Abstract
AbstractThis chapter looks beyond the ambitious, large-scale, utopian visions of twentieth-century urban designers to smaller-scale “micro-interventions,” including building codes, rent regulation, housing subsidies, smart growth, New Urbanism, and zoning. It then examines their consequences, especially their unintended consequences, from a Market Urbanist perspective.
Publisher
Springer Nature Singapore
Reference66 articles.
1. Ashton, T.S. (1963). The Treatment of Capitalism by Historians. In: Hayek.
2. Bertaud, A. (2018). Order Without Design: How Markets Shape Cities. MIT Press.
3. Bui, Q., Chaban, M. A. B., & White, J. (2016, May 20). 40 percent of Buildings in Manhattan Could Not Be Built Today. The New York Times.
4. Fairbanks, R. B., & Robert, B. (2000). From Better Dwellings to Better Neighborhoods: The Rise and Fall of the First National Housing Movement. In B. Bauman & Szylvian (Eds.), (Vol. 2000, pp. 21–42).
5. Barr, J. M. (2016). Building the Skyline. Oxford Univ. Press.