The Unfinished Metropolis: Igniting the City-Building Revolution

Consider your surroundings. Maybe you’re in a house or in an apartment building. Maybe you’re at a desk in an office building, or in a café looking out on a lively main street. The urban landscape is not simply the backdrop to your life. It determines, to a remarkable degree, what kind of life you’re able to live. Today, the horizons of American life are constrained by a built environment that has not significantly changed since the 1970s. 

American cities used to constantly evolve, experimenting with new urban designs and ambitious infrastructure projects, from railroads and subways to public housing and shopping malls. But now we keep pursuing the same 20th century urban development plans—freeways, downtown office towers, suburban housing developments. This pattern is why Americans are so dependent on their cars, why housing is so expensive and homelessness is at crisis levels, and why downtowns are struggling and communities are fraying.  

In The Unfinished Metropolis, Benjamin Schneider argues that city-building is a lost art. We need to embrace new transportation technologies, new types of housing, new ways to use streets other than for cars and parking. In this insightful and entertaining tour of the built environment, Schneider explores common urban designs that shape our lives and color our cultural imagination: office parks, apartments, single family homes, and transit systems. He explains how these forms came to be, why they no longer function as promised, and introduces readers to the advocates and professionals around the country who are working on transformative new solutions. Learning from past mistakes, we can remake our cities and create better lives for ourselves and future generations. 

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The Unfinished Metropolis: Igniting the City-Building Revolution

Consider your surroundings. Maybe you’re in a house or in an apartment building. Maybe you’re at a desk in an office building, or in a café looking out on a lively main street. The urban landscape is not simply the backdrop to your life. It determines, to a remarkable degree, what kind of life you’re able to live. Today, the horizons of American life are constrained by a built environment that has not significantly changed since the 1970s. 

American cities used to constantly evolve, experimenting with new urban designs and ambitious infrastructure projects, from railroads and subways to public housing and shopping malls. But now we keep pursuing the same 20th century urban development plans—freeways, downtown office towers, suburban housing developments. This pattern is why Americans are so dependent on their cars, why housing is so expensive and homelessness is at crisis levels, and why downtowns are struggling and communities are fraying.  

In The Unfinished Metropolis, Benjamin Schneider argues that city-building is a lost art. We need to embrace new transportation technologies, new types of housing, new ways to use streets other than for cars and parking. In this insightful and entertaining tour of the built environment, Schneider explores common urban designs that shape our lives and color our cultural imagination: office parks, apartments, single family homes, and transit systems. He explains how these forms came to be, why they no longer function as promised, and introduces readers to the advocates and professionals around the country who are working on transformative new solutions. Learning from past mistakes, we can remake our cities and create better lives for ourselves and future generations. 

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The Unfinished Metropolis: Igniting the City-Building Revolution

The Unfinished Metropolis: Igniting the City-Building Revolution

by Benjamin Schneider
The Unfinished Metropolis: Igniting the City-Building Revolution

The Unfinished Metropolis: Igniting the City-Building Revolution

by Benjamin Schneider

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Overview

Consider your surroundings. Maybe you’re in a house or in an apartment building. Maybe you’re at a desk in an office building, or in a café looking out on a lively main street. The urban landscape is not simply the backdrop to your life. It determines, to a remarkable degree, what kind of life you’re able to live. Today, the horizons of American life are constrained by a built environment that has not significantly changed since the 1970s. 

American cities used to constantly evolve, experimenting with new urban designs and ambitious infrastructure projects, from railroads and subways to public housing and shopping malls. But now we keep pursuing the same 20th century urban development plans—freeways, downtown office towers, suburban housing developments. This pattern is why Americans are so dependent on their cars, why housing is so expensive and homelessness is at crisis levels, and why downtowns are struggling and communities are fraying.  

In The Unfinished Metropolis, Benjamin Schneider argues that city-building is a lost art. We need to embrace new transportation technologies, new types of housing, new ways to use streets other than for cars and parking. In this insightful and entertaining tour of the built environment, Schneider explores common urban designs that shape our lives and color our cultural imagination: office parks, apartments, single family homes, and transit systems. He explains how these forms came to be, why they no longer function as promised, and introduces readers to the advocates and professionals around the country who are working on transformative new solutions. Learning from past mistakes, we can remake our cities and create better lives for ourselves and future generations. 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781642833546
Publisher: Island Press
Publication date: 10/21/2025
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Benjamin Schneider is a freelance journalist covering all things urbanism. His work has appeared in Bloomberg CityLab, MIT Technology ReviewSlateThe Nation, the Los Angeles Times, and many other publications. Born and raised in San Francisco, Schneider has lived in Los Angeles, Manhattan, and Washington, D.C. He currently lives in Brooklyn with his fiancée. 

Table of Contents

Praise for The Unfinished Metropolis

About Island Press

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Title Page

Copyright

Contents

Introduction

Live

Chapter One: The Cult of the Single-Family Home

Chapter Two: America’s Apartment Exceptionalism

Chapter Three: What We Talk About When We Talk About Affordable Housing

Move

Chapter Four: How the Streets Got Mean

Chapter Five: Nostalgia Train No More

Chapter Six: The Canadian School of Public Transit

Chapter Seven: The Urbicidal Advance of Urban Freeways

Chapter Eight: Therapy for the Parking Panic

Work

Chapter Nine: Skylines of Salvation

Chapter Ten: Fifteen-Minute Malls

Chapter Eleven: The Architecture of Reindustrialization

Conclusion

Acknowledgments

Notes

Index

About the Author

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