鈥淚 have a confession to make. I hate Venice.鈥 So begins Richard J. Williams鈥 Why Cities Look the Way They Do. It is a promising start to an intriguing book that faces the complexities and paradoxes of the 21st century city head-on.
Williams, professor of visual culture at the University of Edinburgh, focuses on 鈥渢he city as process鈥, and draws largely on the philosophies and theories of art and architecture. As an architect, I can vouch for Williams鈥 observations on my own profession, which are spot on. 鈥淎rchitectural and urban criticism invariably stops at the moment something is built,鈥 he observes, one reason I would argue that we know so little about what works.
I enjoyed Williams鈥 insightful observations, his use of quirky sources such as the TV series Seinfeld to tease out a structure for the chapter on sex (which isn鈥檛 quite as exciting as its sounds), the introduction of fascinating off-piste examples and his beautiful writing. The book opens up questions rather than closing them down and, being relatively short and accessible, is likely to be on reading lists for some time.
The individual chapters, offered as a methodology for really looking at cities, explore money, power, sex, work, war and culture. As usual, religion doesn鈥檛 get a look in 鈥 nor nature nor technology. Fortunately and refreshingly, Williams doesn鈥檛 pretend to be exhaustive: 鈥淟ike any book, this one is influenced by the partial and eccentric experience of its author.鈥 He acknowledges that his emphasis is on the 鈥渓argely rich, largely northern hemispheric cities鈥. To me, it feels like the book has an emphasis on the 1980s, a pivotal period of privatisation of city space. This was also a period when real estate took off as an investment, often from overseas, distorting the market and blighting communities in the process, a problem that Williams interrogates in some detail.
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The chapter on work is of particular interest because it gives an account of the development of the 鈥渟o-called鈥 creative industries and their colonisation of space, for example through squatting. This is a neglected area of research. It is also a particularly pertinent subject given current British government ambitions, trickling down to us in academia more or less blatantly from research councils, to tame creatives in the name of UK Plc. The irony that the creative industries were developed 鈥渋n critical relation to the state鈥 is not lost on Williams, whose attention then moves on to culture, providing a useful account of its self-conscious development as an 鈥渋ndustry鈥 since the Second World War. He reflects on 鈥渢he Bilbao Effect鈥, the putative economic impact of Frank Gehry鈥檚 Guggenheim Museum in the northern Spanish city and the rise of iconic projects built in the name of soft power.
I really like the fact that Williams is unafraid to make predictions about the future of cities, and the way that they might be conceived in the years ahead. Ultimately, they are 鈥渢he material forms of processes that can鈥檛, and shouldn鈥檛, be fully controlled鈥.
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听Flora Samuel is professor in the new School of Architecture at the University of Reading, and the author of Why Architects Matter: Evidencing and Communicating the Value of Architects (2018).
Why Cities Look the Way They Do
By Richard Williams
Polity
232pp, 拢15.99
ISBN 9780745691817
Published 3 May 2019
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