Prologue
The Beginnings | Frances Bula
Part 1: What Is Vancouverism?
1 Setting the Stage
2 A Unique Context for Urban Innovation
3 Counter-Intuitive Perspectives for Shaping a City
Part 2: The Key Urban Principles of Vancouverism
4 Neighbourhoods
5 Transportation Choices
6 Diversity
7 Urban Design
8 Environmental Responsibility
9 Public and Private Collaboration
Part 3: The Future of Vancouverism
10 New Iterations and Lessons Learned
Epilogue
A Special Urban Experience
Notes; Index
Larry Beasley is the Distinguished Practice Professor of Planning at the University of British Columbia and the founding principal of Beasley and Associates, an international planning and urban design consultancy. He sits on the boards of TransLink (British Columbia’s integrated transportation agency), the National Capital Commission in Ottawa, and the Canadian Urban Institute. He is a registered professional planner in Canada and the retired co-chief planner for the City of Vancouver.
After more than thirty years of civic service, fifteen as co-chief planner, where he led Vancouver’s modern transformation into a world model for sustainable and livable cities, Larry Beasley now teaches and advises on urbanism around the world. Key appointments have included: special advisor on city planning to the Government of Abu Dhabi, UAE, where he founded the Urban Planning Council, one of the most progressive planning agencies in the Middle East; senior advisor on urban design in Dallas, Texas, where he founded their Urban Design Studio; member of the International Economic Development Advisory Board of Rotterdam, The Netherlands; chair of the NCC’s Advisory Committee on Planning, Design and Realty; urban advisor to Nordic Innovations in Scandinavia; planning advisor in Vancouver, BC, as well as Toronto and Brampton, Ontario; and, vice-president of Aquilini Developments, a major Canadian development company. Beasley has also had key involvement in new capital cities around the world, including Abu Dhabi (leading design of the new capital), Moscow (leading design of expansion of the city with a new capital district for the Duma and national government), and Canberra (advising on diversification of the inner city).
Larry Beasley is a fellow of the Canadian Institute of Planners and an honorary member of the Canadian Society of Landscape Architects. He has been awarded: Advocate for Architecture by the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada; the Kevin Lynch Prize from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and the Applied Sciences Dean’s Medal of Distinction at the University of British Columbia. He is also a fellow of the Dallas Institute.
Larry Beasley is a Member of the Order of Canada and has received the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal. He is the author, with Jonathan Barnett, of Ecodesign for Cities and Suburbs (2015).
Frances Bula is an award-winning journalist who has written about Vancouver city politics and urban issues for a quarter century, covering the “City Hall Beat” on everything from development to drug policy. Her work appears predominantly in the Globe and Mail, as well as in Vancouver magazine and BCBusiness.
Beasley’s book is a captain’s log that will sit nicely alongside
other books on city building in Vancouver.
*The Tyee*
...this will be the definitive insider’s account of the creation of
Vancouver’s famous skyline, its downtown neighbourhoods and its mix
of natural beauty and urbanism.
*BC Bookworld*
In Beasley’s hands, Vancouverism’s seemingly disparate parts emerge
as a cohesive whole.
*The Literary Review of Canada*
...an insider’s view of how, especially during Beasley’s decades
inside city hall, the Terminal City came to be an internationally
renowned exemplar of livable, family-friendly urban
neighbourhoods.
*Globe and Mail*
Overall, this book is a fantastic look at the history of how a city
came to be.
*Western Exteriors Magazine*
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