Written with contributions from Nicholas Falk of the innovative planning and architecture practice Urbed, Peter Hallâs Good Cities, Better Lives is a critical, rigorous and deeply researched account of what is going on in European cities today. Hall, Bartlett professor of planning and regeneration at University College London, who was knighted in 1998, deftly weaves together political economy, geography and planning to create a continuous and highly informative narrative, contextualised within UK research culture in this area. If you have ever wondered what a Catapult is or how it connects to the rest of the UK economy and political system, then this is the book for you. The writing is admirable and rich in human interest, with tales of multitasking French mayors, scandalous research disagreements and Scandi-noir all contributing to the integrity of the whole.
The structure is clear and to the point. The first part explores âthe roots of the malaise that has gripped our cities and townsâ. Hall distils five basic challenges faced by cities today: rebalancing our urban economies; building new homes; linking people and places through integrated land use and transport planning; living with finite resources and the impact of climate change; and âfixing the broken machinery so as to bring public and private agencies together in the process of development and redevelopmentâ. These issues must be addressed, he argues, if we are to acquire âthe lost art of urbanismâ.
In the second part, Hall takes us on a âtwenty-first-century equivalent of the Grand Tourâ to experience those places that are leading the world in âcreating different and better patterns of urban work and lifeâ. His account, which could be fruitfully used as a travel guide, starts in Germany, moves to the Netherlands, France and Scandinavia, and finishes back in Freiburg â the city, says Hall, that âdoes it allâ. In the final chapter, he reflects on how British urban centres might match or even improve upon these examples and the rather limited efforts made by our government in this direction.
Vice-chancellors take note: perhaps one of the strongest messages in Hallâs book is the vital role that universities can play in the regeneration of their home cities, and not just through the development of technology parks. In Kassel, for example, âuniversity thinking also played a role in developing new and radical concepts of urban regeneration which shaped an entire quarter of the cityâ. And of his favourite city, Hall writes: âOne important lesson from Freiburgâs remarkable economic growth is that investment in linking university and other research to the creation of attractive modern urban environments pays off.â He appeals for us to ârecast universities to make them agents of technical and cultural changeâ, and I couldnât agree more.
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It pleased me to see Hall cite the University of Sheffieldâs Advanced Manufacturing Park as a thoroughly positive example, and one that has bucked the trend for research cash to flow unerringly towards the âgolden triangleâ of Oxford, Cambridge and London. Hallâs argument is always for balance of resources. The corollary of development in one area is very often the neglect of another, as he demonstrates when tempering his idyllic account of the exemplary Hammarby Sjöstad development with a discussion of the unpopular and neglected satellites of Stockholm nearby.
Good Cities, Better Lives is in some ways a eulogy for town planning and the planning profession, once admired the world over but now greatly diminished. âPlanning education needs to restore these areas of competence, through a broad-based general education coupled with deeper specialist understanding, if it is to take the lead again,â writes Hall. I can think of no better place to start than with this book.
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Good Cities, Better Lives: How Europe Discovered the Lost Art of Urbanism
By Peter Hall
Routledge, 356pp, ÂŁ105.00 and ÂŁ34.99
ISBN 9780415840217 and 40224
Published 25 September 2013
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