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House by House, Block by Block will be a must-read for anyone who cares about the fate of America's cities. Read more Read less. Add both to Cart Add both to List. These items are shipped from and sold by different sellers. Buy the selected items together This item: House by House, Block by Block: The Origins of the Urban Crisis: Ships from and sold by Amazon.
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House by House, Block by Block: The Rebirth of America's Urban Neighborhoods [Alexander von Hoffman] on bahana-line.com *FREE* shipping on qualifying. Editorial Reviews. From Publishers Weekly. America's blighted inner cities enjoyed a House by House, Block by Block: The Rebirth of America's Urban Neighborhoods - Kindle edition by Alexander von Hoffman. Download it once and read it.
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This is a very comprehensive historical review of urban regrowth in major U. Overall, the book takes a comprehensive look at how change happens and who makes it happen. This book should be read by everyone interested in a step by step outline of how neighborhoods change and how neighborhood change leads to the revitalization of entire cities. Yet increasingly, local organizations are picking up where Washington has left off. Based on years of research and more than a hundred interviews, this book is the first systematic account of the dramatic urban revival now going on in the United States. One person found this helpful.
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The way feelings control our mind. Looking at words, in a way that has never been done before. During its history, humankind has been using words without being aware of what words are. Review "Contains eternal truths for reformers in any major American city. I was there, and the revitalization occurred just as von Hoffman describes. Koch, former mayor of New York City.
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There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later. I found this book at a library and eventually purchased it with great hopes. The book goes through a couple different cities detailing different revitilization efforts that took place. I found that it was heavy on historical and not as much analysis as i was hoping for.
Yet it still provided some examples for community development and helped to show the differences between development in cities.
I found that section on L. One person found this helpful.
This is a very comprehensive historical review of urban regrowth in major U. The author gives sometimes too detailed histories of what happened as formerly neglected areas rebuilt and reclaimed their glory as livable urban neighborhoods. By the stories chosen, it is obvious that the author does not subscribe to the government do it all model of urban regrowth - instead, he focuses on how cities can enable developers and groups to rebuild their cities house by house, block by block. As is, it seems focused too highly on giving the historical story, and less as a cogent synthesis of step-by-step urban renewal.
House by House, Block by Block tells the stories of how urban neighborhood revitalization happened in five cities across America. Alexander Von Hoffman, an historian and specialist in housing and urban affairs and senior research fellow at Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies, takes his readers on a journey across America from east to west and describes how neighborhoods fall into decline as well as how they rise back up from the ashes of blight and devastation.
The histories of neighborhoods in New York, Boston, Chicago, Atlanta, and Los Angeles are revealed through a series of case studies about specific neighborhoods in those cities. The case studies were developed from personal interviews, census data, private publications, and newspaper articles. Each chapter dissects the rebirth of neighborhoods beginning with the causes of decline, identifying and describing the people who facilitated the transformations, how the revitalization began on the street, and ends with a summary of lessons learned from that particular case.
Overall, the book takes a comprehensive look at how change happens and who makes it happen. This book should be read by everyone interested in a step by step outline of how neighborhoods change and how neighborhood change leads to the revitalization of entire cities. House by House, Block by Block will be a must-read for anyone who cares about the fate of America's cities.
He is the author of Local Attachments: America's blighted inner cities enjoyed a renaissance in the s, with crime rates plummeting and employment, real estate values and population all rising for the first time in decades. The credit for the turnaround, according to this absorbing study of urban revitalization, belongs to local community organizations, whose David vs.
Goliath fight against red-lining banks and insurance companies, all-devouring real-estate developments and neglectful city halls helped preserve and revitalize their neighborhoods. Von Hoffman, an academic and the author of Local Attachments: The Making of an American Neighborhood, studies urban disaster areas such as the South Bronx, where housing activists helped transform burned-out ruins into flourishing neighborhoods, and South Central Los Angeles, where an influx of hard-working, entrepreneurial Latino immigrants built a vibrant working-class community after the riots.
His is a somewhat conservative brand of urbanism, favoring "the power of capitalism" over vast urban renewal schemes that, he says, often destroy the character of the areas they're meant to revitalize. Hope for cities, he argues, lies not in glitzy stadiums and civic centers or giant public-housing projects, but in smaller-scale public-private partnerships, subsidies and tax incentives that encourage local landlords and mom-and-pop businesses, the motor of inner-city revitalization. Urban development policy is a labyrinth of heavily acronymed programs, regulations, community groups and government agencies, but von Hoffman's lucid narrative, with its colorful activists, Machiavellian politicians and inspiring struggles, brings this potentially mind-numbing subject to life.
This book deserves to be read by everyone concerned with the fate of America's cities.
Thank you for using the catalog. House by house, block by block: Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press, []. The quest to save the inner city: Urban renewal -- United States. Community development, Urban -- United States -- Case studies.