P.D. Smith's Blog, page 7
May 14, 2012
Building the New Jerusalem
When I was reviewing a collection of Michael Moorcock's non-fiction recently, I was struck by this passage from a piece he wrote about London in 1988, called 'Building the New Jerusalem':
'Cities can be neither simplified nor easily defined. They are hard to interpret. They are the ultimate and natural expression of human evolution, of human dreams and needs; they are as complex as the people who build them, as the planet itself; they have a sensitive ecology. In their architecture and their social organisation they are capable of reflecting the very best in us.'
That's a wonderful quote that neatly encapsulates what I was trying to achieve in my book City. On the future of London, he writes:
'Instead of retreating from the notion of the megametropolis we should have embraced it, celebrated it, grown comfortable with it, equipped it with hospitals, crèches, schools, houses set among imaginatively laid-out parks and "wild gardens", with low-rise asymmetrical buildings designed to blend with and reflect the organic world around them. We should acknowledge and revel in the natural complexity of the London we can create for ourselves.'
It's an inspirational piece of writing about cities in general and London in particular. The collection - London Peculiar and Other Nonfiction - is well worth reading.

May 8, 2012
Our natural mode of living
"The character of a city comes from its people. And that’s why the best cities are multicultural and cosmopolitan: there’s a unique atmosphere when people are constantly negotiating the differences between cultures and languages. I hope what this book shows is how positive that is, and how urbanism isn’t a new thing. It’s our natural mode of living.”
From my interview with Vision magazine about urbanism, Dubai and my new book, City: A Guidebook for the Urban Age.
Read more here.

April 11, 2012
Losing myself in Tokyo
I’ve just returned after a holiday in Japan. It was my first time there. We stayed in Tokyo and Kyoto, with a few days in the mountains of Hakone. As I write, my brain keeps telling me it’s the middle of the night. I’m dog-tired but my mind is also buzzing with the sights and sounds of Japanese cities.
In the sixteenth century, Tokyo was little more than a small town. Now it’s the largest metropolis on the planet, with some 33 million people living in the metropolitan region. That’s about the same number as live in the whole of Canada.

March 5, 2012
A shining city on a hill
Very pleased to see this description of City in today's Kirkus Reviews: "As exciting, sprawling and multifarious as a shining city on a hill."
Bloomsbury Publishing have also just sent me a link to a digital sampler of the book, so you can judge for yourself. It's online here.

February 14, 2012
Starred review
When you've spent the last couple of years researching and writing a book it's always a rather nerve-racking experience waiting for the first reviews. So I was delighted to read the first one for City which has just appeared in Publishers Weekly. It's a starred review and this is a taster:
"Whether evoking the slums of Mumbai, a 1905 dinner party at London’s Savoy Hotel, or the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlán before Cortés conquered it in 1521, Smith proves a lively, learned narrator with a strong synthetic sense. Discursive, imaginative, and comprehensive, his analysis of everything from the Hanging Gardens of Babylon to skateboarding and graffiti should be savored. Read in parts or whole, readers can wander and drift, and enjoy the element of surprise, just as in the exploration of a real city."
You can read the review here.

February 10, 2012
This Urban Age
"In 1900, just 10% of the world’s population lived in cities. Today more than half of humanity are city dwellers, and with each day that passes this proportion rises inexorably. We are living in a truly urban age. Global cities have become the engines of the modern economy and decisions made in cities touch the lives of every person on the planet. The challenges faced by the world today, from climate change to poverty and inequality, are concentrated in cities and often played out on their streets, in demonstrations and riots. The city has become the theatre of our anxieties as well as our hopes."
My review of Living in the Endless City, edited by Ricky Burdett and Deyan Sudjic, and The New Blackwell Companion to the City, edited by Gary Bridge and Sophie Watson, is in the current Times Literary Supplement (February 10, 2012, p 24). I have posted a somewhat longer version of the published review here.

January 25, 2012
US Proofs of City
Today, the postman delivered a box containing proof copies of the US edition of City: A Guidebook for the Urban Age (Bloomsbury Press). It's a really great feeling, after so many months and years of work, to finally have a bound copy in your hands - even an uncorrected black & white proof...
The full-colour hardback of City is due in shops in May (UK) and June (US).

November 17, 2011
Ghetto at the Center of the World
“I seek in this book to celebrate Chungking Mansions in its extraordinary and largely harmonious cultural diversity. It is an amazing place, one that should be lauded in Hong Kong and the world over.”
My review of Gordon Mathews' fascinating book Ghetto at the Center of the World: Chungking Mansions, Hong Kong is in this week's TLS. You can read it online here.

November 12, 2011
The Trouble with City Planning
Kristina Ford was director of city planning in New Orleans for eight years before Hurricane Katrina swept across the Big Easy in 2005, bringing floods and devastation on a scale unparalleled in an American city in modern times. According to Ford, the hurricane was an opportunity for city planners to do the job they were trained for: “to devise how to use the city’s lands more to the city’s betterment.” But this didn’t happen.
Ford's The Trouble with City Planning: What New Orleans Can Teach Us (Yale, £18.00) is a detailed and insightful analysis of what went wrong and a blueprint for how city planning can be improved in all cities. Cities are constantly changing and the way land is used impacts the lives of every city dweller. In post-Katrina New Orleans there was a “blizzard of planning”. There were at least five different plans in all, but the process was chaotic and the results largely ignored by the city’s elected leaders. They also failed to address the thorny historical issue of why people (largely poor African Americans) were living in areas – such as the Lower Ninth Ward – which were vulnerable to flooding. As Ford says, “any street that appeared on a map of New Orleans drawn in the nineteenth century…probably did not flood”. Planning decisions made in the early twentieth century placed too much faith in the power of technology to protect new residential areas. And importantly no attempt was made in the post-Katrina pans to explore, let alone explain, these decisions.
According to Ford, even today “a plan for rebuilding New Orleans still remains a most elusive goal”. But the experiences of the residents of New Orleans cast light on the trouble with contemporary urban planning throughout America. Ford wants to put city dwellers back at the heart of urban planning: good plans “are made with citizens and are meant to be used by them”. For a start she wants plans to be written in plain English rather than jargon and to incorporate not just facts but people’s experiences of how they use the city, what they love and hate about the city, what problems need to be solved and what kind of city they want in the future. Planners need to listen more to the people who live and work in the city. When she was a New Orleans city planner residents of New Orleans told Ford that their priorities were easy access to the amenities of the city, neighbourhoods with a strong sense of community, streetcars and cycle lanes. These are the kinds of views that should be at the centre of a city’s plan, argues Ford. A good plan should be “an expression of how the citizenry, working with city planners, believes a city could be made better”. At the heart of her argument is an important point that is often overlooked: cities are first and foremost human environments, not display cases for architecture.
Ford argues passionately that plans need to be “robust and supple documents”, which include the voices of city dwellers, and are “rooted in history”. She acknowledges that the planning process is as much an art as it is a science. There is even room for serendipity: “A Good City Plan acknowledges that what enlivens any city is frequently the product of the unexpected.” But as well as listening to the voices of residents, she is also reasserting the vital role planners must play in creating tomorrow’s cities: “what city planners know is essential to great cities”. By reforming the way city plans are created, Ford believes “the trouble with city planning” can be overcome. As a result mayors will be obliged to use city plans rather than political expediency as the basis for planning decisions. Ford’s idealism is certainly inspiring but this is an idealism grounded in a practical understanding of the challenges of city planning. And in the end, it is this that makes her book so valuable for cities and citizens everywhere.
[NB. This is a longer version of my review published in the Guardian on 12 November 2011.]

November 8, 2011
Jane Jacobs and the Future of the City
I shall be taking part in a panel discussion on "Jane Jacobs and the Future of the City" at the Bristol Festival of Ideas on 3 December, together with Geoff Dyer, Anna Mansfield, and Ben Rogers. More details and booking information here. Should be interesting. See you there!
