Lauren Andres is director of research and professor of planning and urban transformations at the Bartlett School of Planning, University College London. She is coeditor of Pandemic Recovery? Reframing and Rescaling Societal Challenges (2024), among other books.
The city is, and will always be, an unfinished project. In this new book, Lauren Andres makes a major contribution to the theory and application of temporary urbanism by setting it within the context of societal change and the power structures that shape our lives today. -- Peter Bishop, coeditor of <i>Design for London: Experiments in Urban Thinking</i> Lauren Andres establishes a compelling framework for understanding how adaptability and temporariness contribute to urban vibrancy, address crises and are fundamental to understanding what makes a city, a city. A must-read for students, scholars and policymakers, Adaptable Cities and Temporary Urbanisms suggests that adaptability and temporariness offer pathways to achieving urban equity, creativity, sustainability and resilience. -- Shauna Brail, author of <i>Urban Mobility: How the iPhone, COVID and Climate Changed Everything </i> Critiquing the inadequacy and rigidity of responses to urban instability and inequality, Andres draws on research on different continents to weave together the concepts of temporary urbanism and adaptability. She makes a persuasive argument for the necessity of creativity and experimentation in urban theory and practice. -- Ali Madanipour, author of <i>Cities in Time: Temporary Urbanism and the Future of the City</i>