Postmodern UrbanismPrinceton Architectural Press, 1 abr 1999 - 368 páginas Like a good city, Postmodern Urbanism can be read from many perspectives as a rich conversation of world views, languages, and artifacts....It's a generous and thoughtful piece of scholarship which is unlikely to be superseded."-Charles Jencks Since the 1960s, many architects and urban planners have reacted against the drab universalism and inhuman scale of modern architecture and urbanism, seeking instead to recover a sense of community and place. It is apparent to these architects and planners, as well as segments of the general public, that something needs to be done to improve the physical landscape and the sense of desolation it arouses. Efforts to do so have been grouped under the rubric "postmodern urbanism." While this late- twentieth-century quest for meaning has elicited nostalgia for cities of the past, it has not been accompanied by a desire to relinquish technological innovations that raise the standard of living, or the pursuit of progress and modernity. Postmodern Urbanism examines these important and complex issues that directly affect our cities and neighborhoods in a book that has been widely heralded for its clarity and insight. |
Índice
THE ROMANTIC RESURGENCE | 13 |
URBAN DESIGN THEORY ON THE EUROPEAN CONTINENT | 22 |
THE ANGLOAMERICAN AXIS | 60 |
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Términos y frases comunes
According aesthetic American appear architects architecture attitude become building built called central century challenge chapter cited classical concern construction contemporary contends context continued contributed create crisis critical culture described desire economic efforts environment example existing experience explains expression follows forms Frampton French function global Harvey housing human ideal ideas individual industrial instance interest Jencks Krier landscape largely less living maintains mass means modern modernist movement nature offers original Paris Park past planners planning points political postmodern postmodern urbanism practice present preservation production profession proposed public space rational reaction referred regarded regional relations response Robert role says seek sense shift social society space street style suggests technologies theory tion town traditional turn United University urban design values York
Referencias a este libro
Splintering Urbanism: Networked Infrastructures, Technological Mobilities ... Stephen Graham,Simon Marvin No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 2001 |