ABSTRACT

Existing patterns of urbanization are unsustainable in the long run. Current development practices consume enormous amounts of land and resources, damage local ecosystems, produce pollutants, create huge inequalities between groups of people and undermine local community and quality of life. Unfortunately planning has itself led to many unsustainable development practices.

Planning for Sustainability presents a straightforward, systematic analysis of how more sustainable cities and towns can be brought about. It does so in a highly readable manner that considers in turn each scale of planning: international, national, regional, municipal, neighbourhood, site and building. In the process it illustrates how sustainability initiatives at these different scales interrelate and how an overall framework can be developed for more livable communities.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|15 pages

Sustainable development

chapter 3|19 pages

Theory of sustainability planning

chapter 4|13 pages

Planning and the Three Es

chapter 5|19 pages

Issues central to sustainability planning

chapter 6|17 pages

Tools for sustainability planning

chapter 7|12 pages

International planning

chapter 8|11 pages

National planning

chapter 9|8 pages

State and provincial planning

chapter 10|19 pages

Regional planning

chapter 11|29 pages

Local government planning

chapter 12|35 pages

Neighborhood planning

chapter 13|14 pages

Site planning and architecture

chapter |5 pages

Project Checklist

chapter 14|7 pages

How do we get there from here?