Downtown, Inc., how America rebuilds cities

書誌事項

Downtown, Inc., how America rebuilds cities

Bernard J. Frieden and Lynne B. Sagalyn

MIT Press, 1991, c1989

  • : pbk

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 11

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

Includes bibliographical references

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Pioneering observers of the urban landscape Bernard Frieden and Lynne Sagalyn delve into the inner workings of the exciting new public entrepreneurship and public-private partnerships that have revitalized the downtowns of such cities as Boston, San Diego, Seattle, St. Paul, and Pasadena.

目次

  • Part 1 A bunch of nobodies: legacy of the big stores, vanishing crowds. Part 2 Sanitizing the city: alliances - the Pittsburgh model
  • highway detours
  • the urban renewal takeover
  • tracking the money
  • demolition by the acre
  • the cover-up
  • casualty count. Part 3 Blueprint for indifference: designed for isolation
  • nobody knows the rubble I've seen
  • the freeway revolt
  • losing urban renewal
  • persuasive protests
  • progress but no applause. Part 4 Would the shopping mall play downtown?: sanctuaries for shopping
  • competing with easy street
  • a tonic for tired cities?
  • roadblocks
  • the gatekeepers
  • searching for new locations. Part 5 Pasadena - no bed of roses: inventing a transplant
  • sweetheart deals
  • pledging future taxes
  • protective maneouvres
  • sharing troubles. Part 6 Entrepreneurial cities and maverick developers: a landmark in Boston
  • James Rouse - mixing pleasure with business
  • a public market in Seattle
  • John Clise - the coalition-builder
  • proving St Paul's competence
  • George Latimer - the Mayor's glue
  • a porno district in San Diego
  • Ernest Hahn - endurance and flexibility
  • Gerald Trimble - the public sector developer. Part 7 Deal making: testing the waters
  • deals to match projects
  • development by consensus
  • City Hall deal makers
  • coping with crisis
  • negotiable designs
  • the relationship is the deal. Part 8 Getting and spending: paying without pain
  • the federal pipeline - good to the last drop
  • digging into local resources
  • safe money for risky projects
  • dovetailing dollars into joint ventures. Part 9 Open for business: Faneuil Hall - marketing the unusual
  • Pike Place - preserving the past
  • town square - making the setting special
  • Horton plaza - designing fantasies. Part 10 Popular success and critical dismay: fear of commerce
  • artificial environments
  • highbrows and lowbrows. Part 11 Privatizing the city: running risks - Burbank, St Paul, Detroit
  • setup for scandal
  • how public is a mall?
  • security at a price
  • the chaining of Main Street. Part 12 Marketplace contributions: uses of commercialism
  • taming Times Square and Bryant Park
  • School for Management
  • the hiding hand
  • selling Columbus Circle. Part 13 Downtown malls and the city agenda: corporate territory
  • 250 Empire State buildings
  • lodgings and lobbies
  • conventioneers
  • the gentry come to town
  • stagecraft
  • big league ambitions
  • logic in the patchwork. Part 14 An unfinished renaissance: indicting City Hall
  • manufacturing myths - New Yrok and Pittsburgh
  • is development unfair? where is the opposition?
  • bargaining for downtown jobs - Baltimore and Boston
  • slowing the pace
  • the mall business
  • do cities learn?.

「Nielsen BookData」 より

詳細情報

ページトップへ