US
45 MIN READ TIME

NEW WORLD DEAL

BY ALEC APPELBAUM

@alecappelbaum

“THE UNITED STATES doesn’t have a good history with urban projects,” says architect Matthijs Bouw.

As proof, he points to the multitude of grim public-housing projects across the country. Theorists believed courtyards enclosed by tall towers would enhance quality of life, but nobody asked the people who’d be living there. Today, students learn about places like Pruitt-Igoe in St. Louis and Cabrini-Green in Chicago as models for what not to do; city governments have already taken the wrecking ball to them.

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