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Liberalizing cities | From the bottom up

“Market Urbanism” refers to the synthesis of classical liberal economics and ethics (market), with an appreciation of the urban way of life and its benefits to society (urbanism). We advocate for the emergence of bottom up solutions to urban issues, as opposed to ones imposed from the top down.

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Digging deeper on natalism and urbanism

April 7, 2025 By Michael Lewyn

In a recent blog post at Planetizen, I criticized the idea that higher birth rates can only be achieved in car-dominated suburbia. In this post, I pointed out that a) not all walkable places have as little floor space as my Manhattan apartment, b) that some (admittedly unusual) urban places have … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Development, MUsings, Places & Spaces, planning, Policy, sprawl, Urban[ism] Legends Tagged With: birth rates, children, natalism

Are we spiralling into a new dark age? | Analysis and review of Jacobs’ Dark Age Ahead

July 25, 2024 By Adam Louis Sebastian Lehodey

Jane Jacobs wasn’t optimistic about the future of civilisation. ‘We show signs of rushing headlong into a Dark Age,’ she declares in Dark Age Ahead, her final book published in 2004.  She evidences a breakdown in family and civic life, universities which focus more on credentialling than on actually … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Culture, Culture & Books, Development, Economics, history, Jane Jacobs, Uncategorized Tagged With: book review, Economics, Jane Jacobs, Urban Economics

Are New Cities Necessary?

July 15, 2024 By Alain Bertaud

Promotors of recently developed cities ranging from Nusantara, the freshly built capital of Indonesia, to Neom, Saudi Arabia’s futurist urban paradise, advertise them as breakthroughs in urban living. But does the world need new cities? This article appeared originally in Caos Planejadoand is … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Development, planning, Urban[ism] Legends, World Tagged With: New Cities

Lessons from Cities and the Wealth of Nations: a manual for urban policymakers

July 12, 2024 By Adam Louis Sebastian Lehodey

Continuing this series of book reviews on Jane Jacobs’ works, I now turn to Cities and the Wealth of Nations. But there is already a fantastic piece on the Market Urbanism website, by Matthew Robare, who reviews this book and outlines what Jacobs overlooks in her analysis. So, this piece takes a … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Book Review, Culture & Books, Development, Economics, housing, Jane Jacobs, Zoning Tagged With: Jane Jacobs, Mayors, Urban Economics, Urban Governance

Retrospective: Sites & Services

June 26, 2024 By Alain Bertaud

The World Bank's "sites and services" generated many projects on which I spent several years of my professional life. Here's a description: Sites and services projects are government-sponsored packages of shelter related services, which range from a minimal level of "surveyed plot" to an … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Development, infrastructure, World Tagged With: development, India, Mumbai

Lessons from Jane Jacobs on The Economy of Cities

June 21, 2024 By Adam Louis Sebastian Lehodey

At the heart of Jane Jacobs’ The Economy of Cities is a simple idea: cities are the basic unit of economic growth. Our prosperity depends on the ability of cities to grow and renew themselves; neither nation nor civilisation can thrive without cities performing this vital function of growing our … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Architecture and Design, Book Review, Development, Economics, history Tagged With: development, Economics, Growth, history, Jane Jacobs, Urban Economics, Urban Growth

The Death and Life of Great American Cities, Revisited

June 13, 2024 By Adam Louis Sebastian Lehodey

Jane Jacobs’ The Death and Life of Great American Cities, published in 1961, revolutionised urban theory. This essay kicks off a series exploring Jacobs’ influential ideas and their potential to address today’s urban challenges and enhance city living. Adam Louis Sebastian Lehodey, the author of … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Book Review, Culture & Books, Development, housing, Jane Jacobs Tagged With: density, Jane Jacobs, urban renewal

The sudden death of the American condo

April 9, 2024 By Salim Furth

Condos are disappearing. They persist now mainly in pre-2010 buildings. Among multifamily homes built in the 2020s, just 1 in 25 is owner-occupied. What happened? I pulled American Community Survey data via IPUMS to get a better grasp of the numbers and the geography. Nationally, the rate of … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Development, history, housing, Law

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