Helmut Holzapfel
Urbanism and Transport
Building Blocks for Architects and City and Transport Planners
Helmut Holzapfel
Urbanism and Transport
Building Blocks for Architects and City and Transport Planners
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Helmut Holzapfel's Urbanism and Transport, a German bestseller now available in English, examines the history and future of urban design for transport in European cities.
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Helmut Holzapfel's Urbanism and Transport, a German bestseller now available in English, examines the history and future of urban design for transport in European cities.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 116
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. Februar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 155mm x 10mm
- Gewicht: 204g
- ISBN-13: 9781138798182
- ISBN-10: 1138798185
- Artikelnr.: 41608461
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 116
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. Februar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 155mm x 10mm
- Gewicht: 204g
- ISBN-13: 9781138798182
- ISBN-10: 1138798185
- Artikelnr.: 41608461
Helmut Holzapfel studied civil engineering, first working in leading positions from 1980-1993 as a transport scientist in research groups and later as an official at the Transport Ministry of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. Since 1993 he has been a professor at the Faculty of Architecture, Urban and Landscape Planning at the University of Kassel, Germany, and since 2009 has lead the research project "Sintropher" in close collaboration with Sir Peter Hall. Urbanism and Transport was published in German as Urbanismus und Verkehr and went on to become one of the bestselling books on urban and transport planning.
1. Introduction 1.1 Streets and Transport: Separation or Connection? 2.
What We Think about Transport and Urbanism 2.1 Mobility: A culture and a
phenomenon of industrialization 2.2 The relationship of urban development
and transport 2.3 A few hypotheses and methodological approaches to clarify
the relation of urbanism and transport 2.3.1 Persons and space 2.3.2 What
is the city, what are urban conditions? Regarding the object of analysis 3.
House, street, network - Small-scale organisation and urbanism 3.1 The role
of small-scale spatial relationships 3.2 The street and the house in the
settlement 3.3 Street networks and the intersection 3.4 Separation,
disintegration and displacement - The strategies of industrialisation in
transport 3.4.1 Background 3.4.2 The separation of the house from the
street and the loss of the street as a place to spend time 3.4.3 Changes in
the transport networks 3.4.4 The prevalence of distance-oriented planning
in the 1950s and 60s - and the isolation of residents in new Fordist forms
of settlement 3.4.5 The development of the street network 3.5 Social
Aspects of the Organisation of the City and Transport 4. Transport and
"social space" 4.1 The interaction of transport networks and social
relations 4.2 Bigger and bigger, further and further! - The fascination and
implementation of the enormous in the previous century 4.2.1 Development of
axis concepts 4.3 The accelerated and unrestricted development of transport
infrastructure and the apogee of fordist planning 4.4 Critical or
"alternative" transport planning in Germany since the 1970 4.5 Desolate
locations or the forgotten basis of a critique of modernism 4.6 Post-modern
transport planning 4.7 The locality in global competition or the city as
point in a transport network 5. Bridges in the archipelago - Creating new
networks 6. What is happening with the new theories of transport planning
in practice in Germany and in Europe as a whole? 7. Bibliography
What We Think about Transport and Urbanism 2.1 Mobility: A culture and a
phenomenon of industrialization 2.2 The relationship of urban development
and transport 2.3 A few hypotheses and methodological approaches to clarify
the relation of urbanism and transport 2.3.1 Persons and space 2.3.2 What
is the city, what are urban conditions? Regarding the object of analysis 3.
House, street, network - Small-scale organisation and urbanism 3.1 The role
of small-scale spatial relationships 3.2 The street and the house in the
settlement 3.3 Street networks and the intersection 3.4 Separation,
disintegration and displacement - The strategies of industrialisation in
transport 3.4.1 Background 3.4.2 The separation of the house from the
street and the loss of the street as a place to spend time 3.4.3 Changes in
the transport networks 3.4.4 The prevalence of distance-oriented planning
in the 1950s and 60s - and the isolation of residents in new Fordist forms
of settlement 3.4.5 The development of the street network 3.5 Social
Aspects of the Organisation of the City and Transport 4. Transport and
"social space" 4.1 The interaction of transport networks and social
relations 4.2 Bigger and bigger, further and further! - The fascination and
implementation of the enormous in the previous century 4.2.1 Development of
axis concepts 4.3 The accelerated and unrestricted development of transport
infrastructure and the apogee of fordist planning 4.4 Critical or
"alternative" transport planning in Germany since the 1970 4.5 Desolate
locations or the forgotten basis of a critique of modernism 4.6 Post-modern
transport planning 4.7 The locality in global competition or the city as
point in a transport network 5. Bridges in the archipelago - Creating new
networks 6. What is happening with the new theories of transport planning
in practice in Germany and in Europe as a whole? 7. Bibliography
1. Introduction 1.1 Streets and Transport: Separation or Connection? 2.
What We Think about Transport and Urbanism 2.1 Mobility: A culture and a
phenomenon of industrialization 2.2 The relationship of urban development
and transport 2.3 A few hypotheses and methodological approaches to clarify
the relation of urbanism and transport 2.3.1 Persons and space 2.3.2 What
is the city, what are urban conditions? Regarding the object of analysis 3.
House, street, network - Small-scale organisation and urbanism 3.1 The role
of small-scale spatial relationships 3.2 The street and the house in the
settlement 3.3 Street networks and the intersection 3.4 Separation,
disintegration and displacement - The strategies of industrialisation in
transport 3.4.1 Background 3.4.2 The separation of the house from the
street and the loss of the street as a place to spend time 3.4.3 Changes in
the transport networks 3.4.4 The prevalence of distance-oriented planning
in the 1950s and 60s - and the isolation of residents in new Fordist forms
of settlement 3.4.5 The development of the street network 3.5 Social
Aspects of the Organisation of the City and Transport 4. Transport and
"social space" 4.1 The interaction of transport networks and social
relations 4.2 Bigger and bigger, further and further! - The fascination and
implementation of the enormous in the previous century 4.2.1 Development of
axis concepts 4.3 The accelerated and unrestricted development of transport
infrastructure and the apogee of fordist planning 4.4 Critical or
"alternative" transport planning in Germany since the 1970 4.5 Desolate
locations or the forgotten basis of a critique of modernism 4.6 Post-modern
transport planning 4.7 The locality in global competition or the city as
point in a transport network 5. Bridges in the archipelago - Creating new
networks 6. What is happening with the new theories of transport planning
in practice in Germany and in Europe as a whole? 7. Bibliography
What We Think about Transport and Urbanism 2.1 Mobility: A culture and a
phenomenon of industrialization 2.2 The relationship of urban development
and transport 2.3 A few hypotheses and methodological approaches to clarify
the relation of urbanism and transport 2.3.1 Persons and space 2.3.2 What
is the city, what are urban conditions? Regarding the object of analysis 3.
House, street, network - Small-scale organisation and urbanism 3.1 The role
of small-scale spatial relationships 3.2 The street and the house in the
settlement 3.3 Street networks and the intersection 3.4 Separation,
disintegration and displacement - The strategies of industrialisation in
transport 3.4.1 Background 3.4.2 The separation of the house from the
street and the loss of the street as a place to spend time 3.4.3 Changes in
the transport networks 3.4.4 The prevalence of distance-oriented planning
in the 1950s and 60s - and the isolation of residents in new Fordist forms
of settlement 3.4.5 The development of the street network 3.5 Social
Aspects of the Organisation of the City and Transport 4. Transport and
"social space" 4.1 The interaction of transport networks and social
relations 4.2 Bigger and bigger, further and further! - The fascination and
implementation of the enormous in the previous century 4.2.1 Development of
axis concepts 4.3 The accelerated and unrestricted development of transport
infrastructure and the apogee of fordist planning 4.4 Critical or
"alternative" transport planning in Germany since the 1970 4.5 Desolate
locations or the forgotten basis of a critique of modernism 4.6 Post-modern
transport planning 4.7 The locality in global competition or the city as
point in a transport network 5. Bridges in the archipelago - Creating new
networks 6. What is happening with the new theories of transport planning
in practice in Germany and in Europe as a whole? 7. Bibliography