List of Figures
List of Tables
Preface
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction: futures, imagination, and visions for cities
2. Cities of Vision: a visual history of the future
3. Rendering Tomorrow: the impact of visualisation techniques
4. Technological Futures: optimism, science fiction, and
infrastructural systems
5. Social Futures: experiments, ephemerality, and experiences
6. Global Futures: challenges and opportunities for collective
life
7. Tomorrow’s Cities Today: conclusions and alternative futures
References
An exploration of urban visions of future cities that explains what such representations sought to communicate and why and how they may shape our lives in the future.
Nick Dunn is Professor of Urban Design and Executive
Director of Imagination, the design research lab at Lancaster
University, UK. He is Senior Fellow at the Institute for Social
Futures, examining the insights that the arts and humanities can
bring to the ways we think, envision, and analyse the futures of
people, places, and planet.
Paul Cureton is a Senior Lecturer in Design at
ImaginationLancaster, and member of the Data Science Institute,
Lancaster University, UK. His previous publications include
Strategies for Landscape Representation: Digital and Analogue
Techniques (2016) and Drone Futures: UAS in Landscape & Urban
Design (2020).
Images of future cities are one of the most revealing ways in which
hopes, fears and plans about the future are imagined. This
wonderful book brings together images of urban futures from a wide
range of places, disciplines, histories, media and genres, to
dizzying effect. Whether you make images of urban futures, you're
interested in studying them, or you're a fascinated spectator, this
book is an essential, imaginative, provocative and above all
generous resource for thinking about how and why to picture future
cities.
*Gillian Rose, Professor of Human Geography, University of Oxford,
UK*
We conceive of the future via the images we make of it. This
lavishly illustrated visual history of the city is a powerful
reminder of the influence of images on our thinking about the
future. It is an asset in times when we need to scan the probable,
the possible and the preferable futures that lie ahead. A wonderful
and valuable resource.
*Maarten Hajer, Professor of Urban Futures, Utrecht University, the
Netherlands*
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