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urban planning |
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urban planning: see city planning city planning, process of planning for the improvement of urban centers in order to provide healthy and safe living conditions, efficient transport and communication, adequate public facilities, and aesthetic surroundings. ..... Click the link for more information. . urban planningPrograms pursued as a means of improving the urban environment and achieving certain social and economic objectives. Evidence of urban planning can be found in the ruins of ancient cities, including orderly street systems and conduits for water and sewage. During the Renaissance, European city areas were consciously planned to achieve circulation of the populace and provide fortification against invasion. Such concepts were exported to the New World, where William Penn, in founding the city of Philadelphia, developed the standard gridiron plan—the laying out of streets and plots of land adaptable to rapid change in land use. Modern urban planning and redevelopment arose in response to the disorder and squalor of the slums created by the Industrial Revolution. The urban planner best known for his transformation of Paris was Georges-Eugène Haussmann. City planners imposed regulatory laws establishing standards for housing, sanitation, water supply, sewage, and public health conditions, and introduced parks and playgrounds into congested city neighbourhoods. In the 20th century, zoning—the regulation of building activity according to use and location—came to be a key tool for city planners. See also Pierre-Charles L'Enfant. |
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| Power Failure: Politics, Patronage And The Economic Future Of Buffalo, NY analyzes the history of the urban planning process in her native Buffalo: a process which ultimately failed. According to a presentation prepared by MAS, a 113-year-old urban planning advocacy group, Forest City Ratner's proposal to build 16 skyscrapers and a stadium for the Bruce Ratner-owned New Jersey Nets on the site of abandoned rail properties near the Atlantic Avenue transit hub fails, at varying levels of severity, to live up to understood principals of urban design and neighborhood planning. The author, a professor of urban planning and a science fiction consumer, discusses how science fiction from such notable authors as Robert Heinlein, Ray Bradbury, William Gibson, and Ursula LeGuin are informed by their knowledge of modern frontierism. |
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