Rebuilding Urban Complexity: A Configurational Approach to Postindustrial Cities
English
By (author): Francesca Froy
This is a book about urban complexity how it evolves and how it gets destroyed. It explores the structures of interdependency which underpin cities, where the many different parts (people, streets, industry sectors) interact to form an evolving whole.
This book explores the evolution and destruction of complexity in one city Greater Manchester but also other post-industrial cities, including Sheffield and Newcastle, Detroit and New Haven. The focus is on the networked qualities of public urban space, and how street networks work as multiscale systems. The book also explores economic networks, and the evolving sets of interconnecting economic capabilities which help to shape urban economies. It demonstrates how cities evolve through processes of self-organisation and conclude by considering how policy makers can best harness such processes as they rebuild urban complexity following the insensitive planning interventions of the 1960s and 1970s.
The book will appeal to anybody with an interest in cities, and how they work. It is interdisciplinary in scope, weaving in strands from architecture, economics, history, anthropology and ecology. It is written for both academics but also non-academics, including urban planners, architects and policy makers.
See moreWill deliver when available. Publication date 09 Dec 2024