Culture of Cities - Book Review
Culture of Cities - Book Review
Culture of Cities - Book Review
Technology
Lisha Bendre
February 2021 Architect | Urban Planner
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Content
6. Medieval domesticity
Throughout The Middle Ages, the Christian churches of Europe advanced both art and architecture by building
larger, grander churches called cathedrals
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• As cities and its population density increased, new sanitation difficulties arose.
• During the twelfth and thirteenth century, breeding places for disease were more congested than the city itself.
• Leftovers were eaten by dogs, chickens and pigs which were considered to be the local scavengers.
• Non-edible waste was difficult to dispose.
• Other important issues were the drinking water supply and bathing. Public baths appeared since as early as the thirteenth
century.
• Supply of drinking water to the town was a collective function. However, as city size increased, there was increased
demand of water and thus collection had to be done on a larger scale.
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• To increase the boundaries of the state , was to increase the taxable population, increasing population
of the capital city resulted in the increase of the rent.
• Capitalism in turn became militaristic , it relied on arms when it could no longer no bargain.
• Behind the immediate interests of new capitalism, with its abstract love of money an power , a
change in entire conceptual framework took place.
• At first ,new conception of space and second ,use of time for research and patent.
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• The first he called Viace military or military streets, he required that to be straight.
• Palladio after Alberti, proposed the avenues to be wide and regular to show their richness and so that there
is enough space for carts.
• He distinguished them from non military roads by pointing out that they pass through the middle of the
city and lead from one city to another and that they serve for the common use of the passengers.
• The building stand on each side so that spectators can have a nice view if the parade on the street.
• In medieval town upper and lower class had to adjust on this street but now the dissociation of upper and
lower class was very easy.
• Rich road along access of avenues while poor are off- centre. Eventually a separate strip is provided for
pedestrians.
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• The point of maximum accumulation, the focus of past achievements and present activities, is the metropolis.
• One may distinguish roughly between producing cities and consuming cities(New York, Paris, Berlin). Beginning
in the third quarter of the nineteenth century, the center of gravity shifted from the producing towns to the capital
cities.
• A coalition of land, industry, finance, and officialdom was formed in almost every country in order to effect the
maximum amount of financial exploitation.
• The agents of power, the aristocracy, the political bureaucracy, and the army began to direct "national interests"
toward the service of the industrialist.
• The basis for metropolitan agglomeration lay in the tremendous increase of population that took place during the
nineteenth century.
• By 1900 ,after London and Paris, eleven metropolises with more than a million inhabitants had come into existence,
including Berlin, Chicago, New York, Calcutta etc.
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• Circle over big cities in an airplane. As the eye stretches toward the hazy periphery one can pick out no definite
shape, except that formed by nature.
• The growth of a great city is amoeboid.
• The city has absorbed villages and little towns and reduced them to place names.
• Here and there in the mass one may partly trace the outline of a city: hut the mass itself is not a city, in a functional
sense, any more than the immediate countryside that surrounds it is a rural area.
• To conclude, big cities expanded organically with hazy boundaries , still the concentration at the centre kept
increasing.
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• The land which was once a green land, was now crowded with low economic strata who used this
land to live.
• Then the blight starts, everything gets more and more congested and unhygienic.
• Green grounds get converted in either slum or get covered with torn paper, discarded boxes, broken
iron etc.
• All working class neighborhoods are by sheer poverty in a state of blight because, in the more
outlying areas, the cost of the utilities that connect them with the center has have increased
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• Meanwhile, the urban agglomeration produces a similar depletion in the natural environment.
• The cement jungle kept on increasing and it increased up to the rural hinterlands causing a drastic
effect in the culture.
• The metropolitan life affected the rural life cycle in many ways.
• Though the physical radius of the metropolis may be only twenty or thirty miles, its effective radius
is much greater.
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• The early definition of relaxation and pleasure completely changed in the new metropolis.
• The restaurants, the cafes, the saloons and pubs came into picture.
• The concrete jungle also nurtured many rackets and criminal activities in its heart.
• This era saw different heights of drug addiction and prostitution.
• Hence, a professional form of surveillance by an organized police grew in the city of strangers.
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• People began to see their happiness in other people or in other things rather than concentrating on
themselves.
• This was the time when the modes of entertainment such as boxing matches, wrestling bouts bicycle
races and dance marathons etc. came into picture.
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• The metropolis is economically weakened by the fact of growth and its own magnified expenses
which gives rise to the threat of bankruptcy.
• There is always a military vulnerability. Conditions after the first World War presented almost
unbearable difficulties to the harassed and starving metropolises, while out in the countryside, in
many regions, the peasant remained relatively secure and well-fed.
• In recreation, there is a serious lack of sufficient space for play, and for lack of play areas.
• As every aspect of a city grew, its fare also increased. After a certain point, one may say that urban
growth penalized itself.
• Immigration of people can also be a cause of death of the city. After a certain degree of
concentration, the community fails to cope up with its members.
• But in actual life, these threats they come together and reinforce each they can easily be the cause of
the end of the entire civilization
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