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Learning from Delhi

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Learning from Delhi

The inflexibility of modern urban planning, which seeks to determine the activities of urban inhabitants and standardise everyday city life, is challenged by the unstoppable organic growth of illegal settlements. In rapidly expanding cities, issues of continuity with local traditions, local conditions and local ways of working are juxtaposed with those of abrupt change due to emergency, reaction to modernity, environmental degradation, global market forces and global technological imperatives. These efforts to control by physical planning become redundant as soon as they are enacted.

In most third world cities, there is little social welfare and almost no attempt at social housing.

Learning from Delhi by Maurice Mitchell and Shamoon Patwari offers insightful exploration of these themes, emphasising the dynamic nature of city development in contrast to rigid planning methodologies.

The inflexibility of modern urban planning, which seeks to determine the activities of urban inhabitants and standardise everyday city life, is challenged by the unstoppable organic growth of illegal settlements. In rapidly expanding cities, issues of continuity with local traditions, local conditions and local ways of working are juxtaposed with those of abrupt change due to emergency, reaction to modernity, environmental degradation, global market forces and global technological imperatives. These efforts to control by physical planning become redundant as soon as they are enacted.

In most third world cities, there is little social welfare and almost no attempt at social housing.

Learning from Delhi by Maurice Mitchell and Shamoon Patwari offers insightful exploration of these themes, emphasising the dynamic nature of city development in contrast to rigid planning methodologies.

$34.30

Original: $97.99

-65%
Learning from Delhi

$97.99

$34.30

Description

The inflexibility of modern urban planning, which seeks to determine the activities of urban inhabitants and standardise everyday city life, is challenged by the unstoppable organic growth of illegal settlements. In rapidly expanding cities, issues of continuity with local traditions, local conditions and local ways of working are juxtaposed with those of abrupt change due to emergency, reaction to modernity, environmental degradation, global market forces and global technological imperatives. These efforts to control by physical planning become redundant as soon as they are enacted.

In most third world cities, there is little social welfare and almost no attempt at social housing.

Learning from Delhi by Maurice Mitchell and Shamoon Patwari offers insightful exploration of these themes, emphasising the dynamic nature of city development in contrast to rigid planning methodologies.

Learning from Delhi | Book Hero