Robert Bruegmann is chair of and professor in the Department of Art History at the University of Illinois at Chicago as well as professor in the School of Architecture and the Program in Urban Planning. His many books include The Architects and the City: Holabird & Roche of Chicago, 1880-1918, also published by the University of Chicago Press.
"After 70 years of suffering the slings and arrows of academic criticism, suburban life finally finds a compelling defender in Bruegmann. A professor of art history and urban planning at the University of Illinois-Chicago, Bruegmann demonstrates that urban sprawl is a natural process as old as the world's oldest cities, wherein large metropolises reach a point of maturity and those with financial means escape the congestion and high prices of city life. What has changed over the past century, the author says, is that an increasing number of citizens have achieved the financial means to participate in what was once an exclusive luxury of the wealthy. Bruegmann acknowledges that the effects on cities are not always positive, but he also demonstrates that many of the criticisms of suburban sprawl-e.g., that it is culturally deficient and environmentally noxious-are greatly exaggerated and ignore the very real benefits sprawl offers in terms of privacy, mobility and choice. With his disdain for doomsday predictions and his disregard for the academic consensus, Bruegmann's thorough analysis is sure to be controversial, but a shot of controversy ought to do the field, and public dialogue about it, some good."--Publishers Weekly
"After 70 years of suffering the slings and arrows of academic
criticism, suburban life finally finds a compelling defender in
Bruegmann. A professor of art history and urban planning at the
University of Illinois-Chicago, Bruegmann demonstrates that urban
sprawl is a natural process as old as the world's oldest cities,
wherein large metropolises reach a point of maturity and those with
financial means escape the congestion and high prices of city life.
What has changed over the past century, the author says, is that an
increasing number of citizens have achieved the financial means to
participate in what was once an exclusive luxury of the wealthy.
Bruegmann acknowledges that the effects on cities are not always
positive, but he also demonstrates that many of the criticisms of
suburban sprawl-e.g., that it is culturally deficient and
environmentally noxious-are greatly exaggerated and ignore the very
real benefits sprawl offers in terms of privacy, mobility and
choice. With his disdain for doomsday predictions and his disregard
for the academic consensus, Bruegmann's thorough analysis is sure
to be controversial, but a shot of controversy ought to do the
field, and public dialogue about it, some good."--Publishers
Weekly
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