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Harvard to New Urbanism: A bit of long-due respect
Review of City on a Hill: Urban Idealism in America from the Puritans to the Present, by Alex Krieger, Harvard University Press, 2019.For 30 years there’s been an unwritten rule at Harvard—and many elite US universities that follow Harvard’s lead—“keep your distance from the New Urbanism.” Twenty years ago, Harvard held a series of events that were framed as debates between new urbanists and Harvard faculty and students. These...Read more -
The Charter Awards at 20: Looking back, moving forward
The year’s awards will celebrate design that takes New Urbanism to the next level and inspires a new generation of urbanists.Urban planner Geoff Dyer, CNU-A, is chairing CNU’s twentieth Charter Awards jury in 2020. CNU has officially opened up the period of submissions for awards in this special year. This year, the jurors are especially looking for projects that emphasize the importance of design to New Urbanism, and...Read more -
Why buildings need ‘eyes’
To understand architecture and design buildings successfully, we need to acknowledge core human tendencies that secured our survival.As a social species, we are built to see eyes, so we look for them all the time—everywhere—without conscious awareness or control. When we find them, they grab our attention, anchoring us in space, securing us to a place. So, it’s no surprise that tour buses driving through historic Cambridge,...Read more -
Learning from Manhattan’s urban imperfections
New York is a great city that breaks many rules of urban planning. Here's what its imperfections can teach us about city building.“New York is the perfect model of a city, not the model of a perfect city,” Lewis Mumford, 1979. The above quote is featured on a wall in the Museum of the City of New York, which I visited on a recent trip to our most unequivocally urban city. Later, as I walked down 5 th Avenue, Mumford’s keen...Read more