The Assassination of Paris
He describes an almost continual parade of garish and grandiose plans: some, like the destruction of the glorious marketplace of les Halles for him the heart of the city, were realized; others, like the superhighway along the left bank of the Seine, were bitterly and successfully resisted.
Almost twenty years later, we find it difficult to remember the city as it was. And while Paris looks to many much the way it always has, behind the carefully sandblasted stone and restored shop fronts is a city radically transformed—emptied of centuries of popular life; of entire neighborhoods and the communities they housed engineered out to desolate suburban slums. The battle over the soul and spirit of the city continues.
This book is not entirely about the loss of physical places. Or a romance about a world that never really was. It is a cautionary tale filled with lessons for all who struggle to protect the human scale, the diversity, and the welcoming public life that are the threatened gifts of all great cities.
John Merriman
Introduction
PART ONE: CIRCUMSTANCES
1. The Mystery of Charity
2. The Bagnole and the Tree
3. "La Grande Bouffe"
PART TWO: MEN
4. The Technocrats
5. The Enarques
6. Business
PART THREE: POWER AND CHOICES
7. Those in Power
8. Choices
9. "En finir..."
Conclusion: "Une Ville Merveileuse"
Epilogue: Twenty Years Later
Architecture: European Architecture
Geography: Cultural and Historical Geography | Urban Geography
History: European History | Urban History
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