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Tables of Contents for The Regional City
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Acknowledgments
xi
 
Foreword
xv
 
Introduction
1
14
Part One: The End of Sprawl
15
28
Living in the Regional World
15
16
The Economic Region
17
5
The Ecological Region
22
4
The Social Region
26
5
Communities of Place
31
12
Building Social Capital and Neighborhood
32
2
The Threat of ``Everywhere Communities''
34
3
The Importance of Communities of Place
37
6
Part Two: The Architecture of the Regional City
43
62
Designing the Region
43
18
Designing the Region Is Designing the Neighborhood
49
1
The Building Blocks of the Region
50
11
Public Policy and the Regional City
61
27
The Physical Design Policies
63
9
The Social and Economic Policies
72
16
The Federal Role in Regionalism
88
17
Transportation Investments
89
3
Environmental Policy and Open-Space Investments
92
4
Housing Financing
96
2
Urban Revitalization Programs
98
7
Part Three: Regionalism Emerging
105
90
Designing the Regions: Portland, Salt Lake, and Settle
107
65
Portland Metro
107
18
The Salt Lake Region
125
34
Color Plates [1-20]
139
20
The Puget Sound Region
159
13
The Superregions: New York, Chicago, and San Francisco
172
13
New York and the Third Regional Plan
173
3
Chicago Metropolis 2020
176
4
The San Francisco Bay Area
180
5
State-Led Regionalism: Florida, Maryland, and Minnesota
185
10
Florida
185
3
Maryland
188
2
Minnesota
190
5
Part Four: Renewing the Region's Communities
195
76
The Suburb's Maturation
198
45
Restructuring the Suburban Town Plan
199
5
Suburban Greyfields
204
4
Exurban Greenfields
208
6
Suburban Transit: Not an Oxymoron
214
29
Color Plates [21-38]
223
20
Renewing Urban Neighborhoods
243
28
The Neighborhood as Ecosystem: HUD's Consolidated Planning
246
7
Rebuilding the Ghetto: HUD's HOPE VI Program
253
18
Color Plates [39-46]
263
8
Conclusion: Transforming the Edge City into the Regional City
271
5
Appendix: Charter of the New Urbanism
276
10
Project Credits
286
4
Bibliography
290
7
Index
297