

Americans are voting with their feet to abandon strip malls and suburban sprawl, embracing instead a new type of community where they can live, work, shop, and play within easy walking distance. In The Option of Urbanism visionary developer and strategist Christopher B. Leinberger explains why government policies have tilted the playing field toward one form of development over the last sixty years: the drivable suburb. Rooted in the driving forces of the economy—car manufacturing and the oil industry—this type of growth has fostered the decline of community, contributed to urban decay, increased greenhouse gas emissions, and contributed to the rise in obesity and asthma.

 

Highlighting both the challenges and the opportunities for this type of development, The Option of Urbanism shows how the American Dream is shifting to include cities as well as suburbs and how the financial and real estate communities need to respond to build communities that are more environmentally, socially, and financially sustainable.

“Could it possibly be that [metropolitan] Washington, for years bashed by politicians, its [city] population shrinking and, at one point, almost bankrupt, has become a model of how the entire nation might smartly develop in the 21st century? I never thought I'd see the day. But Christopher Leinberger… makes a startling case for it… in his book.”
 
Neal Peirce, Washington Post Writers Group


In his new book, the latest of his significant contributions to New Urbanism, Christopher Leinberger says American development comes in two basic patterns: "drivable sub-urbanism" and "walkable urbanism." Leinberger's aim is to show how these two kinds of development function and to expalain why it's in everyone's interest to make sure that walkable urbansim becomes more commonplace.
Philip Langdon, New Urban News


From Planetizen's Top 10 Books List, 2008. "The new American Dream presented in this quick and easy read is one similar to the American Dream of the past: a slower-paced and neighborhood-centric lifestyle."
 
Planetizen


"In delightfully readable prose, Professor Leinberger overwhelms us with the advantages of development that is dense enough and mixed enough to make walking and transit worth it, while illuminating the unintended urban consequences of land use regulations, Wall Street finance, and the eleven o'clock news."
Douglas Kelbaugh, FAIA, dean and professor of architecture and urban planning, University of Michigan, A. Alfred Taubman College of Architecture + Urban Planni


"Chris Leinberger has spent many years thinking about real estate economics and how our culture is affected by our built environment.  This book offers a cogent argument for changing that environment to achieve more lasting values, both economic and cultural."
Robert Davis, developer and founder of Seaside, Florida


"Leinberger, a developer who teaches real estate at the University of Michigan, may be the boldest prophet of walkability anywhere."
Alan Ehrenhalt, Governing magazine


"The Option of Urbanism: Investing in a New American Dream is free of jargon and, more important, free of ideological resentments."
 
 
Planning


"In this book, [Chris Leinberger] carefully explains the decisions that have made the 'drivable suburban' model the dominant one and highlights the obvious and unintended consequences that come from spending 35 percent of the nation's weatlh building in this way, to the virtual exclusion of other approaches."
Ray Bert, Civil Engineering Journal


"Christopher Leinberger, a visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution who has called for D.C. to revisit its building-height limits, tracks the politics that led to auto-based development and shows how developers and their financial backers can build more sustainable communities. He doesn't mince words."
Washington Business Journal


"Leinberger isn't just a theoretician. He's a former new urbanist land developer. As he shows, if we're serious about reducing our car dependency, we need to go beyond making the personal decision to walk; we need to advocate for chagnes that will make walking a viable option for more Americans."
Stacey Moncrieff, Realtor magazine


"In The Option of Urbanism, Leinberger deftly shares his wealth of knowledge through the musings of a writer, the patience of an academic, and the technical abilities of an active developer. The book is straightforward and manages to be an enjoyable reading experience for just about anyone interested in where the developing landscape goes from here."
Howard Kozloff, Urban Land magazine


"The Option of Urbanism is a great read."
John Calimente, Re:place online magazine


"In The Option of Urbanism, Christopher B. Leinberger aims to present a happy alternative to the usual apocalyptic accounts of urban srpawl and its consequences."
Jeanne Haffner, The Next American City


"Leinberger, a developer who teaches real estate at the University of Michigan, may be the boldest prophet of walkability anywhere. ''The United States,'' he writes, ''is on the verge of a new phase in constructing its built environment.''
Alan Ehrenhalt, Governing magazine


"Christopher B. Leinberger admirably chronicles the real estate industry's critical role in the evolving nature of the Americna Dream.  Drawing equally from history, professional experience, research and pop culture, he makes a very readable case for the desirability and realization of the next American Dream - walkable urbanism.  Reading his analysis reinvigorates my passion for the dynamic potential of our industry."
Albert B. Ratner, co-chairman of the board of directors, Forest City Enterprises, Inc.


PrefaceIntroduction  Chapter 1:  Futurama and the Twentieth-Century American DreamChapter 2:  The Rise of Drivable Sub-urbiaChapter 3:  The Standard Real Estate Product Types: Why Every Place Looks Like Every Place ElseChapter 4:  Consequences of Drivable Sub-urban GrowthChapter 5:  The Market Rediscovers Walkable UrbanismChapter 6:  Defining Walkable Urbanism: Why More is BetterChapter 7:  Unintended Consequences of Walkable UrbanismChapter 8:  Achieving the Next American Dream: Leveling the Playing Field and Implementing Walkable Urbanism
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