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E-book: Access, Property and American Urban Space

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This book explains why the earliest cities had grid-form street systems, what conditions led to their being overwhelmingly preferred for 5000 years throughout the world, why the Founding Fathers wanted gridform cities and how they affect economic transactions. Real property has been instrumental in forming urban settlements for 5000 years, but virtually all urban form commentary, theory and research has ignored this reality. The result is an incomplete and flawed understanding of cities. Real property became a means of arranging spatial patterns caused by millennia of human evolutionary and historical developments with respect to access and movement. As a result, access to resources of all types became a regulatory mechanism controlled, at least in part, by real property ownership.

The effects of real property on urban spatial patterns are currently best seen by examining American urban space, which has changed significantly over the past 200 years. This change, which began in the 1840s and established path dependence through a combination of design thought, sentimental pastoralism and financial prowess resulted in an urban regime shift that diminished economic resilience. This book offers a rethinking of how real property relates to real space, examines the thought of form promoters, links space, property, neurological evolution and settlement form, shows access is measurable and describes the plusses and minuses of functionalism, rent seeking, general purpose technology, grid-form street systems and what the American Founding Fathers thought about urban form.

List of Figures
ix
List of Tables
xi
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xix
1 Stagnation
1(10)
2 Intentions and Disconnections
11(24)
3 The Road to Congestion
35(23)
4 Networks, Complexity, Models and Measures
58(18)
5 Quantifying Vehicle and Pedestrian Access
76(27)
6 Space and Property: Public and Private
103(22)
7 Historic and Prehistoric Origins of American Urban Space
125(26)
8 History of a Regime Shift: Two Centuries of American Moral Design
151(22)
9 Structures, Powers, Mechanisms and Tendencies
173(34)
Notes 207(2)
Bibliography 209(22)
Index 231
M. Gordon Brown is Principal of Space Analytics in Wauconda (Chicago) where he consults and does expert witness work on the built environment. He was a professor of architecture at three major American universities and head of the Real Estate Program at Eindhoven University of Technology.