Moving from Master Planning to Strategic Planning — 30 Cities
Edited by:
Marisa Carmona
Rod Burgess
Sakkie Badenhorst
Illustrations
576 pages
Publisher:
Techne Press, The Netherlands
The starting point of Planning through Projects is the diversity of historical, political, socio-economic and environmental factors that affect the urban realities of each city. The book shows how the shift from master planning to strategic planning through large urban projects is a worldwide process affecting all countries, and it highlights the impact that such large projects have on urban governance.
A theoretical introduction is followed by 30 city cases, considering the socio-economic and environmental context, and the plans and strategies implemented: Beijing, Bilbao, Bogotá, Buenos Aires, Caracas, Córdoba, Daegu, Fukuoka, Glasgow, Hsinchu, La Plata, Liverpool, Lusaka, Mexico City, Montevideo, Ningbo, Panama, Paris, Pretoria, Rio de Janeiro, Rotterdam, Santiago, San Salvador, Sao Paulo, Singapore, Shanghai, Taipei, The Hague, Tokyo, and Valparaíso.
The global scope, the combination of theory and practice, and the many examples, plans and illustrations make this book an excellent reference for teachers, students and professionals working in urban planning and management.
"Provides meaningful insights on how the neoliberal economy is shaping the future of the city and contributes significantly to broaden the current perspectives on urban planning and management issues.”
Marcello Balbo, UNESCO Chair, Professor of Urban Planning, Università Iuav of Venice, Italy
“There are riches too great to absorb in a single read…It bridges the planning and architecture perspectives in city development by considering socioeconomic and environmental situations and planning strategies…makes a persuasive case for the influence of plans and projects on urban development.”
Lewis D. Hopkins, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, US
“An important contribution to a contemporary vision of organising and re-organising our enlarged cities in a globalized world…a huge source of successful examples as well as in-depth analysis of a fluid integrative planning approach rather than a more static master planning system.”
Yasunori Kitao, Professor of Architecture, Kyoto Women’s University, Japan
Marisa Carmona is the Director of the IBIS Research Network and a member of the Advisory Board of the United Nations Habitat. She is a former Associate Professor at the Technical University of Delft, NL, and has published numerous books on urban agglomerations and globalization issues.
Rod Burgess is a senior lecturer at the School of the Built Environment at Oxford Brooks University, UK and has lectured and written widely on Third World development and planning issues, third world housing problems, and Latin American urban politics.
Sakkie Badenhorst is Professor Emeritus and former Head of the Department of Urban and Regional Planning of the University of Pretoria.