Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Cyburbia is a friendly big tent, where we share our experiences and thoughts about urban planning practice, the built environment, planning adjacent topics, and anything else that comes to mind. No ads, no spam, and it's free. It's easy to join!
Can anyone point me towards some great/best out there books introducing students to Urban Planning and preferably discussing its various subfields? Thanks a lot in advance.
Close-Up: How to Read the American City by Grady Clay is fantastic. the book it self is a bit dated by now, but the information is very accessible and well presented.
Suburban Nation is also a good book - but don't take everything in it as gospel. the new urbanists are a wacky bunch and have some equally wacky ideas.
Delirious New York: A Retroactive Manifesto for Manhattan by Rem Koolhaas is also a good book. if you arent familiar - Koolhaas is an architect, not a planner but the book is good.
Cullingworth wrote one of the textbooks in my "planning 101" class- his international perspective was helpful in that he came at the U.S. system as an outsider, just like a new student. Also, his writing style was a lot more engaging than most textbook writers.
Instead of creating a new thread, i'll continue with this one.
I am interested in finding literature on housing policy and planning within the U.S.
Specifically maybe a book which outlines significant policies/regulations that have been created over time, guidelines of policy implementations, or general books of housing case studies. Technical/Non technical its all good.
On the general topic of intro to planning books: I think, if someone really wants to know what planners actually do, they should read these two books (dry though they may be):