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Last Harvest:

From Cornfield to New Town
Capa
46 Resenhas
Simon and Schuster, 17/04/2007 - 356 páginas
In Last Harvest, the award-winning author of Home and A Clearing in the Distance tells the compelling story of New Daleville, a brand-new residential subdivision in rural Pennsylvania. When Witold Rybczynski first heard about New Daleville, it was only a developer's idea, attached to ninety acres of cornfield an hour and a half west of Philadelphia. Over the course of five years, Rybczynski met everyone involved in the transformation of this land -- from the developers, to the community leaders whose approvals they needed, to the home builders and sewage experts and, ultimately, the first families who moved in.

Always eloquent and illuminating, Rybczynski looks at this "neotraditional" project, with its houses built close together to encourage a sense of intimacy and community, and explains the trends in American domestic architecture -- from where we place our kitchens and fences to why our bathrooms get larger every year.

As Publishers Weekly said, "Rybczynski provides historical and cultural perspective in a style reminiscent of Malcolm Gladwell, debunking the myth of urban sprawl and explaining American homeowners' preference for single-family dwellings. But Rybczynski also excels at 'the close-up,' John McPhee's method of reporting, where every interview reads like an intimate conversation, and a simple walk down neighborhood sidewalks can reveal a wealth of history."

Last Harvest is a charming must-read for anyone interested in where we live today -- and why -- by one of our most acclaimed and original cultural writers.

  

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Review: Last Harvest: How a Cornfield Became New Daleville: Real Estate Development in America from George Washington to the Builders of the

Comentário do usuário  - Sunkist and Mango - Goodreads

I read this book as a requirement for a graduate art history course I took: American architectural home design. It explains what goes in to creating a residential home development. It is an easy read ... Ler resenha completa

Review: Last Harvest: How a Cornfield Became New Daleville: Real Estate Development in America from George Washington to the Builders of the

Comentário do usuário  - Jeff Rosendahl - Goodreads

Although I'm not an architect, developer, town supervisor, etc, I felt this was an interesting book. Rybczynski details how a farm in Pennsylvania becomes a suburb and goes into the history of ... Ler resenha completa

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Conteúdo

Prologue
3
The Developer
9
Seaside
17
Epiphanies
25
Last Harvest
31
Life Liberty and the Pursuit of Real Estate
41
Joes Deal
49
On the Bus
61
Builders
167
A Compromise
175
PART THREE
185
Tradeoffs
187
Mike and Mike
197
Ranchers Picture Windows and Morning Rooms
205
Pushing Dirt
215
The Market Rules
225

Meetings
71
Scatteration
81
More Meetings
91
PART TWO
99
Drop by Drop
101
On the Way to Exurbia
111
Design Matters
119
Locked In
129
House and Home
141
Generic Traditional
147
The Dream
157
Bumps in the Road
233
HardSell
241
Competition
251
The Spreadsheet Buyers
257
Moving Day
269
POSTSCRIPT
275
Acknowledgments
283
Notes
285
Index
297
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Sobre o autor (2007)

Witold Rybczynski, born in Edinburgh, raised in Canada, and currently living in Philadelphia, is the Meyerson Professor of Urbanism at the University of Pennsylvania. He has written on architecture and urbanism for The New York Times, The Atlantic, The New Yorker and Slate, and is the author of the critically acclaimed Home and the A Clearing in the Distance, a biography of frederick Law Olmsted, for which he was awarded the J. Anthony Lukas Prize. He is the recipient of the National Building Museum’s 2007 Vincent Scully Prize.

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