Social Sciences, asked by mani1441, 1 year ago

name the danger of the Garden City of new task week

Answers

Answered by DodieZollner
0

Garden city movement is a way of urban planning in which self-sustaining communities are surrounded by "greenbelt", which includes proportional areas of residence, industry and agriculture. The idea was started in 1898 by Sir Ebenezer Howard in the United Kingdom.

While the cities of the garden were praised for being pleasantly opulent and industrial cities, along with the more durability, cities of the garden were often criticized for damaging the economy, destructive of nature's beauty and inconvenience. . According to A Tristan Edwards, garden cities have begun to insult the country by trying to recreate the houses along the countryside, which can spread itself; However, due to their limited space, this was not possible.

Recently the environmental movement has offered "inherent criticism" of the Garden City movement by embracing urban density. [31] In this way the criticism of the concept resembles the criticisms of other suburban models, however, author Stefan Ward has argued that critics often do not make substantial differences between true garden cities and more mundane hostel city plans.

It is often known as urban design experiment, which is determined by failure due to transactions used as common entries, and goes out to help households in Jewish houses and encourage crime. ; This ultimately leads the efforts of 'D-Redburn' or partly destroys American Redburn with public housing areas.

During the interview in 1998, the responsible architect responsible for launching a design for public housing in New South Wales, Philip Cox, admitted in the suburb of Wilawwood, in connection with an American redburn designed property, "everything that is wrong Maybe the society went wrong, "" It became the center of drugs, it became a center of violence and in the end, the police refused to go in. It was hell


Answered by Simrankaur1025
0

Explanation:

The garden city movement is a method of urban planning in which self-contained communities are surrounded by "greenbelts", containing proportionate areas of residences, industry, and agriculture.

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