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Why Face-to-Face Still Matters

The Persistent Power of Cities in the Post-Pandemic Era

Jonathan Reades (King's College London) Martin Crookston (strategic planning consultant)

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Paperback

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English
Bristol University Press
18 March 2021
What do cities do that suburbs or countryside can't? Tracking more than a century's worth of thinking across infrastructures, markets, and changing technologies, this book drills down into the realities of modern city business life to explore why central places have come to dominate economic life in the 21st Century.

COVID-19 has meant it's a difficult time to be putting the case for the importance of Face-to-Face, but the book outlines how it can help us — often in unobserved ways — to negotiate uncertainty and to 'seal the deal'.

Using interviews with staff and business leaders from high-profile industries to bring it to life, the book argues for the value of the 'right' location during and after the pandemic, and explains why ICT has transformed both businesses, and our cities and towns, and yet also changed little about the underlying challenges of business life.

This accessible book gives readers including developers, investors, and policy-makers essential tools for thinking about the future of places ranging from market towns to great World Cities.

By:   ,
Imprint:   Bristol University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
ISBN:   9781529216004
ISBN 10:   1529216001
Pages:   252
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Dr Jonathan Reades is an Associate Professor in the Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis at UCL. He is a human geographer who uses quantitative social science methods to explore contemporary challenges in urban and regional development. He has a background in both planning and geography, and programming and ‘big data’ analytics, and has published widely in these areas. Martin Crookston is a strategic planning consultant, with experience ranging from London and Abu Dhabi to Prague and the Paris region. An urban economist and planner, he was a member of Lord Rogers’s Urban Task Force, where he chaired the Working Group on Design & Transport. Much of his recent work has focussed on housing and regeneration, and he is the author of Garden Suburbs of Tomorrow? - a new future for the cottage estates (2014).

Reviews for Why Face-to-Face Still Matters: The Persistent Power of Cities in the Post-Pandemic Era

"""A persuasive reminder of why cities will continue to thrive in a digital world - they enable people to share knowledge and experiences, to work together and to innovate through face to face contact."" Andrew Carter, Centre for Cities ""Amidst the fog of the pandemic this book, eight years in the making, provides a timely and powerful light to guide towns and cities into the new future."" Chris Brown, igloo Regeneration ""Highly readable and endlessly thought-provoking, this book helps us understand how towns and cities can continue to prosper in the wake of COVID-19 and galloping technological changes."" Shaun Spiers, Green Alliance ""With superb timing, Reades and Crookston navigate a future for our cities by drawing on a rich understanding of their past. A luminous must-read for all concerned with the continuing vitality and potential of our cities."" Jackie Sadek, UK Regeneration ""With rich interview material, this book offers a stimulating entre into a necessary debate about identifying and sustaining economically crucial kinds of personal interaction - despite AI, COVID-19 and all!"" Ian Gordon, London School of Economics and Political Science ""This lively book is a timely and perceptive celebration of the virtues of face-to-face interaction, the value of cities in bringing people together, and the role of technology in strengthening and augmenting those relationships."" Richard Brown, Centre for London ""An important contribution to the enduring debate on the importance of place. The global pandemic has halted most of our face-to-face interaction, but the authors demonstrate that, while Zoom may alleviate some of their necessity, in situ interactions remain indispensable and the cities and urban infrastructure in which they occur will thrive again because they must."" Elizabeth Currid-Halkett, University of Southern California ""The authors share Peter Hall's unwavering optimism that cities have the capacity to reinvent themselves in times of crisis. Technological developments in ICT have reinforced, not diminished, the importance of cities. Yet, written at the time of the Covid-19 pandemic crisis, the book is a wake-up call that the resilience of all cities rests on the health and wellbeing of physically clustered but mobile people in an increasingly interconnected urban world."" Kathy Pain, Henley Business School, University of Reading"


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