The Guardian / cities 04-05-2016, por Saskia Sassen
How Jane Jacobs changed the way we look at cities
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| Jane Jacobs |
(..) So perhaps now, on the 100th anniversary of her birth,
we should all be asking: what is it that Jane Jacobs made us want to see in the
city?
Thinking about this question leads me to focus on the
conditions that make a metropolis – the enormous diversity of workers, their
living and work spaces, the multiple sub-economies involved. Many of these are
now seen as irrelevant to the global city, or belonging to another era. But a
close look, as encouraged by Jacobs, shows us this is wrong.
She would ask us to look at the consequences of these
sub-economies for the city – for its people, its neighbourhoods, and the visual
orders involved. She would ask us to consider all the other economies and
spaces impacted by the massive gentrifications of the modern city – not least,
the resultant displacements of modest households and profit-making,
neighbourhood firms. (..)
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2016-05-05