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5.0 out of 5 stars
Nice!,
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This review is from: Reclaiming Our Cities and Towns: Better Living With Less Traffic (Paperback)
This was a well written discussion of walkable urbanism. It is mainly devoid of academic urban planning-speak which makes it accesible and easy to read.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Table of Contents,
By Theseus "theseus" (US of A) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Reclaiming Our Cities and Towns: Better Living With Less Traffic (Hardcover)
Foreword
Acknowledgements Introduction The Nature of the Eco-City - Events Not Matter - Pro-City Not Anti-City - Chaotic Not Mono-Cultural - Spontaneous not Planned - Places not Destinations How Traffic Destroys the Eco-City - The Growing Zone of Influence - Burning the House to Stay Warm - A Nudge is as Good as a Wink Eco-Relational Thinking - More Power to the Generalist - Learning the Gentle Art - Getting Inside the Skin - Learning to Yarn With Rubbish Bins Eco-Rights - Human Rights in the Mechanical City - Cars on Streets Right or Privilege - Raw End of the Deal - A Draft Charter of Access to Exchange Rights Rebuilding the Eco-City Tomorrow - Metamorphosis - Do Cites Make the People - Five Clues from Nature - Ten Guidelines - No Gain Without Pain? - Four Modest Proposals - Feeding the Revolution - Will it Be a Long Road Home? Appendices A and B Glossary Endnotes Bibliography (10 pp) Index |
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Reclaiming Our Cities And Town by David Engwicht (Paperback - Nov. 1993)
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