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Garden cities for the twenty-first century
How can cities grow without harming the environment? Nicholas Falk and David Rudlin won the 2014 Wolfson Economic Prize by showing how to build New Garden Cities that are visionary, viable and popular. The principles were tested out first in York and then in Oxford, and are now being applied in a number of other cities. The basic idea is to use the uplift in land values to fund improved local infrastructure.
Garden cities for the twenty-first century
How can cities grow without harming the environment? Nicholas Falk and David Rudlin won the 2014 Wolfson Economic Prize by showing how to build New Garden Cities that are visionary, viable and popular. The principles were tested out first in York and then in Oxford, and are now being applied in a number of other cities. The basic idea is to use the uplift in land values to fund improved local infrastructure.
Garden cities for the twenty-first century
Falk, Nicholas (author)
2017
Article (Journal)
English
Garden cities for the twenty-first century
Online Contents | 2017
|Geologic Presence in a Twenty-First-Century Scenic Garden
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 2014
|Geologic Presence in a Twenty-First-Century Scenic Garden
British Library Online Contents | 2014
|Geologic Presence in a Twenty-First-Century Scenic Garden
Online Contents | 2014
|Geologic Presence in a Twenty-First-Century Scenic Garden
British Library Online Contents | 2014
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