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Above and Beyond: Visualizing change in small towns and rural areas

Reference Type
Book (Entire)

"How exactly do small towns become suburbs? How do country roads turn into commercial strips? And what can planners do to prevent these changes in the future? Using the state of Vermont as the rural ideal, the authors compare contemporary vs. traditional development to demonstrate how todays primary way of developing land--suburban sprawl--is forever changing the look of rural American. Using a host of aerial photographs--many altered through computer simulation to illustrate how landscapes are transformed over time-- "Above and Beyound" argues for a return to traditional development patterns that produce more compact cities and towns. Highlighting widespread trends in contemporary land development--from fragmentation (our tendency to spread out) to separation (our tendencey to allocate separate areas of town for living, working, shopping and playing)--the authors offer case examples of coummunities that have succeeded in curbing those trends. They show how these communities have invigorated their town centers; lured home buyers back to town; integrated working, shopping and recreation areas; nurtured a sense of identity and community; rewritten land-use regulations to allow for more compact developing; and overcome the "cars rule" mentality of suburban development." [from APA website]

Chapters include:



Reading patterns

Incremental change

Edges and centers

Fragmentation

Separation

Private space, public realm

Scale

Cars

Authors
J. Campoli, E. Humstone, A. MacLean
Date Published
2002
Publisher
American Planning Association (Planners Press)
Publisher Location
Chicago, IL (US)
ISBN/ISSN
1-884829-50-3
Pages
210
Sub-Topics
Planning, Sustainable Development
Keywords
Development, Growth, Planning, Preservation, Zoning
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