Cover of “The Homegrown City: Reclaiming the Metropolis for its Users”

The Homegrown City:Reclaiming the Metropolis for its Users

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A radical new perspective on cities and urbanism

Slums, informal settlements, and other unplanned habitats are seen as the antithesis of the metropolis. Matias Echanove and Rahul Srivastava, found­ers of the design practice urbz, explore how such neighbourhoods and their inhabitants have been unfairly dismissed when they should in fact be under-stood as partners in the story of cities and urban development.

Reviews

  • The brilliance of The Homegrown City lies in its emphasis on a simple but rarely acknowledged truth: that the true experts of urban life are the inhabitants themselves—the local builders, artisans, and families who, through sheer ingenuity and collective agency, shape environments in ways that official planning often fails to imagine. Written by two researchers who have spent decades living and working in some of the world's poorest neighborhoods, the book presents a deeply humane approach to urbanism, suggesting many practical modalities for improving the quality of urban life, even in crowded megalopolises.

    Amitav Ghosh, Author of The Great Derangement
  • An important contribution to the literature on urban development. Rather than focusing on how capital makes cities, they show how residents create cities that respond to their needs.Thus, they show the guidance that makers of informal settlements provide for enlightened planning

    Susan S. Fainstein author of The Just City
  • A powerful provocation to rethink urban theory and practice in the twenty-first century, The Homegrown City maps insurgent infrastructures of appropriation, inhabitation, and collective spatial practice that proliferate within—and unsettle—the neoliberal city. It casts these emergent spaces as counterforces to dispossession and as laboratories for imagining and building alternative urban worlds

    Neil Brenner, University of Chicago