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Word: urbanism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Europe's narrow roads--showing off models like the Fortwo, a two-seat runt you could practically stuff into a Hummer. Mercedes-Benz, which has sold Smart cars for DaimlerChrysler in Canada since last fall, aims to have a model at U.S. dealerships by 2006, marketed to parking-challenged urban drivers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is Small the Next Big Thing? | 1/10/2005 | See Source »

...ending slavery, most blacks voted Republican until Democrat Franklin Delano Roosevelt wooed them into his New Deal coalition in 1932. Now the Republicans are injecting different ideas. Kemp, for example, suggests that the government eliminate capital-gains taxes on inner-city entrepreneurs in order to put more funds into urban pockets of impoverishment. Only 5% of blacks are self-employed, vs. 11% of whites...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Recharging The Mission | 1/10/2005 | See Source »

...proportionate to their demographic majority, and they'll brook no delay at the behest of the Sunni minority they plan to displace in the corridors of power. And while the Sunni insurgents have the capacity for violent disruption, the Shiite clerical leadership has previously demonstrated the sort of mass urban support that, if called onto the streets, could render the U.S.-authored transition untenable...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Iraq's Bloody Election Season | 1/5/2005 | See Source »

...exterior looks like, the skyscraper can be a problematic building--isolated, aloof from its neighbors and boring inside, a pancake stack of identical floor plates with a lobby at the bottom and maybe a restaurant at the top. For years now, Rem Koolhaas, the oracular Dutch architect and urban theorist, has conducted an unrelenting rhetorical campaign against the skyscraper. "The promise it once held," he wrote recently, "has been negated by repetitive banality [and] carefully spaced isolation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Kissing The Sky | 12/30/2004 | See Source »

...Tall buildings are turning into urban fabrics," says Greg Lynn of FORM, one of the members of United Architects. "Architects are thinking about how to pull the qualities of the street into the building." The United Architects design was too massive and audacious to have any real hope of winning the competition. And to a public looking for stability after Sept. 11, it was also too tilted. But the firm's ideas about the ways public space can be brought inside a tall building were very much, well, in the air. One of the most talked about skyscrapers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Kissing The Sky | 12/30/2004 | See Source »

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