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Redesigning Urban Centers: Adapting to Changing Real Estate Markets [Pehme köide]

(University of Pennsylvania, USA)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 210 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 453 g, 76 Halftones, color; 76 Illustrations, color
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032759216
  • ISBN-13: 9781032759210
  • Pehme köide
  • Hind: 51,39 €
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 210 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 453 g, 76 Halftones, color; 76 Illustrations, color
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032759216
  • ISBN-13: 9781032759210

Through case studies from Philadelphia and across the U.S., this book demonstrates how places which offer clean, safe, and attractively designed streets and public spaces, along with reinvented zoning, are transforming urban centers from places people have to be to places people want to be.



Redesigning Urban Centers: Adapting to Changing Real Estate Markets describes how well-managed places which offer clean, safe, and attractively designed streets and public spaces, along with reinvented zoning, are drawing real estate investors and developers to reimagined legacy downtowns, innovation districts, edge cities becoming real cities, suburban shopping streets turning into mixed-use centers, urban districts near airports, and bypassed downtowns relying on government support. Case studies from the Philadelphia metropolitan region, plus examples from across the U.S, demonstrate how designs which integrate offices, housing, shopping, hotels, and entertainment, along with cultural and other attractions, transform places where people have to be into places where people want to be.

This book will interest leaders of business improvement districts and Main Street organizations, planning officials, urban design practitioners, and instructors and students of planning, economic development, and urban design.

Arvustused

This is the best book about the future of U.S. metropolitan areas yet written. It shows the pent-up demand for walkable urban development, why it costs so much relative to sprawl (walkable urban tends to be illegal by zoning and opposed by NIMBYs), and where our future growth is going. It is the first book to show that future development trends will focus on the urbanization of the suburbs. Plus, it gives many, many examples of these future growth patterns throughout the country. If you want to see the future, read this book.

Christopher B. Leinberger, Co-founder of Places Platform, author of The Option of Urbanism and co-author of Reimagining Cities

This is an indispensable book by America's leading city planning practitioner, teacher, and observer. Barnett isolates the most important trends and challenges facing urban centers and then lays out the whole range of actions and solutions leaders are applying to deal with them in the real world. The author shows how we got here and where we're going; meticulously researched case studies pair succinct histories with present-day facts on the ground in each place, and then he documents the interventions underway to bend the future into forms that support human flourishing. All the material is presented in a straightforward, objective way and backed up with statistics. Every mayor should read it. Altogether, it's a compelling story of success, failure, injury, recovery, persistence, and inspiration. City centers, Barnett shows, are changing for the better.

Victor Dover, FAICP, CNU Fellow, Dover, Kohl & Partners Town Planning

Jonathan Barnett's Redesigning Urban Centers: Adapting to Changing Real Estate Markets provides a succinct overview of the current state of urbanized communities in post-pandemic U.S. in a manner that will speak to professional planners and students across the spectrum of specialtiesland use, transportation, urban design, housing and economic development. Barnett seamlessly weaves these different perspectives into a synopsis of the driving forces of change, key challenges, and best practices to create and maintain thriving centers. His focus on the metropolitan scale and appreciation for the different assets of the various built environment contexts across a region makes this a unique and refreshing take on this often-studied topic.

Ariella Maron, Executive Director, Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission

As an urban design, planning, and development professional since the 1990s, Ive seen firsthand the challenges and triumphs of revitalizing urban spaces. Jonathan Barnetts book is an essential guide for anyone passionate about creating vibrant communities. What I particularly value is Barnetts focus on the power of place management organizationsthe Business Improvement Districts, Center City Partnerships, and Main Street organizations that are the lifeblood of successful downtowns. He doesnt just theorize; he shows us, through compelling case studies in a wide array of contexts, how these organizations drive real change. Its heartening to see the power of place management finally recognized as an essential component for building great places. This book is a must-read for practitioners, policymakers, and anyone who believes in the future of our cities.

David T. Downey, President & CEO, International Downtown Association

1. Emerging Trends in Urban Centers

2. Reinventing a Legacy Downtown: Center City Philadelphia

3. Becoming an Innovation Center: Philadelphia's University City District

4. Converting an Edge City into a Downtown: The King of Prussia District

5. Transforming Suburban and Neighborhood Centers: Conshohocken and Downtown
Ardmore

6. Developing Near an Airport: Philadelphia's Airport, Bellwether, Navy Yard,
and Comcast Spectacor Developments

7. Reviving a By-Passed Downtown: Camden, New Jersey

8. Implementing Mixed-Use Zoning, Place-Based Management
Jonathan Barnett is the author of many books and articles about urban design and planning and is a professor emeritus of practice in city and regional planning at the University of Pennsylvania. He has been an urban design advisor to Federal government agencies, and to many cities and suburbs, including Charleston, SC, Cleveland, Kansas City, Miami, Nashville, New York City, Norfolk, Omaha, and Pittsburgh.