Thursday, August 22, 2013

Cities are good for you


The 21st century will be the age of the city. Already over 50% of the world population live in urban centres and over the coming decades this percentage will increase - with consequences for us all. But this does not mean that things will only get worse. In fact, Leo Hollis suggests, our urban future might just be something to look forward to. 

Blending anecdote, fact and first hand encounters - from exploring the slums of Mumbai, to visiting roof-top farms in Brooklyn and attending secret dinner parties in Paris, to riding the bus in Latin America - Leo Hollis reveals that we have misunderstood how cities work for too long.

Upending long-held assumptions and challenging accepted wisdom, he explores: why cities can never be rational, organised places; how we can walk in a crowd without bumping into people, and if we can design places that make people want to kiss; whether we have the right solution to the problem of the slums; how ants, slime mould and traffic jams can make us rethink congestion. And above all, the unexpected reasons why living in the city can make us fitter, richer, smarter, greener, more creative - and, perhaps, even happier. 


I live in Auckland, a city I love, have been here since the late 1970's. My next choices of places to live, if it was an option or necessity, would be Melbourne then New York followed by Sydney, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Paris, Venice and London. 
Reading Leo Hollis' book makes me realise why I like cities so much and why I feel so at home being in them.
I should pass this book on to Mayor Len Brown, he loves Auckland too.

Cities Are Good for You introduces dreamers, planners, revolutionaries, writers, scientists, architects, slum-dwellers and emperors. It is shaped by the idea that cities are the greatest social experiment in human history, built for people, and by the people.


Publisher Bloomsbury - NZ$37.00

1 comment:

Geoff Churchman said...

I think the ideal population for a city is 1 million, big enough for plenty of culture and variety, but not too big. My favorite city after Wellington used to be San Francisco but it's not as good now as it was back in the 1970s and early 1980s.