Retrofitting Suburbia : urban design solutions for redesigning Suburbs (Record no. 42653)
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000 -LEADER | |
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fixed length control field | 05977 a2200181 4500 |
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER | |
International Standard Book Number | 9780470041239 |
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER | |
Classification number | 307.760973 |
Item number | DUN |
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME | |
Personal name | Dunham-Jones Ellen |
245 ## - TITLE STATEMENT | |
Title | Retrofitting Suburbia : urban design solutions for redesigning Suburbs |
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT) | |
Place of publication, distribution, etc | New Jersey |
Name of publisher, distributor, etc | John Wiley & Sons |
Date of publication, distribution, etc | 2009 |
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION | |
Extent | xvi,256p. |
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE | |
Formatted contents note | CONTENTS<br/>Preface vi<br/>Introduction viii <br/>Urban Versus Suburban Form viii <br/>Why Retrofits? Why Now? xii <br/>Organization of the Book xiii<br/>Acknowledgments xv<br/>PART I. THE ARGUMENT <br/>Chapter 1<br/>Instant Architecture, Instant Cities, and Incremental <br/>Metropolitanism 2<br/>Instant Cities and Suburban Retrofits 2 <br/>Instant Architecture, Instant Public Space 6<br/>Incremental Metropolitanism 9<br/>How Sustainable? How Urban? 12<br/>PART II. THE EXAMPLES <br/>Chapter 2<br/>Retrofitting Garden Apartments and Residential Subdivisions <br/>to Address Density and the New Demographics 16<br/>Never Homogenous? The New Suburban History 17<br/>Demographic Changes 18<br/>Retrofitting Policy 20<br/>Retrofitting Residential Subdivisions 22<br/>Revising the Rules: Kansas City First Suburbs Coalition and DADUs in Seattle 23<br/>Connect the Culs-de-sac: Apollo Beach and Laurel Bay 25<br/>From Subdivision to Edge City: Greenway Plaza 27<br/>From Subdivision to TOD: MetroWest 27<br/>Reintegrating Garden Apartment Buffer Sites 29<br/>Accommodating New Immigrants: Brookside Apartments and Gulfton 30<br/>Market Devaluation: Park Forest Courts 32<br/>Gentrification Infill: Gramercy and The Colony 34<br/>Tomorrow's Suburbanites 35<br/>Chapter 3<br/>Residential Case Study: Changes to "Levittown" 44<br/>The Earliest Postwar Suburbs Are Sixty Years Old<br/>Demographic Diversity in Levittown, Willingboro, and Park Forest 46<br/>Failure and Redevelopment of Retail Properties 51 <br/>Resistance to Change in Residential Patterns 52 <br/>Diversifying Housing Choices 54<br/>Paths Toward Further Change 56<br/>Chapter 4<br/>Retrofitting Social Life Along Commercial Strips 59<br/>Third Places in Suburbia? 59<br/>History of the Strip and Its Building Types 62<br/>The Drive out of Town 62<br/>Adaptive Reuse of Big Boxes and Strip Malls for Community-Serving Activities 67<br/>Reviving Ghostboxes 67<br/>From Strip Malls to Community Anchors: La Grande Orange and Camino Nuevo 70<br/>Retrofitting Shopping Centers: The Middle Scale 72<br/>Regreening: Phalen 72<br/>Public Sector Strategies to Support Retrofitting 75<br/>Santana Row's Rough Road to Riches 78<br/>From Strip Centers to New Downtown: Temple Terrace 80<br/>Retrofitting the Corridors Themselves: Designing for Mobility <br/>or Access or Both 81<br/>The Transit Boulevard and the Urban Network 82 <br/>Return of the Multiway Boulevard: Cathedral City 84<br/>Rezoning Corridors: Three Examples in Atlanta 87 <br/>Inducing Transit on a Corridor Through Form-Based Codes: Columbia Pike 90<br/>Retrofitting the Urban Structure of Commercial Strips 92<br/>Social Infrastructure 9<br/>Chapter 5<br/>Strips Case Study: Mashpee Commons, Cape Cod,<br/>Massachusetts 95<br/>Attaching to a Well-Established Fragment of Urbanism <br/>Site History 98 <br/>Morphological Analysis 102<br/>From Strip to Downtown: Mashpee's Third Place 105<br/>Chapter 6<br/>From Regional Malls to New Downtowns Through <br/>Mixed-Use and Public Space 108<br/>The Significance of Public Space 110<br/>A Brief History of Malls 112<br/>Dead and Dying Malls 114<br/>Changing Uses to Meet Local Needs 119<br/>Downsizing: Park Forest and Willingboro 119<br/>From Enclosed Malls to New Downtowns 123<br/>From Dead Mall to New Downtown: Mizner Park 123<br/>Turning a Mall Inside Out: Winter Park Village 126<br/>Incremental Metropolitanism Around Denver: CityCenter Englewood 129<br/>Infilling Around a Live Mall 134<br/>You Can Save the Tree and Have Tiffany's, Too: Walnut Creek 134<br/>From Mall to Transit-Served University and Office Tower: Surrey Central City 136<br/>The Role and Form of Mixed-Use and Public Space in Retrofitted Malls 138<br/>Chapter 7<br/>Mall Case Study: Cottonwood, Holladay, Utah 140<br/>From Concept to Press Release<br/>Repositioning Mall Properties 142<br/>Market Study and Mini-Charrette 143<br/>Charrette 146<br/>Benefits of the Charrette 151<br/>Chapter 8<br/>Mall Case Study: Belmar, Lakewood, Colorado 154<br/>"Enrich Your Life, Not Your Lawn" in Lakewood's New Downtown<br/>"Greening": Finding the Funding for Sustainable Urbanism 159<br/>Morphological Analysis 162<br/>From Bunkers to Streetscapes: Public Space 166<br/>New Uses/New Users 170<br/>Chapter 9<br/>Edge City Infill: Improving Walkability and Interconnectivity 172<br/>Redirecting Edge Cities 173<br/>The Evolution of Edge and Edgeless Cities 177<br/>Edgeless Cities 179 <br/>Infilling Edge Cities 180<br/>Addison Circle 180<br/>Legacy Town Center 182<br/>Perimeter Place 183<br/>How Effective Are the Infill Strategies? 186 <br/>Edge-City Retrofits Across Multiple Parcels 187<br/>The Future of Edge Cities 191<br/>Chapter 10<br/>Edge City Case Study: Downtown Kendall/Dadeland, Miami-Dade County, Florida 192<br/>Zoning the Creation of New Blocks and Squares over Multiple Parcels<br/>Regulating an Urbanizing Framework 196<br/>Morphological Analysis 198 <br/>Demographic Analysis: Reaping the Benefits of <br/>Interconnectivity 201<br/>Chapter 11<br/>Suburban Office and Industrial Park Retrofits to Recruit the Creative Class 203<br/>Suburban Industrial Parks, Office Parks, and Corporate Campuses 204<br/>Monconcentric Patterns of Commuting 206<br/>Polycentric Atlanta: Bellsouth in Lenox Park, Midtown, and Lindbergh City Center 207<br/>Recruiting the Creative Class 209<br/>Creative Campus: SkySong 211<br/>Retrofitting Suburban Workplaces 211<br/>Glass Box Lofts: C loud 9 Sky Flats 212<br/>Lofts on the Interstate: Upper Rock 214<br/>Retrofitting Industrial Parks 216<br/>Instant Urbanism: Westwood Station 217<br/>Chapter 12<br/>Office Park Case Study: University Town Center, Prince George's County, Maryland 219<br/>Finishing a Job Started Almost Half a Century Ago<br/>Transit Provides Opportunity for Infilling with Mixed Use 222 <br/>Morphological Analysis 225<br/>Demographic Analysis: Appeal to the Creative Class? 228<br/>Epilogue: The Landscape of Incremental Metropolitanism in 2050 230<br/>Notes 234<br/>Image Credits 248<br/>Index 249<br/><br/> |
600 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME | |
9 (RLIN) | 42028 |
700 ## - ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME | |
Personal name | Williamson, June |
890 ## - Country | |
Country | USA |
891 ## - Topic | |
Topic | FP |
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA) | |
Source of classification or shelving scheme | Dewey Decimal Classification |
Withdrawn status | Lost status | Source of classification or shelving scheme | Damaged status | Not for loan | Collection code | Withdrawn status | Home library | Current library | Date acquired | Source of acquisition | Cost, normal purchase price | Total Checkouts | Total Renewals | Full call number | Barcode | Date last seen | Date last borrowed | Cost, replacement price | Price effective from | Koha item type |
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Dewey Decimal Classification | Faculty of Planning | CEPT Library | CEPT Library | 07/09/2016 | Books India | 4608.00 | 12 | 17 | 307.760973 DUN | 015224 | 10/05/2024 | 30/04/2024 | 5760.00 | 28/03/2016 | Book |