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"Since Megalopolis" treats urban questions from the ancient and modern worlds alike. What can today's planners learn from the ancient Greek city of Miletus? What do the shape and placement of the world's capitals tell us about their function? How large can our cities grow before suffocating in slums, pollution, and crime? Gottmann offers a hard-headed argument on the economic value of city parks--and a utopian vision of Manhattan auto traffic speeding through subway tunnels. He examines Tanaka's Tokyo and Solomon's Jerusalem--and tells why the king's wisdom did not extend to urban planning.
In an introductory essay new to this volume, Gottmann draws a lesson from an earlier megalopolis. "In antiquity," he writes, "a great city flourished for 600 years on the small and craggy island of Delos in the Aegean sea. When circumstances excluded it from the predominant networks, it fell into ruins. Now an archaeological museum, Delos reminds us that cities are human artifacts and exist by participating in systems of relationships, not just as eagle nests."
Author: Jean Gottmann
ISBN-10: 0801839270
ISBN-13: 9780801839276
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Language: English
Published: 12/19/1989
Pages: 304
Format: Paperback
Weight: 1.07lbs
Size: 9.20h x 6.06w x 0.81d
Jean Gottman is professor emeritus of geography at the University of Oxford and at the Sorbonne. He is the author of editor of eighteen book, among them the pioneering Megalopolis. Robert Harper is professor emeritus and former chairman in the department of geography at the University of Marylamd, College Park.
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