Rethinking town growth: a Garden City approach that links open space, housing, and value for all.
This nonfiction work argues that limiting how many houses sit on a given acre can deliver more usable land, better gardens, and healthier neighborhoods. It examines how open space per family and the size of buildings interact with town planning, showing why a less crowded layout can improve amenities and reduce costs for both owners and occupants.
Through proposed schemes and practical calculations, the book explores how density affects land value and ground rents. It contrasts old, crowded development with Garden City methods, illustrating potential benefits for large estates, developers, and residents if the community chooses coordinated development over fragmentation.
- How limiting houses per acre can preserve garden space without raising costs for tenants.
- Why density decisions influence land value, building size, and road needs.
- Economic implications for landowners when adopting a Garden City approach.
- Practical examples that compare traditional vs. Garden City development models.
Ideal for readers of urban planning, housing policy, and land economics seeking a clear look at scale, value, and community welfare.
Sir Raymond Unwin (1863 to 1940) was a prominent and influential English architect and town planner, best known for his effots to improve working class housing.