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The Evolution of City Centers and Urban Renewal

Season 1 Episode 203 Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description

From bustling marketplaces to gleaming waterfronts, the modern city center is the product of repeated reinvention. Once forged by the convergence of railways, ports, and commerce in the late nineteenth century, downtowns later became targets of mid-twentieth-century urban renewal schemes that sought to erase “blight” through large-scale redevelopment—often at the cost of local communities. In this episode, we explore how critics like Jane Jacobs challenged those visions, reshaping planning around street life, density, and diversity, and how today’s city centers are being redesigned once again as festival marketplaces, cultural districts, and global nodes in a postindustrial economy. The story traces a long arc of ideas about what the heart of a city is for—and why it keeps changing with every new era of movement, money, and power.

Abbott, Carl, 'Saving the center', City Planning: A Very Short Introduction, Very Short Introductions (New York, 2020; online edn, Oxford Academic, 22 Oct. 2020), https://doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780190944346.003.0004

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