Robert L. Fishman
This book represents a fresh approach to a perennial problemarguably the perennial problemin urban history. It will surely be, as the authors intend, a very useful and enlightening book for planners and design professionals seeking to learn from a single volume the most important elements of American urban history. The range of detailed, accurate, and insightful knowledge the authors display from the colonial city to the present is simply astonishing. And I believe the book will generate much useful comment and debate among urban historians about how to conceptualize and to present our field.
Michael H. Ebner
American Urban Formassaying Boston, New York, and Philadelphiamerits acclaim. Imagining our urban past, present, and future, Sam Bass Warner and Andrew Whittemore frame their lively narrative with twenty-first century sensibilities as they plumb the near and more distant past. Assembling chronologically organized big-picture views, the co-authors explain the shaping forces which created assorted urban forms. This superb book, to its credit, features Whittemore's hand-crafted and sumptuously detailed urban landscapes, best thought of as a luminous historical exhibition. A wide range of readersarchitects, artists, planners, historians, journalists, lawyers, mayors, legislators, policy makers, and general readerssurely will learn much from this book.
Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris
With its rich narrative and outstanding visual representation of urban form changes, this concise book succeeds in making the reader experience the American city through time and understand the forces behind its evolution. The hypothetical city becomes real through engaging and detailed accounts of events, spaces, and social interactions.
Endorsement
This book represents a fresh approach to a perennial problemarguably the perennial problemin urban history. It will surely be, as the authors intend, a very useful and enlightening book for planners and design professionals seeking to learn from a single volume the most important elements of American urban history. The range of detailed, accurate, and insightful knowledge the authors display from the colonial city to the present is simply astonishing. And I believe the book will generate much useful comment and debate among urban historians about how to conceptualize and to present our field.
Robert L. Fishman, Professor of Architecture and Urban Planning, Taubman College, University of Michigan
From the Publisher
"With its rich narrative and outstanding visual representation of urban form changes, this concise book succeeds in making the reader experience the American city through time and understand the forces behind its evolution. The hypothetical city becomes real through engaging and detailed accounts of events,spaces, and social interactions."Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris,Professor of Urban Planning, UCLA
" American Urban Form assaying Boston, New York,and Philadelphia merits acclaim. Imagining our urban past, present, and future,Sam Bass Warner and Andrew Whittemore frame their lively narrative with twenty-first century sensibilities as they plumb the near and more distant past. Assembling chronologically organized big-picture views, the co-authors explain the shaping forces which created assorted urban forms. This superb book, to its credit, features Whittemore's hand-crafted and sumptuously detailed urban landscapes, best thought of as a luminous historical exhibition. A wide range of readers architects, artists,planners, historians, journalists, lawyers, mayors, legislators, policy makers, and general readers surely will learn much from this book."Michael H.
Ebner, Lake Forest College
"This book represents a fresh approach to a perennial problem arguably the perennial problem in urban history. It will surely be, as the authors intend,a very useful and enlightening book for planners and design professionals seeking to learn from a single volume the most important elements of American urban history.
The range of detailed, accurate, and insightful knowledge the authors display from the colonial city to the present is simply astonishing. And I believe the book will generate much useful comment and debate among urban historians about how to conceptualize and to present our field." Robert L. Fishman,Professor of Architecture and Urban Planning, Taubman College, University of Michigan