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Peter Neal
Urban Villages: The Making of Community
Spon Press; 1 edition (August 1, 2003)
240 pages, $41.29
ISBN: 0415262739
Buying information
The
book is available at Taylor & Francis Group
The book is available at Amazon.com:

Book presentation
The Urban Village movement grew from a desire for change- it offers
an alternative and time-honoured approach to the creation of successful
and sustainable urban communities. For decades owr towns and cities
have suffered from intense economic and social deprivation. Many
urban areas have witnessed near total collapse of a manufacturing
and industrial base on which, paradoxically, many of our gratest
cities were originally built. This has left a daunting residue of
soulless housing estates, home to unemployment, crime, drug-abuse
and social exclusion. The common response has been to turn our back
on these failing cities; creating, in contrast, vast swathes of
land-hungry and characterless suburban sprawl and relocating commercial
activities to drive-in retail parks on the edge of town. Now the
problem has become the solution as we embark on an urban renaissance
that seeks to re-establish our towns and cities as great places
to live. Central to its success will be the fundamental role played
by the neighborhood, for it is at this scale that communities can
be established and a sense of security, sociability and economic
purpose can be formed.
Urban Villages and the Making of Communities describes
the principles and process of creating attractive, socially diverse
and economically sustainable mixed-use neighborhoods. It addresses
issues of their strategic planning, physical design, transport and
connectivity, social strusture, implementation, funding and long
term management. It restates many of the authentic urban precedents
of successflu neighborhoods that have been ignored in recent decades
and responds to the key drivers of urban change identified by Lord
Roger’s Urban Task Force. An international perspective is
provided, drawing parallels with the New Urbanist movement in the
United States, and case studies of succeeful urban neighborhoods
in Britain, Europe, America and Australia.

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