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Seven Rules for Sustainable Communities

Design Strategies for the Post Carbon World
  • ISBN-13: 9781597266659
  • Publisher: ISLAND PRESS
    Imprint: ISLAND PRESS
  • By Patrick M. Condon, Foreword by Robert Yaro
  • Price: AUD $81.99
  • Stock: 0 in stock
  • Availability: This book is temporarily out of stock, order will be despatched as soon as fresh stock is received.
  • Local release date: 14/06/2010
  • Format: Paperback 213 pages Weight: 0g
  • Categories: Landscape art & architecture [AMV]
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Questions of how to green the North American economy, create a green energy and transportation infrastructure, and halt the deadly increase in greenhouse gas buildup dominate our daily news. Related questions of how the design of cities can impact these challenges dominate the thoughts of urban planners and designers across the U.S. and Canada. With admirable clarity, Patrick Condon discusses transportation, housing equity, job distribution, economic development, and ecological systems issues and synthesizes his knowledge and research into a simple-to-understand set of urban design rules that can, if followed, help save the planet.

 

No other book so clearly connects the form of our cities to their ecological, economic, and social consequences. No other book takes on this breadth of complex and contentious issues and distills them down to such convincing and practical solutions. And no other book so vividly compares and contrasts the differing experiences of U.S. and Canadian cities.

 

Of particular new importance is how city form affects the production of planet-warming greenhouse gases. The author explains this relationship in an accessible way, and goes on to show how conforming to seven simple rules for community design could literally do a world of good. Each chapter in the book explains one rule in depth, adding a wealth of research to support each claim. If widely used, Condon argues, these rules would lead to a much more livable world for future generations'a world that is not unlike the better parts of our own.


Cover

Title Page

Copyright page

Table of Contents

Foreword

Chapter 1: Introduction

How Did Cities Get This Sick?

Separation By Class and Income

The Problem Emerges

Reasons for Hope

Seven Rules for Sustainable Low-Carbon Communities

Chapter 2: Restore the Streetcar City

A Day in the Life

The Streetcar City as a Unifying Principle

Urban Form and the Pattern of Walking and Riding

Forty Percent Still Live There

Continuous Linear Corridors, Not Stand-Alone Nodes

Buses, Streetcars, Light Rail Transit, and Subways

Streetcar as an Urban Investment

Cars, Buses, Streetcar, or Heavy Rail? Case Study of teh Broadway Corridor in Vancouver

What Is the Optimal Transit System?

Chapter 3: Design an Interconnected Street System

Challenges of the Dendritic Street System

Four Types of Interconnected Street Systems

Block Size

Why is the Interconnected System Better?

Parcel Size

Ideal Block and Parcel Size

Road Width

Fire Access

Queuing Streets

The Corner

Lanes and Alleys

Greenhouse Gas and Street Pattern

Chapter 4: Locate Commercial Services, Frequent Transit, and Schools within a Five-minute Walk

Sense of Place in Corridors

Transit, Density, and the Five-Minute Walk

Designing for the Bus or Streetcar

The Walk to School

Chapter 5: Locate Good Jobs Close to Affordable Homes

The Historic Relationship Between Work and Home

Solutions

Metropolitan and Community Scale

Chapter 6: Provide a Diversity of Housing Types

The Influence of Building Type on GHG Production

The Sustainable Single-family Home

Build and Adapt Neighborhoods for all Ages and Incomes

Buildings with a Friendly Face to the Street

Chapter 7: Create a Linked System of Natural Areas and Parks

Fredrick Law Olmsted and Linked Natural Areas and Parks

Ian McHarg and the Greenway Revival

More Recent Progress

Progress on the Ground

Case Study at the Regional Scale: The Damascus Design Workshop

Case Study at the Neighborhood Scale: Sustainable Fairview and the Pringle Creek Community, Salem, Oregon

Chapter 8: Invest in Lighter, Greener, Cheaper, Smarter Infrastructure

Watershed Function

Four Rules for Infiltration

Green Infrastructure for Parcels

Pervious or Impervious

Impervious Paved Infiltration Streets

Conclusion

Acknowledgments

References

Index

"Seven Rules for Sustainable Communities is a compact, informative handbook to one of the most profound and intricate planning challenges of our time... Condon prescribes very specific and useful solutions ... Condon has assembled a concise, cogent plea to search for design strategies for the post-carbon world in our own backyards—as well as our streets, sidewalks, driveways, roods, houses, blocks, parks, waterways, and the planning policies we devise together to govern them"
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