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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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Book Review: The Making of Urban Japan

April 28, 2022 By Salim Furth Leave a Comment

If you read one book about Japan this year, it should be the beautiful, new Emergent Tokyo: Designing the Spontaneous City by Jorge Almazan and his Studiolab colleagues, including Joe McReynolds. But if you read two books about Japan, as you should, the second one should be André Sorensen's … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Book Review, Culture & Books, Places & Spaces, planning, sprawl, Uncategorized, Urban[ism] Legends, World Tagged With: Andre Sorensen, japan, planning, tokyo

Review: Homelessness is a Housing Problem

April 19, 2022 By Michael Lewyn

In Homelessness is a Housing Problem, Prof. Gregg Colburn and data scientist Clayton Page Aldern seek to answer the question: why is homelessness much more common in some cities than in others?They find that only two factors are significant: 1) overall rents and 2) rental vacancy rates. Where … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Book Review, housing, Michael Lewyn, zoning Tagged With: homelessness

Book review: Last Harvest

July 12, 2021 By Salim Furth

In the standard urban growth model, a circular city lies in a featureless agricultural plain. When the price of land at the edge of the city rises above the value of agricultural land, “land conversion” occurs. In the real world, we’re more likely to call it “development” and it is, of course, a lot … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Book Review, Development, Uncategorized Tagged With: book review, developers, development

Book Review: The Housing Bias

March 9, 2021 By Salim Furth

The best book on zoning and NIMBYism you’ve never read might well be The Housing Bias by Paul Boudreaux. The author is a law professor, but you’d be forgiven for thinking he’s a journalist. His writing is engaging - and occasionally funny – and he does what is unthinkable for many scholars: drives … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Book Review, history, housing

Get the tuck out of here

September 10, 2020 By Salim Furth

Tuck-under duplexes in Palisades Park, NJ (Google Streetview)In two previous posts, I’ve raised questions about the competitiveness of missing middle housing. This post is more petty: I want to challenge the design rigidities that Daniel Parolek promotes in Missing Middle Housing. Although … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Architecture and Design, Book Review, housing, Los Angeles Tagged With: books, Economics, housing, missing middle

In praise of fee simple ownership

September 9, 2020 By Salim Furth

In yesterday's post, I showed that missing middle housing, as celebrated in Daniel Parolek’s new book, may be stuck in the middle, too balanced to compete with single family housing on the one hand and multifamily on the other.But what about all the disadvantages that middle housing faces? … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Architecture and Design, Book Review, housing Tagged With: books, Economics, housing, missing middle

Stuck in the (Missing) Middle

September 8, 2020 By Salim Furth

Everybody loves missing middle housing! What’s not to like? It consists of neighborly, often attractive homes that fit in equally well in Rumford, Maine, and Queens, New York. Missing middle housing types have character and personality. They’re often affordable and vintage.Daniel Parolek’s new … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Architecture and Design, Book Review, Development, housing Tagged With: books, Economics, housing, missing middle

What Should I Read to Understand Zoning?

April 16, 2019 By Nolan Gray

A stack of books

We are blessed and cursed to live in times in which most smart people are expected to have an opinion on zoning. Blessed, in that zoning is arguably the single most important institution shaping where we live, how we move around, and who we meet. Cursed, in that zoning is notoriously obtuse, with … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Book Review, zoning Tagged With: alain bertaud, bernard siegan, books, david owen, death and life of great american cities, edward glaeser, green metropolis, Jane Jacobs, reading list, richard babcock, richard rothstein, seymour toll, sonia hirt, the color of law, the zoning game, triumph of the city, William Fischel, zoned american, zoned in the usa, zoning

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