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Good neighbors: affordable family housing - Review
by Lorenzo Venturini
It is ordinary America the one that Tom Jones, William Pettus and                Mike Pyatok describe in their book on U.S. housing and community                planning. Good Neighbors: Affordable family housing - this is the                title of this challenging book - speaks about another America, the                one that hardly ever finds a place in newspapers and magazines because                usually it is overwhelmed by the most common archetypical images.                Sparkling are such images when they express financial and technological                power; carefree when they convey the idea of open space and free                time seaside or mountain escape; dramatically violent and deteriorated                when they express social and legal problems.
 Through the description of their vision of life styles, Jones, Pettus                and Pyatok offer us a sample of North American social living styles,                of the variety of regional architectural expressions, of the difference                among urban centers, suburbs, countryside and their relationship                with public space and historical identity. 
 Written in a simple linear style, the book tells us about a new                interpretation of the designer's profession that derives from the                authors' clear social and civic convictions in their job considered                as a community service.
 Through the illustration of the housing problems a great number                of Americans has to face, of the welfare system and of the applied                experiences, the authors portray American social life. They also                describe the neighborhood life and the citizens efforts to overcome                economical, ethnic, and cultural barriers. 
 In the wide review of study cases collected in this book, exceptional                architectures are rarely found, if we take the word "exceptional"                as contemporary architectural style. The majority of the projects                is inspired to tradition in the constant search for a urban model                that encourages identification and socialization. On the contrary,                "exceptional" is the design process care, the constant search for                a better human living dimension considered as everybody's right                even though the customers are low income people and budgets are                limited. 
 A thorough quest of the aspects that improve everyday life is evident                in the book together with the search for social aggregation and                a sense of belonging to a community. Moreover, the community planning                method and the theoretical aspects are verified during the design                process with the neighbors and the new inhabitants. The book is                rich in descriptions of the social, economic and legislative context                in which affordable housing designers work. All the aspects regarding                the community design are confronted: the subjects living in community                housing, the needs expressed by them, the factors influencing the                community housing design. The second half of the text concentrates                on a rich variety of study cases accompanied by photos and essential                information. 
 
 The authors gained a long experience in the community housing field:                Tom Jones was Director of Architecture of the Asian Neighborhood                Design of San Francisco, a company that works for the development                of the non-profit settlements. He worked in the community planning                field and he has a 25-year experience in public housing. Working                for the AND Company he won several prizes for community planning                and for his dedication in design. William Pettus worked as                an architect in affordable housing and community planning design.                He taught design at the University of California at Berkeley and                edited several books on San Francisco Bay Area community planning.                Michael Pyatok designed lots of family housing throughout                the US. Winner of several design prizes and competitions, he collaborated                with communities in the design process. At the moment he teaches                at the University of Washington School of Architecture in Seattle.
This is a review for:
- [Book] Good neighbors: affordable family housing - by Tom Jones, William Pettus, Mike Pyatok 
 
	
	
	
		 
	
	
		 
	
	
	
		 
	
	
	
	
Planum
The Journal of Urbanism
ISSN 1723-0993
owned by
	Istituto Nazionale di Urbanistica
published by
	Planum Association
ISSN 1723-0993 | Registered at Court of Rome 4/12/2001, num. 514/2001
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