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The Death and Life of Great American Cities, Jane Jacobs
VVip Premium The Death and Life of Great American Cities, Jane JacobsThe Death and Life of Great American Cities, Jane Jacobs
Review "The most refreshing, provacative, stimulating and exciting study of this [great problem] which I have seen. It fairly crackles with bright honesty and common sense."â"Harrison Salisbury, The New York Times"One of the most remarkable books ever written about the city... a primary work. The research apparatus is not pretentiousâ"it is the eye and the heartâ"but it has given us a magnificent study of what gives life and spirit to the city."â"William H. Whyte, author of The Organization Man Read more From the Inside Flap A classic since its publication in 1961, this book is the defintive statement on American cities: what makes them safe, how they function, and why all too many official attempts at saving them have failed. Read more See all Editorial Reviews Books,Arts & Photography,Architecture, Vintage; Reissue edition (December 1, 1992) 458 pages Version in English The Death and Life of Great American Cities torrent, The Death and Life of Great American Cities pdf, The Death and Life of Great American Cities ebook, The Death and Life of Great American Cities epub, The Death and Life of Great American Cities mediafire, The Death and Life of Great American Cities putlocker, The Death and Life of Great American Cities download You be able to retrieve this ebook, i supply downloads as a pdf, kindledx, word, txt, ppt, rar and zip. There are many books in the world that can improve our knowledge. One of them is the book entitled The Death and Life of Great American Cities By Jane Jacobs. This book suggests the reader new expertise and experience. This online book is made in simple word. It releases the reader is easy to know the meaning of the contentof this book. There are so many people have been read this book. Ever word in this online book is packed in easy word to make the readers are easy to read this book. The content of this book are easy to be understood. So, reading thisbook entitled Free Download The Death and Life of Great American Cities By Jane Jacobs. does not need mush time. You may appreciate browsing this book while spent your free time. Theexpression in this word renders the reader seem to see and read this book again and still. She starts with the sidewalk. The sidewalk, after all, is where we live most of our lives if we live in a city. Itâs where we walk, where kids play, where people congregate and look out for one anotherâ"whether they know they are doing it or not. She tells anecdotesâ"the one about the boy who was rescued by strangers on the sidewalk and the one about the boy trapped in an elevator in a project who cried and cried for hours but no-one came. The sidewalk, where people take responsibility for one another; where a community is formed; where we know our local grocer and that annoying lady next door is far safer than the projects where peopleâ"anonymous individualsâ"live cheek by jowl with their neighbors.And from the point of view of the humble sidewalk, Jane Jacobs builds a kind of theory of cities: what works and what doesnât. She makes points that, once she makes them, are nothing more nor less than common sense. She points out that we like interesting things and that what we, as people are most interested in, is other people. So we like to people-watching. And that means we need different, truly different, buildings on our sidewalks. It just doesnât work to have a part of the city thatâs all âabout cultureâ and another part thatâs all âabout businessâ and yet a third thatâs âall aboutâ housing. We donât live our lives like that and we should not expect our city to live if every aspect of human life is segregated from every other aspect.Itâs fineâ"no, itâs healthyâ"if people live next to a culture center, next to a place of worship, next to a place of business, and next to a park and playground. It means that at all times of the day, every day of the week, you will see different and interesting people on your streets. Sundays, you will see families dressed for church (and teenagers dressed âspeciallyâ for church); during the day on weekdays, you will see people in their business attire hurrying to and fro with their important tasks; at lunchtime you will see mothers (and these days increasingly fathers) pushing their baby strollers in the park and at night everyone gathers at the local watering holes and restaurants. If that is what you see where you live, you live in a safe and good neighborhood. A neighborhood where buildings are different not just because they have different paint but because they serve different functions. And that neighborhood is great for business. A baker, a coffee shop, a pub, a bar, a shoe repair shopâ"all will flourish in a neighborhood like this.The way to destroy a city, on the other hand, is to destroy a neighborhood by transplanting it into a project. It doesnât matter how poor that neighborhood is. There are people who live in that place who are genuinely attached to it. A famous story is told (not in this book but as an example) of the Mother of all the Rothschilds not wishing to leave the Jewish Ghetto in Vienna. That is where her friends were and that is where she wanted to live. And no matter how poor a place seems to an outsider, people do put down roots there. And those roots mean that they, the people who are attached to that place, can make it into a thriving, interesting neighborhood. Just like (or even better than) the one I described just now. All they need is a little help: loans from banks to start a business, short blocks, encouraging the kinds of uses the people want. If there is one thing Jane Jacobs is adamant about itâs that a city is about the people who live in it and so you canât impose a great idea on them-no matter who they areâ"it has to come from within the community. Because only then will you have a community. And given half a chance, that community will grow and will prosper.All that, and more, is in this relatively slim (for an urban planning book) volume. A volume that has been (rightly I think) been called a classic. Not just because of its message which is just as relevant today as it was when Jane Jacobs wrote it but because of the writing style. Jane Jacobs is obviously well-read and well-traveled but she does not feel the need t showcase that she read a book or two once. She writes in simple, easy-to-read prose and the lessons she teaches the reader are all the more memorable for that.I highly recommend it. I love this book. It contains so much common sense drawn from careful observation. Jane Jacobs looks at cities from a variety of angles, points out exactly what is wrong with ours today, how they got that way, and what to do about it. What makes it an interesting read, besides her style and the interesting things she discusses, is how grounded she is in human nature. The book is just as much about people and communities, as streets and buildings. It will change the way you see cities, and you will learn about more than cities. The book had a similar effect on me as reading Euclid's Elements, Plato's Dialogues, or Aristotle's Categories. I see things differently now, not in a "I was completely off my rocker before." kind of way, but in a "Oh, that's kind of what I thought, but now I see it clearly!" sort of way. 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