
The book traces the rise of a 1960s urban ideology that celebrated bottom-up, organic city development while criticising state-led planning that resulted in lifeless, sterile “projects.” Using walking as a method, the author tests these ideas across New York City, with a brief interlude in Washington, DC, examining a wide array of urban developments.
Key areas explored:
– Cultural complexes in Manhattan
– New Deal-era public housing in Brooklyn, Harlem, and Queens
– Roosevelt Island’s social experiment
– Communist housing co-operatives in the Bronx
– Union-led rebuilding of the Lower East Side
– DC’s Metro system
By walking through these spaces, the book reveals that, despite their flaws, fragments of a more equal society were built in the past and continue to thrive today.
Walking the Streets/Walking the Projects asks what lessons a new generation of American socialists might learn from these surviving social democratic enclaves as they envision a better future.