A book filled with fascinating observations and research about the crazy way we have come to see and live in our cities. Too many to list here. One: inhabitants of Toronto and Vancouver express less satisfaction with life than people living in small towns and backwaters such as Sherbrooke and Brantford (!!!!!)
He looks at many of the unhealthy, unhappy trends in modern urban design and living. He explores the negative outcomes of our obsessions with suburban sprawl. He looks at the politics of power and inequality in modern urban environments, from the domination of the car to gentrification.
Throughout the book I met explanations for many of the things I disliked about my suburban living experience and also that I dislike in the changes in Toronto. Why walking is so unpleasant in the suburbs. Why parks are often so uninviting. Why the ROM addition is such an abomination. Why areas like Harboufront, with their endless condos and planned recreational areas, remain lifeless and uninviting. Why I was compelled to give up riding the subway this winter (the growing stress caused by repeated unreliability combined with a lack of power to circumvent the problem).
It also filled with inspirational stories of change for the better, like Bogata, Copenhagen, neighbourhoods and local movements around the world.
Definitely worth a reread.
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