Graham Livesey

Ecologies of the Early Garden City: Essays on Structure Agency and Greenspace (Hardcover)

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BrandGraham Livesey
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ConditionNew
This is a study of the inaugural decade (1903-1913) of the first Garden City at Letchworth in Hertfordshire employing theories derived from landscape ecology and assemblage theory. The early Garden City movement as represented by the writings of Ebenezer Howard--particularly his book Tomorrow: A Peaceful Path to Real Reform (1898)--was a concerted attempt to redefine many urban practices. The Garden City strove to unite town and country through the garden it emerged as a direct response to what were perceived to be the evils of the large industrial cities of the nineteenth century. The field of landscape ecology provides a structural method for examining the behavior of landscapes by focusing on flow patch and boundary systems. These are examined in the urban context along with the broad topic of agency. Ecological factors are complemented by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari s concept of assemblage with its emphasis on territorial cultural and formal factors. This provides the material for a study of the theories of Ebenezer Howard and the early history of Letchworth Garden City. This includes exploring the central role of gardens farms and the greenbelt in the Garden City model along with agents such as the gardener farmer and manager. The Garden City also pioneered modern town-planning and contributed in such areas as planned neighborhoods housing design streetscape composition architectural controls controlled growth urban zoning greenspace organization and regional responsiveness.
BrandGraham Livesey
Size[]
ConditionNew
Barcode / EAN9781863351270
StoreWalmart