Urban Design: The American Experience / Edition 1

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Overview

Urban Design the American Experience Jon Lang Urban Design: The American Experience places social and environmental concerns within the context of American history. It returns the focus of urban design to the creation of a better world. It evaluates the efforts of designers who apply knowledge about the environment and people to the creation of livable, enjoyable, and even inspiring built worlds. Urban Design: The American Experience emphasizes that urban design must take a user-oriented approach to achieve a higher quality of life in human settlements. All the keys to this approach are spelled out in chapters that address:
* Urban design as both a product and process of communal decision-making
* Types of knowledge required as a base for urban design action
* How to apply recent environmental and behavioral research to professional design
* How human needs are fulfilled through design
* The true role of functionalism in design Urban design efforts of the twentieth century in the United States are examined within their socio-political context. Jon Lang reviews the urban design experience from the beginning of the "City Beautiful" movement, paying particular attention to developments since World War II. He explores how the twentieth-century city has developed, as well as discusses the attitudes that have driven major movements in urban design. Readers learn a neo-Modernist approach that builds on the successes and failures of Rationalism and Empiricism, the two major streams of Modernist thought in architecture and urban design. They also gain an understanding of how the environment is experienced by people, and the implications of this experiencing for architectural and urban design. Numerous illustrations throughout demonstrate how various design schemes can be used. Urban Design: The American Experience provides architects, designers, city planners, and students in these fields with a model for their own future development as professionals. It is a valuable guide to design methodology (procedural theory) and other issues related to creating optimal urban environments.

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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780471285427
  • Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
  • Publication date: 2/28/1994
  • Edition description: New Edition
  • Edition number: 1
  • Pages: 528
  • Product dimensions: 8.82 (w) x 10.91 (h) x 1.69 (d)

Meet the Author

About the Author Jon Lang, Ph.D., is currently Professor of Architecture at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, as well as Director for Urban Design of the Environmental Research Group in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Dr. Lang also taught in the Urban Design program at the University of Pennsylvania from 1970 to 1990, chairing the program during the eighties. He continued his association with Penn as a visiting Professor of City Planning through 1993. Dr. Lang has served as a consultant for UNESCO in Turkey and for the Ford Foundation in India. He is co-editor of the pioneering book Designing for Human Behavior: Architecture and the Behavioral Sciences, as well as author of Creating Architectural Theory: The Role of the Behavioral Sciences in Environmental Design.

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Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction 1
1 The Nature of the Environment 19
2 Shaping the Twentieth-Century City 34
3 The Nature of Urban Design Today 68
4 Basic Attitudes in Urban Design 105
5 Redesigning Urban Design 124
6 A Functionalist, Empiricist Urban Design 135
7 Functionalism 151
8 The Functions of Cities and Urban Places 168
9 The Elements of Urban Design 183
10 Technological and Geometric Possibilities 196
11 Meeting Physiological Needs 217
12 Meeting Safety and Security Needs 234
13 Meeting Affiliation Needs 252
14 Meeting Esteem Needs 280
15 Meeting Self-Actualization Needs 299
16 Meeting Cognitive Needs 303
17 Meeting Aesthetic Needs 316
18 Meeting the Needs of the Biogenic Environment 339
19 Substantive Issues in Urban Design 357
20 The Development Process 369
21 The Urban Design Designing Process 383
22 Procedural Issues in Urban Design 401
23 Fundamental Attitudes for Urban Design 415
24 A Normative Procedural Model for Urban Design - An Emerging Empiricist Consensus 428
25 Urban Design as a Discipline and as a Profession 453
Bibliography, Credits, and Index 465
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