Living Cities

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A01=Matthew Skjonsberg
A32=Janet Parks
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Author_Matthew Skjonsberg
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=AMC
Community
COP=Switzerland
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eq_nobargain
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GreenSpaces
LandscapeArchitecture
Language_English
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Park
Price_€50 to €100
PS=Forthcoming
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softlaunch
Streets
UrbanDesign
UrbanPlanning

Product details

  • ISBN 9783038603634
  • Weight: 1880g
  • Dimensions: 300 x 245mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Aug 2025
  • Publisher: Park Books
  • Publication City/Country: CH
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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The creation of park systems is a historically proven method for communities to stabilise and cultivate healthy ecological habitats in country dwellings as well as in dense urban areas. Park systems ensure clean soil, water, and air for all. Moreover, they offer inter-generational and inclusive recreational opportunities along ecological corridors. Between 1900 and 1950, civic design — a practice in urban and landscape planning explicitly oriented towards the common good — experienced a heyday. Park systems were successfully used as “green armatures” hosting public facilities such as playgrounds, schools, administrative buildings, hospitals, and gardens.

Living Cities offers a chronological survey of civic design based on more than 30 park systems on five continents. The examples range from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's Park an der Ilm in Weimar (1778) and John Nash’s Regent Street in London (1806) to Chicago’s park system (1850), Albert Bodmer and Maurice Braillard’s plans for Geneva (1936), and Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin Valley (1947), as well as to contemporary and future projects in Addis Ababa, Madrid, Medellín, New York, and Seoul. Matthew Skjonsberg’s book demonstrates the ecological and social impact of park systems and highlights the diverse challenges that communities face when implementing such projects. At the same time, it encourages a re-evaluation of civic design as an inter-generational practice of urban design.

Matthew Skjonsberg is a lecturer on the MAS in Urban and Territorial Design program at EPFL in Lausanne and the director of Praxis Institute, a Swiss-based trans-disciplinary experimental research initiative.

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