
Street Smart
the rise of cities and the fall of cars
- Hardcover
312 pages
- Release Date
7 September 2015
Summary
On a Saturday morning in December 1973, a section of New York’s West Side Highway collapsed under the weight of a truck full of asphalt. The road was closed, seemingly for good, and the 80,000 cars that traveled it each day had to find a new way to their destinations. It ought to have produced traffic chaos, but it didn’t. The cars simply vanished. It was a moment of revelation: the highway had induced the demand for car travel. It was a classic case of build it and they will come,” but for …
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781610395649 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1610395646 |
| Author: | Samuel Schwartz, William Rosen |
| Publisher: | PublicAffairs,U.S. |
| Imprint: | PublicAffairs,U.S. |
| Format: | Hardcover |
| Number of Pages: | 312 |
| Release Date: | 7 September 2015 |
| Weight: | 534g |
| Dimensions: | 241mm x 157mm x 34mm |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
“Street Smart doesn’t read as if you were stuck on the Cross-Bronx Expressway (‘the most congested corridor in the entire country,’ [Scwartz] writes). Rather, it’s mostly accessible, discerning and even revealing.” –Sam Roberts, New York Times “A snappy read…[Schwartz’s] account of President Eisenhower’s creation of the interstate highway system is riveting, as is his informed discussion of the rise and fall of streetcars.” –Wall Street Journal “Schwartz…chronicles in Street Smart the history of urban transportation in the U.S. (growing up in Brooklyn, he has lived through a lot of it). … He takes a strong stand, in some cases calling upon personal experiences that streets belong to communities, not cars, and that sustainable transportation planning is helping to revitalize cities.” –Chicago Tribune “Equal parts transportation-planning compendium, autobiography and love letter to New York City, Street Smart lays out Sam Schwartz’s vision for the future of multimodal and multinodal transportation systems… Touching on everything from the rise of the automobile and the decline and resurrection of streetcars to traffic calming, ride-sharing and the advent of driverless cars, Schwartz combines an engineer’s precise logic with broader societal and cultural considerations–and plenty of wry Brooklyn humor–to provide an engaging examination of once and future urban transportation trends.” –Engineering News-Record “Nobody is more qualified to write a book about transportation than Schwartz.” –City Journal “A delightful new book.” –Michael Sorkin, The Nation “An engaging trip down memory lane, where trolleys and pedestrians and bicycles intersect and collide with cars in what Schwartz calls ‘an accident of history,’ replete with a promising path toward a multi-modal urban revival.” –MoveNY “Schwartz sees the writing on the asphalt, even if the federal government, intent on building ever more highways, does not. The future isn’t on four wheels. If you want your area to attract young people, entrepreneurs, and capital, you have to make it walkable.” –Downtown Express
About The Author
Samuel Schwartz
Sam Schwartz, a.k.a. Gridlock Sam,” is one of the leading transportation experts in the United States today. He served as New York City’s traffic commissioner and the New York City Department of Transportation’s chief engineer. Schwartz currently runs Sam Schwartz Engineering and is a columnist at the New York Daily News. He has been profiled by the New Yorker, New York Times, and many other national publications. Schwartz lives in New York City. Follow him @GridlockSam.William Rosen is a former editor and publisher at Macmillan, Simon & Schuster, and The Free Press. He has contributed to The Wall Street Journal, The American Interest, Lapham’s Quarterly, The New Atlantic, The Washington Post Book World, Bloomberg, and Smithsonian’s Echoes, and is the author of Justinian’s Flea: The First Great Plague and the End of the Roman Empire (Viking, 2007), The Most Powerful Idea in the World: A Story of Steam, Industry, and Invention (Random House, 2010) and The Third Horseman: Climate Change and the Great Famine of the 14th Century (Viking, 2014).
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