ABSTRACT

Peter Hall and Colin Ward wrote Sociable Cities to celebrate the centenary of publication of Ebenezer Howard’s To-morrow: A Peaceful Path to Real Reform in 1998 – an event they then marked by co-editing (with Dennis Hardy) the magnificent annotated facsimile edition of Howard’s original, long lost and very scarce, in 2003. In this revised edition of Sociable Cities, sadly now without Colin Ward, Peter Hall writes: ‘the sixteen years separating the two editions of this book seem almost like geological time. Revisiting the 1998 edition is like going back deep into ancient history’. The glad confident morning following Tony Blair’s election has been followed by political disillusionment, the fiscal crash, widespread austerity and a marked anti-planning stance on the part of the Coalition government.

But – closely following the argument of Good Cities, Better Lives: How Europe discovered the Lost Art of Urbanism (Routledge 2013), to which this book is designed as a companion – Hall argues that the central message is now even stronger: we need more planning, not less. And this planning needs to be driven by broad, high-level strategic visions – national, regional – of the kind of country we want to see.

Above all, Hall shows in the concluding chapters, Britain’s escalating housing crisis can be resolved only by a massive programme of planned decentralization from London, at least equal in scale to the great Abercrombie plan seventy years ago. He sets out a picture of great new city clusters at the periphery of South East England, sustainably self-sufficient in their daily patterns of living and working, but linked to the capital by new high-speed rail services.

This is a book that every planner, and every serious student of policy-making, will want to read. Published at a time when the political parties are preparing their policy manifestos, it is designed to make a major contribution to a major national debate.

part One|76 pages

The First Century

chapter 1|12 pages

Howard's Beginning

chapter 2|21 pages

Garden City: Ideal and Reality

chapter 3|23 pages

From Garden Cities to New Towns

chapter 4|18 pages

Garden Cities Across the Channel

part II|40 pages

Land, Life and Liberty

chapter 5|7 pages

Plotlands: The Unauthorized Version

chapter 6|8 pages

Land Settlement: The Failed Alternative

chapter 7|9 pages

Do-It-Yourself New Towns

chapter 8|14 pages

Not Counting the Nimbys

part 3|124 pages

The Coming Century

chapter 9|25 pages

Then and Now

chapter 10|38 pages

The Quest for Sustainability

chapter 11|35 pages

Sustainable Social Cities of Tomorrow

chapter 12|24 pages

Making it Happen