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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Otto Saumarez Smith (Assistant Professor in Architectural History, Assistant Professor in Architectural History, University of Warwick)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 14.70cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.274kg ISBN: 9780198865193ISBN 10: 0198865198 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 03 September 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviewsIn his meticulous new book Boom Cities, Otto Saumarez Smith wishes us to understand British architect-planners' activities in the 1960s and respect their objectives. * Will Self, Prospect Magazine * Otto Saumarez Smith's [has written a] detailed and engrossing book about the mid-20th-century boom in urban redevelopment ... That the book ends with a sense of tragedy and intense disillusionment is less of a judgement on the characters involved and more on the inherent penny-pinching - or money-misdirecting, perhaps - of the British political class when presented with the chance to create a dignifying, elevating, equalising public realm. The strength of Boom Cities lies in its insistence that blaming individuals for the failures of a whole political and economic system is too easy. It makes us see the things that should have been different, and the ways in which they could still be. * Lynsey Hanley, New Statesman * Saumarez Smith demonstrates that the urban plans of the 1960s were shaped by forces that are still central to contemporary practice: the need to use urban renewal to reduce inequalities and yet serve an affluent citizenry; the requirement to balance the needs of a local community against the developer's profit motive; and the desire to insert new forms into the historic cityscape thoughtfully. The resonances with contemporary practice are clear throughout this book: Boom Cities is therefore essential reading not just for historians of 20th century architecture and urbanism, but also for anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the development of the contemporary planning profession. * Ewan Harrison, The RIBA Journal * This is a brilliantly researched and very readable book. * Michael Taylor, Context * Saumarez Smith is a very good writer - frequently insightful, often very funny. He has convincingly argued that the work and world of the architect-planner are valuable for understanding the complex of forces that transformed city centres in Britain in the 1960s. He has supported that argument through a careful and sympathetic reading of local government and private archives. * Planning Perspectives * hugely readable and fascinating * Helen Goodwin, Architecture Today * Saumarez Smith writes deftly and has a deep understanding of his subject * Elain Harwood, Literary Review * Boom Cities is much more than a book about buildings. It is instead a study about town planning, welfare and the politics of affluence, and hence central to the history of mid-20th century Britain. Boom Cities may be a slim volume but it is packed with insights which make it an essential reference point for the new urban social history that is rapidly-and excitingly-emerging. * Professor Simon Gunn, University of Leicester, Reviews in History * if you're interested in the motives that inspired the wholesale reshaping of our town and city centres in the Sixties, he has a tale worth telling ... Boom Cities is well-stocked with interesting and revealing quotes ... 4 stars * Michael Bird, The Telegraph * ingeniously researched, well-written and subtly argued study * David Kynaston, Times Literary Supplement * In his meticulous new book Boom Cities, Otto Saumarez Smith wishes us to understand British architect-planners' activities in the 1960s and respect their objectives. * Will Self, Prospect Magazine * Otto Saumarez Smith's [has written a] detailed and engrossing book about the mid-20th-century boom in urban redevelopment ... That the book ends with a sense of tragedy and intense disillusionment is less of a judgement on the characters involved and more on the inherent penny-pinching - or money-misdirecting, perhaps - of the British political class when presented with the chance to create a dignifying, elevating, equalising public realm. The strength of Boom Cities lies in its insistence that blaming individuals for the failures of a whole political and economic system is too easy. It makes us see the things that should have been different, and the ways in which they could still be. * Lynsey Hanley, New Statesman * Saumarez Smith demonstrates that the urban plans of the 1960s were shaped by forces that are still central to contemporary practice: the need to use urban renewal to reduce inequalities and yet serve an affluent citizenry; the requirement to balance the needs of a local community against the developer's profit motive; and the desire to insert new forms into the historic cityscape thoughtfully. The resonances with contemporary practice are clear throughout this book: Boom Cities is therefore essential reading not just for historians of 20th century architecture and urbanism, but also for anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the development of the contemporary planning profession. * Ewan Harrison, The RIBA Journal * This is a brilliantly researched and very readable book. * Michael Taylor, Context * Saumarez Smith is a very good writer - frequently insightful, often very funny. He has convincingly argued that the work and world of the architect-planner are valuable for understanding the complex of forces that transformed city centres in Britain in the 1960s. He has supported that argument through a careful and sympathetic reading of local government and private archives. * Planning Perspectives * hugely readable and fascinating * Helen Goodwin, Architecture Today * Saumarez Smith writes deftly and has a deep understanding of his subject * Elain Harwood, Literary Review * Boom Cities is much more than a book about buildings. It is instead a study about town planning, welfare and the politics of affluence, and hence central to the history of mid-20th century Britain. Boom Cities may be a slim volume but it is packed with insights which make it an essential reference point for the new urban social history that is rapidly-and excitingly-emerging. * Professor Simon Gunn, University of Leicester, Reviews in History * Otto Saumarez Smith, author of Boom Cities, a book on postwar planning, writes with balance, perception and wit. * Rowan Moore, The Observer * if you're interested in the motives that inspired the wholesale reshaping of our town and city centres in the Sixties, he has a tale worth telling ... Boom Cities is well-stocked with interesting and revealing quotes ... 4 stars * Michael Bird, The Telegraph * ingeniously researched, well-written and subtly argued study * David Kynaston, Times Literary Supplement * Author InformationOtto Saumarez Smith is an architectural and urban historian, and is an Assistant Professor in Art History at the University of Warwick. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |