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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent, innovative interesting ideas, May 4, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Cities For A Small Planet (Icon Editions) (Paperback)
After reading this book, I wanted to pack my bags and head to London to study with Richard Rogers. His observations on the importance of balancing population, resources and the environment is right on. He identifies the need for compact cities, but seeks to reinvent the dense city model to be a cleaner, greener, more integrated place. Rogers pays specific attention to positive social changes that compact cities can make, and he addresses the importance of regionalism to acheiving sustainability goals. Also, he explains how proximity allows for creative reuse of resources and efficient building design. The book is unique; Rogers makes concrete suggestions and offers actual examples of ways to acheive sustainability.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars ...But I like my life in the suburbs, May 24, 2006
By 
Charlie (Joliet, Illinois) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cities For A Small Planet (Icon Editions) (Paperback)
"Cities for a Small Planet give me the reassurance that there are influential people trying to reduce the destructive impact of human activities on the world. The case study of Curitiba, Brazil is particularly inspirational.

Author Richard Rogers looks for ways to make city centers more sustainable and points out the importance of public space within a city. He makes a case against single-use developments, the sprawl of the suburbs and the need for automobiles. I can't help but to wonder, though, about the average family living in a suburb in their own house with a backyard garden, two dogs and a cat. Those average people are quite happy to be away from the city centers, from the panhandlers and predators, from unsafe feelings while riding public transportation, from the sounds of police sirens and honking horns. Will dense sustainable city developments change that?

Not everyone is cut out to live in dense cities. A more appropriate question (at least in the United States) might be, "What can we do to make our suburbs more sustainable?"

Just an aside: I found the font size of this book to be a bit on the small side, and the captions under the pictures to be small to the point of near unreadability.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars future, May 8, 2007
This review is from: Cities For A Small Planet (Icon Editions) (Paperback)
There's probably a great truth in the fact that the last 50 years of planning have enrich few and impoverished many.
Zoning is simple, clear, fast and economically definable, but it isolates the people who are destined to live there, and enslaves them to the use of car.
Overlapping and dense urbanism is historically a step back, is more work for planners, more difficult to understand for the laymen and developers and will cost more, but it will ultimately favor humane contact, regenerate sense of community, diminish the slavery of people on machine and last but not least reduce pollution.
We have to reconsider the word coined by the Polish American Architect Lubicz of Nycz: Urbantecture.
Urbanism & architecture are very delicate matters, intimately tided they create the frame for the world we live in.
This is a great book for planner, politicians and people, because everybody today is oblige to look at cities as sustainable places where life can prosper only in respect of nature.

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars well designed and with great insight, December 7, 1999
By 
digitil (San Francisco) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Cities For A Small Planet (Icon Editions) (Paperback)
Unusual and very well thought-out propositions for the architectural/urbanization problems that arise today as society everywhere struggles with increasing overpopulation. EWspecially noteworthy is the inclusion of small town issues, a topic normally overlooked by other architects/scholars who write on urban planning. Some interesting research, and of course the intriguing sketches and drawings I associate with Rogers, Foster, Piano, and all thoes other postindustrial architects. It's a small little book that is great for reading on the plane. Usually something not too common with architecture books.
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3 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars small in size, large in wisdom, May 31, 2000
By 
patoguerrero (Mexico City, MEXICO) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cities For A Small Planet (Icon Editions) (Paperback)
It is a good book, small but with lots of information. It introduces in a simple form the urban problems of the world and tries to focus in it's solutions. After I read it I showed it to teachers at my school and they now quote it in class.
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Cities For A Small Planet (Icon Editions)
Cities For A Small Planet (Icon Editions) by Richard Rogers (Paperback - July 24, 1998)
$23.00 $21.63
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